![]() |
|
Pope Francis - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Players, organisations, and events of deep politics (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-32.html) +--- Thread: Pope Francis (/thread-10419.html) |
Pope Francis - Magda Hassan - 14-03-2013 Before this disappears. Quote:http://articles.latimes.com/2005/apr/17/world/fg-cardinal17 Pope Francis - Magda Hassan - 14-03-2013 Googlish translation of original here Quote:Cardinal Bergoglio accused for stealing babies for Dictatorship Pope Francis - Lauren Johnson - 14-03-2013 VATICAN CITY (AP) In unadorned white robes, the first pope from the Americas sets a tone of simplicity and pastoral humility in a church desperate to move past the tarnished era of abuse scandals and internal Vatican upheavals. The choice of Argentine Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio who took the name Francis reflected a series of history-making decisions by fellow cardinals who seemed determined to offer a message of renewal to a church under pressures on many fronts. The 76-year-old archbishop of Buenos Aries the first from Latin America and the first from the Jesuit order bowed to the crowds in St. Peter's Square and asked for their blessing in a hint of the austere style he cultivated while modernizing the Argentina's conservative Catholic church. In taking the name Francis, he drew connections to the 13th century St. Francis of Assisi, who saw his calling as trying to rebuild the church in a time of turmoil. It also evokes images of Francis Xavier, one of the 16th century founders of the Jesuit order that is known for its scholarship and outreach. Francis, the son of middle-class Italian immigrants, is known as a humble man who denied himself the luxuries that previous Buenos Aires cardinals enjoyed. He came close to becoming pope last time, reportedly gaining the second-highest vote total in several rounds of voting before he bowed out of the running in the conclave that elected Pope Benedict XVI. Groups of supporters waved Argentine flags in St. Peter's Square as Francis, wearing simple white robes, made his first public appearance as pope. "Ladies and Gentlemen, good evening," he said before making a reference to his roots in Latin America, which accounts for about 40 percent of the world's Roman Catholics. Bergoglio often rode the bus to work, cooked his own meals and regularly visited the slums that ring Argentina's capital. He considers social outreach, rather than doctrinal battles, to be the essential business of the church. He accused fellow church leaders of hypocrisy and forgetting that Jesus Christ bathed lepers and ate with prostitutes. "Jesus teaches us another way: Go out. Go out and share your testimony. Go out and interact with your brothers. Go out and share. Go out and ask. Become the Word in body as well as spirit," Bergoglio told Argentina's priests last year. Bergoglio's legacy as cardinal includes his efforts to repair the reputation of a church that lost many followers by failing to openly challenge Argentina's murderous 1976-83 dictatorship. He also worked to recover the church's traditional political influence in society, but his outspoken criticism of President Cristina Kirchner couldn't stop her from imposing socially liberal measures that are anathema to the church, from gay marriage and adoption to free contraceptives for all. "In our ecclesiastical region there are priests who don't baptize the children of single mothers because they weren't conceived in the sanctity of marriage," Bergoglio told his priests. "These are today's hypocrites. Those who clericalize the Church. Those who separate the people of God from salvation. And this poor girl who, rather than returning the child to sender, had the courage to carry it into the world, must wander from parish to parish so that it's baptized!" This sort of pastoral work, aimed at capturing more souls and building the flock, is an essential skill for any religious leader in the modern era, said Bergoglio's authorized biographer, Sergio Rubin. Bergoglio himself felt most comfortable taking a very low profile, and his personal style has been the antithesis of Vatican splendor. "It's a very curious thing: When bishops meet, he always wants to sit in the back rows. This sense of humility is very well seen in Rome," Rubin said before the 2013 conclave to choose Benedict's successor. Bergoglio's influence seemed to stop at the presidential palace door after Nestor Kirchner and then his wife, Cristina Fernandez, took over the Argentina's government. His church had no say when the Argentine Supreme Court expanded access to legal abortions in rape cases, and when Bergoglio argued that gay adoptions discriminate against children, Fernandez compared his tone to "medieval times and the Inquisition." This kind of demonization is unfair, says Rubin, who obtained an extremely rare interview of Bergoglio for his biography, the "The Jesuit." "Is Bergoglio a progressive a liberation theologist even? No. He's no third-world priest. Does he criticize the International Monetary Fund, and neoliberalism? Yes. Does he spend a great deal of time in the slums? Yes," Rubin said. Bergoglio has stood out for his austerity. Even after he became Argentina's top church official in 2001, he never lived in the ornate church mansion where Pope John Paul II stayed when visiting the country, preferring a simple bed in a downtown building, heated by a small stove on frigid weekends. For years, he took public transportation around the city, and cooked his own meals. Bergoglio almost never granted media interviews, limiting himself to speeches from the pulpit, and was reluctant to contradict his critics, even when he knew their allegations against him were false, said Rubin. That attitude was burnished as human rights activists tried to force him to answer uncomfortable questions about what church officials knew and did about the dictatorship's abuses after the 1976 coup. Many Argentines remain angry over the church's acknowledged failure to openly confront a regime that was kidnapping and killing thousands of people as it sought to eliminate "subversive elements" in society. It's one reason why more than two-thirds of Argentines describe themselves as Catholic, but fewer than 10 percent regularly attend mass. Under Bergoglio's leadership, Argentina's bishops issued a collective apology in October 2012 for the church's failures to protect its flock. But the statement blamed the era's violence in roughly equal measure on both the junta and its enemies. "Bergoglio has been very critical of human rights violations during the dictatorship, but he has always also criticized the leftist guerrillas; he doesn't forget that side," Rubin said. The bishops also said "we exhort those who have information about the location of stolen babies, or who know where bodies were secretly buried, that they realize they are morally obligated to inform the pertinent authorities." That statement came far too late for some activists, who accused Bergoglio of being more concerned about the church's image than about aiding the many human rights investigations of the Kirchners' era. Bergoglio twice invoked his right under Argentine law to refuse to appear in open court, and when he eventually did testify in 2010, his answers were evasive, human rights attorney Myriam Bregman said. At least two cases directly involved Bergoglio. One examined the torture of two of his Jesuit priests Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics who were kidnapped in 1976 from the slums where they advocated liberation theology. Yorio accused Bergoglio of effectively handing them over to the death squads by declining to tell the regime that he endorsed their work. Jalics refused to discuss it after moving into seclusion in a German monastery. Both men were freed after Bergoglio took extraordinary, behind-the-scenes action to save them including persuading dictator Jorge Videla's family priest to call in sick so that he could say Mass in the junta leader's home, where he privately appealed for mercy. His intervention likely saved their lives, but Bergoglio never shared the details until Rubin interviewed him for the 2010 biography. Bergoglio who ran Argentina's Jesuit order du ring the dictatorship told Rubin that he regularly hid people on church property during the dictatorship, and once gave his identity papers to a man with similar features, enabling him to escape across the border. But all this was done in secret, at a time when church leaders publicly endorsed the junta and called on Catholics to restore their "love for country" despite the terror in the streets. Rubin said failing to challenge the dictators was simply pragmatic at a time when so many people were getting killed, and attributed Bergoglio's later reluctance to share his side of the story as a reflection of his humility. But Bregman said Bergoglio's own statements proved church officials knew from early on that the junta was torturing and killing its citizens, and yet publicly endorsed the dictators. "The dictatorship could not have operated this way without this key support," she said. Bergoglio also was accused of turning his back on a family that lost five relatives to state terror, including a young woman who was 5-months' pregnant before she was kidnapped and killed in 1977. The De la Cuadra family appealed to the leader of the Jesuits in Rome, who urged Bergoglio to help them; Bergoglio then assigned a monsignor to the case. Months passed before the monsignor came back with a written note from a colonel: It revealed that the woman had given birth in captivity to a girl who was given to a family "too important" for the adoption to be reversed. Despite this written evidence in a case he was personally involved with, Bergoglio testified in 2010 that he didn't know about any stolen babies until well after the dictatorship was over. "Bergoglio has a very cowardly attitude when it comes to something so terrible as the theft of babies. He says he didn't know anything about it until 1985," said the baby's aunt, Estela de la Cuadra, whose mother Alicia co-founded the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo in 1977 in hopes of identifying these babies. "He doesn't face this reality and it doesn't bother him. The question is how to save his name, save himself. But he can't keep these allegations from reaching the public. The people know how he is." Initially trained as a chemist, Bergoglio taught literature, psychology, philosophy and theology before taking over as Buenos Aires archbishop in 1998. He became cardinal in 2001, when the economy was collapsing, and won respect for blaming unrestrained capitalism for impoverishing millions of Argentines. Later, there was little love lost between Bergoglio and Fernandez. Their relations became so frigid that the president stopped attending his annual "Te Deum" address, when church leaders traditionally tell political leaders what's wrong with society. During the dictatorship era, other church leaders only feebly mentioned a need to respect human rights. When Bergoglio spoke to the powerful, he was much more forceful. In his 2012 address, he said Argentina was being harmed by demagoguery, totalitarianism, corruption and efforts to secure unlimited power. The message resonated in a country whose president was ruling by decree, where political scandals rarely were punished and where top ministers openly lobbied for Fernandez to rule indefinitely. http://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/pope-francis-is-known-for-simplicity-and-humility.php Pope Francis - Lauren Johnson - 14-03-2013 Quote: In November 2005, Cardinal Bergoglio was elected head of the Argentine Conference of Bishops for a three-year term, which was renewed in 2008. At the time he was chosen, the Argentine church was dealing with a notorious political scandal, that of the Rev. Christian von Wernich, a former chaplain of the Buenos Aires police who had been accused of aiding in the questioning, torture and death of political prisoners. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/14/world/europe/new-pope-theologically-conservative-but-with-a-common-touch.html?pagewanted=2&hp&_r=0 Pope Francis - Magda Hassan - 14-03-2013 Lauren Johnson Wrote:Quote: In November 2005, Cardinal Bergoglio was elected head of the Argentine Conference of Bishops for a three-year term, which was renewed in 2008. At the time he was chosen, the Argentine church was dealing with a notorious political scandal, that of the Rev. Christian von Wernich, a former chaplain of the Buenos Aires police who had been accused of aiding in the questioning, torture and death of political prisoners.http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/14/world/europe/new-pope-theologically-conservative-but-with-a-common-touch.html?pagewanted=2&hp&_r=0 When my husband was in a Chilean prison cell being tortured they also wheeled in a priest who questioned him and asked him to tell his 'sins' so he could be 'forgiven' before he was sent off to the firing squad. The firing squad was not the end of the torture. They aimed high and low. It was part of the torture. They did it twice. But for many it was the end of their torture. Pope Francis - Magda Hassan - 14-03-2013 DESDE EL MOSTRADOR.CL 13 de Marzo de 2013 El nuevo Papa ha sido cuestionado por entregar a dos sacerdotes a manos de la represión Los testimonios que apuntan a Bergoglio (Francisco I) en violaciones a los DD.HH. y muestran su complicidad con la dictadura militar argentinaEmilio Mignone, destacado especialista en el catolicismo argentino, en su libro "Iglesia y dictadura", editado en 1986, cuando Bergoglio no era conocido fuera del mundo eclesiástico, ejemplificó con su caso "la siniestra complicidad" con los militares, que "se encargaron de cumplir la tarea sucia de limpiar el patio interior de la Iglesia, con la aquiescencia de los prelados".por Hans Hansen Acciones Un halo de oscuridad en temas de derechos humanos se cierne sobre el nuevo Papa, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, quien adoptó el nombre de Francisco I para su pontificado. Esto, pues en cuanto apareció por los balcones del Palacio apostólico hacia la Plaza de San Pedro, también empezaron a aparecer antecedentes que lo vinculan con la detención de sacerdotes durante la dictadura militar argentina. Uno de los actores principales en las denuncias contra Bergoglio es el sacerdote Orlando Yorio, detenido en la Escuela de Mecánica de la Armada de Argentina -la temible ESMA, donde fueron torturados y desaparecieron miles opositores a la dictadura militar- de quien al declarar en los juicios contra las Juntas Militares de 1976 dijo que "Bergoglio nunca nos avisó del peligro que corrÃamos. Estoy seguro de que él mismo les suministró el listado con nuestros nombres a los marinos". Al nuevo PontÃfice se le menciona un poderoso vÃnculo con el entonces jefe de la Armada trasandina, Emilio Massera, ya que Bergoglio cuando integraba la plana mayor de la Universidad del Salvador, le otorgó al militar el tÃtulo de "doctor honoris causa". Sin embargo, la información publicada en Infoeducares.com.ar explica que los datos de la distinción al llamado "Almirante Cero" desaparecieron "misteriosamente" de los archivos del centro educacional y que el nuevo Papa "no recuerda el decisivo papel que jugó en ese homenaje al mandamás de la Marina". "Esa tarde, Bergoglio escuchó a Massera pronunciar un ampuloso discurso sobre la indiferencia de los jóvenes, el amor promiscuo, las drogas alucinógenas y la "derivación previsible" de esa "escalada sensorial" en "el estremecimiento de la fe terrorista". Con una sonrisa en los labios, el dueño y señor de la Esma también aseguró que la Universidad era "el instrumento más hábil para iniciar una contraofensiva" de Occidente. Aunque aplaudió fervorosamente, el discreto Bergoglio no subió al estrado. Sà lo hicieron sus fieles discÃpulos de Guardia de Hierro, la poderosa organización paramilitar en la que Bergoglio militaba desde 1972 y que posteriormente intervino en la apropiación de los bienes de los desaparecidos", recuerda el escrito. Además, se menciona que un informe de inteligencia de la Side, organismo especializado en el seguimiento de los temas y los actores eclesiásticos de la época que se conserva en un archivo de la CancillerÃa sostiene que Bergoglio se proponÃa limpiar la CompañÃa de "jesuitas zurdos". El sacerdote, fallecido en 2000, repitió hasta el cansancio que "no tengo indicios para pensar que Bergoglio nos liberó, al contrario. A mis hermanos les avisó que yo habÃa sido fusilado, no sé si lo dijo como cosa posible o segura, para que fueran preparando a mi madre. Cuando quedé en libertad, Bergoglio me confesó que dos veces lo visitó un oficial de la policÃa para avisarle sobre nuestro fusilamiento. Fuera del paÃs, en The New York Times se publicó la noticia de nuestra muerte, la Cruz Roja internacional tenÃa esa información". A su juicio, Bergoglio "tenÃa comunicación con el almirante Massera, le habrÃan informado que yo era el jefe de los guerrilleros y por eso se lavó las manos y tuvo esa actitud doble. No esperaba que no pudieran encontrar nada para acusarme ni que saliera vivo". Incluso sostenÃa que Bergoglio estuvo presente en la casa operativa de la Armada en la que pasaron varios meses luego de salir de la Esma, mencionando que "una vez nos dijeron que tenÃamos una visita importante. Vino un grupo de gente a la que no pudimos ver porque estábamos con los ojos vendados, pero Francisco Jalics sintió que uno era Bergoglio". Lavado de imagen En tanto, una columna de Horacio Verbitsky indica que Bergoglio está emprendiendo "una operación de lavado de imagen con la publicación de un libro autobiográfico". "El ostensible propósito de "El Jesuita", como se titula, es defender su desempeño como provincial de la CompañÃa de Jesús entre 1973 y 1979, manchado por las denuncias de los sacerdotes Orlando Yorio y Francisco Jalics de que los entregó a los militares. Ambos estuvieron secuestrados cinco meses a partir de mayo de 1976. En cambio nunca reaparecieron las cuatro catequistas y dos de sus esposos secuestrados dentro del mismo operativo", precisa la publicación. Entre ellos se encontraban Mónica Candelaria Mignone, hija del fundador del CELS, Emilio Mignone, y MarÃa Marta Vázquez Ocampo, de la presidente de Madres de Plaza de Mayo, Martha Ocampo de Vázquez. Emilio Mignone, destacado especialista en el catolicismo argentino, en su libro "Iglesia y dictadura", editado en 1986, cuando Bergoglio no era conocido fuera del mundo eclesiástico, ejemplificó con su caso "la siniestra complicidad" con los militares, que "se encargaron de cumplir la tarea sucia de limpiar el patio interior de la Iglesia, con la aquiescencia de los prelados". De acuerdo con el fundador del Centro de Estudios Legales y Sociales, "durante una reunión con la Junta Militar en 1976 el entonces presidente de la Conferencia Episcopal y vicario castrense, Adolfo Servando Tortolo, acordó que antes de detener a un sacerdote las Fuerzas Armadas avisarÃan al obispo respectivo". Agrega Mignone que "en algunas ocasiones la luz verde fue dada por los mismos obispos. El 23 de mayo de 1976 la InfanterÃa de Marina detuvo en el barrio del Bajo Flores al presbÃtero Orlando Yorio y lo mantuvo durante cinco meses en calidad de desaparecido. Una semana antes de la detención, el arzobispo [Juan Carlos] Aramburu le habÃa retirado las licencias ministeriales, sin motivo ni explicación. Por distintas expresiones escuchadas por Yorio en su cautividad, resulta claro que la Armada interpretó tal decisión y, posiblemente, algunas manifestaciones crÃticas de su provincial jesuita, Jorge Bergoglio, como una autorización para proceder contra él. Sin duda, los militares habÃan advertido a ambos acerca de su supuesta peligrosidad". La nota cita a quien fue su colaboradora en el CELS, la abogada Alicia Oliveira, quien dijo "que su amigo Bergoglio, preocupado por la inminencia del Golpe, temÃa por la suerte de los sacerdotes del asentamiento y les pidió que salieran de allÃ. Cuando los secuestraron, trató de localizarlos y procurar su libertad, asà como ayudó a otros perseguidos. A raÃz de aquella nota, Orlando Yorio se comunicó conmigo desde el Uruguay, donde vivÃa. Por teléfono y correo electrónico refutó las afirmaciones de Bergoglio y Oliveira. "Bergoglio no nos avisó del peligro en ciernes" y "tampoco tengo ningún motivo para pensar que hizo algo por nuestra libertad, sino todo lo contrario", dijo. Los dos sacerdotes "fueron liberados por las gestiones de Emilio Mignone y la intercesión del Vaticano y no por la actuación de Bergoglio, que fue quien los entregó", agregó Angélica Sosa de Mignone, Chela, la esposa durante medio siglo del fundador del CELS. Sus testimonios se incluyeron en la nota "La llaga abierta", que se publicó el 9 de mayo de 1999. También se transmitieron allà las posiciones de Bergoglio y del otro cura secuestrado aquel dÃa, Francisco Jalics", menciona. Verbitsky también refuta la versión de Bergoglio respecto a que negó haber aconsejado a los funcionarios de Culto de la CancillerÃa que rechazaran la solicitud de renovación de pasaporte de Jalics, que él mismo presentó. Según lo que cuenta Bergoglio, el funcionario que recibió el trámite le preguntó por "las circunstancias que precipitaron la salida de Jalics", a lo cual asegura que le respondió: "A él y a su compañero los acusaron de guerrilleros y no tenÃan nada que ver" y agrega que "el autor de la denuncia en mi contra revisó el archivo de la SecretarÃa de Culto y lo único que mencionó fue que encontró un papelito de aquel funcionario en el que habÃa escrito que yo le dije que fueron acusados de guerrilleros. HabÃa consignado esa parte de la conversación pero no la otra en la que yo le señalaba que los sacerdotes no tenÃan nada que ver. Además el autor de la denuncia soslaya mi carta, donde yo ponÃa la cara por Jalics y hacÃa la petición". Ante este hecho, Verbitsky sostiene que "nada fue asÃ. En notas publicadas aquà y en mis libros El Silencio y Doble juego, narré la historia completa y publiqué todos los documentos, comenzando por la carta por cuya omisión Bergoglio reclama. Luego sigue la recomendación del funcionario de Culto que lo recibió, Anselmo Orcoyen: "En atención a los antecedentes del peticionante, esta Dirección Nacional es de opinión que no debe accederse". El tercer documento es el definitorio. Ese papelito, firmado por Orcoyen, dice que Jalics tenÃa actividad disolvente en comunidades religiosas femeninas y conflictos de obediencia, que estuvo con Yorio en la ESMA (detenido, dice, en vez de secuestrado) "sospechoso contacto guerrilleros". El punto más interesante es el siguiente, porque remite a intimidades de la CompañÃa de Jesús, vistas desde la óptica de Bergoglio, que no habÃa ninguna necesidad de confiar al funcionario de la dictadura: "VivÃan en pequeña comunidad que el Superior Jesuita disolvió en febrero de 1976 y se negaron a obedecer solicitando la salida de la CompañÃa el 19/3". Agrega que Yorio fue expulsado de la CompañÃa y que "ningún obispo del Gran Buenos Aires lo quiso recibir". La Nota Bene final es ilevantable: dice Orcoyen que estos datos le fueron suministrados "por el padre Jorge Mario Bergoglio, firmante de la nota con especial recomendación de que no se hiciera lugar a lo que solicita". Omisiones en temas de derechos humanos Bergoglio afirma que las declaraciones episcopales sobre los derechos humanos, incluidas en el libro "Iglesia y democracia en la Argentina", que él editó en 2006, están completas, "no con omisiones como algunos periodistas señalaron con mala intención". Sin embargo, el autor de la publicación en Página 12 precisa que "el memo sobre la reunión del 15 de noviembre de 1976 de Primatesta, Juan Carlos Aramburu y Zazpe con la Junta Militar se reproduce en su versión original, tal como está archivado en la sede episcopal de la calle Suipacha ("Reunión de la Junta Militar con la Comisión Ejecutiva de la CEA, 15.IX.1976". Comisión Ejecutiva de la CEA. Caja 24, Carpeta II. Documento 10.937). También se puede leer la transcripción de Bergoglio treinta años después en un libro que prologó con la frase: "No debemos tener miedo a la verdad de los documentos". Puede verse asà que suprimió el concepto central expresado en la introducción, de "aclarar la posición de la Iglesia", para dejar en claro que "de ninguna manera pretendemos plantear una posición de crÃtica a la acción de gobierno" dado que "un fracaso llevarÃa, con mucha probabilidad, al marxismo", por lo cual "acompañamos al actual proceso de re-organización del paÃs". En forma explÃcita menciona la "adhesión y aceptación" episcopal. El cotejo permite advertir el cambio en la numeración de la minuta, en cuya edición oficial se omitió que incluso a solas los tres miembros de la Comisión Ejecutiva Episcopal atribuyeron la represión sin ley a niveles intermedios, mientras destacaban "los notables esfuerzos del gobierno en pro del paÃs" y la "imagen buena de las supremas autoridades". Para no verse obligados a "un silencio comprometedor de nuestras conciencias que, sin embargo, tampoco le servirÃa al proceso" o "un enfrentamiento que sinceramente no deseamos" la Iglesia propuso abrir "un canal de comunicación" con la Junta Militar. Esa prueba de promiscuidad con la dictadura, que en el original está encabezada por el tÃtulo "Lo que tememos", fue suprimida en la recopilación de Bergoglio. Al año siguiente, el obispo Oscar Justo Laguna, reconoció la "total ineficacia" de esa Comisión de Enlace que integraba, en una nota manuscrita a Zazpe. Sin embargo, las amables reuniones mensuales continuaron durante todo el régimen militar. Al comentar esa carta, en 2002, otro miembro de la Comisión, Carlos Galán, le escribió a Laguna: "¡Quién nos diera poder vivir de nuevo con la experiencia adquirida". FantasÃa vana. Sólo se vive una vez". English translation of the above. Quote:The new Pope has been challenged by two priests to deliver hands of repression Pope Francis - Magda Hassan - 14-03-2013 More Googlish translations relating to the above events. Quote:Buenos Aires Cardinal did appoint Admiral Zero honorary doctorate in Usalhttp://www.infoeducasares.com.ar/?p=1223 Pope Francis - Peter Lemkin - 14-03-2013 Half a day in 'office' and he already seems to have more skeletons in his closet that most!..... Pope Francis - Magda Hassan - 14-03-2013 Just another old white man in a frock nominated to be in charge of dealing with the sexual assault law suits. Pope Francis - Charles Drago - 14-03-2013 Jan Klimkowski Wrote:Vatican Multinational. Fabulous. Wish I'd wrote it. |