Mozambique awaits Pope
Francis’s message of hope and renewal
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| A MOzambican man in front of his damaged house in the village of Cheia, near Beira. |
Pope Francis will visit flood-ravaged Mozambique during a
three-nation apostolic journey in September. With the help of a local
journalist we shine the spotlight on some of the issues the country is dealing
with.
By Linda Bordoni
Mozambique, in the southeast of the African
continent, is struggling to begin a recovery and reconstruction process after
the devastating Cyclone Idai and ensuing floods in March that killed more than
800 people and displaced at least one and a half million.
Despite the nation’s abundance of natural resources and
fertile land, it remains one of the poorest countries in Africa with at least
65 % of its population living below the poverty line.
Corruption, poor governance, and political and religious
strife continue to impoverish the country and create division.
These are realties that Pope Francis is
well aware of, as demonstrated by his gift to President Filipe Nyusi when he
visited the Vatican in September 2017: a split medallion held together by an
olive tree and engraved with the words “Look for what unites, overcome what
divides”.
Sheila Pires, who was born in Mozambique but works as
a journalist and radio presenter at South Africa’s Radio Veritas, told Linda
Bordoni that the people of Mozambique are in urgent need of the Pope’s message
of love and unity.
She also revealed that Francis’ friendship and solidarity
have already made a big difference to the country.
Sheila Pires explained that when Mozambique was struck by
flooding in the year 2000, Jorge Bergoglio was the Archbishop of Buenos Aires
in Argentina.
“He is a close friend of our Cardinal Emeritus, Julio Langa,
who at the time was Archbishop of Xai-Xai” she said. Thanks to this great
friendship “he was able to fundraise enough money to restore the city of
Xai-Xai; he was able to help that city rebuild because it was under water and
everything was lost”.
Pope Francis, she continued, has always done a lot for
Mozambique: “recently, again, he has made a huge donation to the countries
affected by the cyclone”.
So, she said, for Mozambique his visit is a blessing; it
will also “help with the tensions”.
A divided nation
Pires explained that the country is divided and in the
throes of political instability, pointing out that the ruling FRELIMO Party has
always clashed with opposition RENAMO militants, both over charges of state
corruption and the disputed results of the 2014 General Election.
She recalled Pope St. John Paul II’s visit to Mozambique in
1988 shortly after the peace agreement where he witnessed, first-hand, the
devastation wrought by the country's long civil war.
“Now, Pope Francis is the second Pope to visit the country,
and people are looking towards him that he will bring this sense of unity,” she
said.
Pires noted that Cyclone Idai destroyed the bridge that
joins the South and the North of the country.
Emblematically, she said, “the conflicts and divisions in
the country are between the South and the North. The collapse of that bridge is
a sign that it is time for people to stop looking at all the divisions and
actually be one, be united, be together again to rebuild the country and love
one another, putting an end to all these divisions and conflicts”.
Marginalization and Corruption
For many years, she said, the North has felt
marginalized by political leaders, and this fact, together with widespread
allegations of corruption, results in divisions.
Pires said that the fact that the North is rich in mineral
resources has ended up creating more division because, “all of a sudden, the
government has its eyes on the North”.
“But who is it benefiting? Is it benefiting the people of
the North or just a handful of elite?” she observed.
Hopefully, Pires said, Pope Francis will instill the thought
of “let’s do the right thing, if we are going to invest in the North, let
it benefit the people of Mozambique not just a handful of elite people.”
She also noted that with the arrival of large amounts
of funds to sustain the country as it faces the humanitarian crisis
caused by Cyclone Idai, “again corruption is coming to the fore!”
“Certain individuals are taking this money into their
pockets,” she said.
So, Pires concluded, there’s a lot to be done: “Hopefully
Pope Francis will be able to sit down with our government, with the people of
Mozambique, and help us come back to that sense of ‘common sense’, let us
do the right thing for the country.”

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