Cardinal
Tagle on visit of Pope Francis to Philippines
(Vatican Radio) Ahead of the journey of Pope Francis to the
Philippines later this month, the Archbishop of Manila, Cardinal Luis Antonio
Tagle, spoke with Vatican Radio about his hopes and expectations for the visit,
as well as the history of Papal trips to the island nation, which is one of
only two nations in Asia with a Catholic majority, and the third-largest
Catholic country in the world. During the course of his broad-ranging
conversation with the Director of English Programming at Vatican Radio, Seàn-Patrick
Lovett, Cardinal Tagle also speaks of the role that the Holy Father's
predecessors had in his own formation. Please find audio and a full
transcript of the interview, below.
Interview with Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle – Archbishop of
Manila
(conducted by the Director of English Programming at Vatican
Radio, Seàn-Patrick Lovett)
Q. Cardinal Tagle, Archbishop of Manila, you are
very busy preparing for the papal visit to the Philippines, the fourth papal
visit to your country.
A. Yes, the fourth. The first was in 1970 with
Blessed Paul VI, then in 1981 with John Paul II. He came back in 1995 for
the World Youth Day. And now the fourth with Pope Francis.
Q. It’s 45 years since the visit of Paul VI and
it’s 20 years since that of John Paul II. Back in 1970 there was a young man of
13 years old craning his head over the crowd trying to catch a glimpse of the
Man in White. What do you remember about that visit of Paul VI?
A. The Philippines was just recovering from a
typhoon at that time and my memories are still vivid of trees that had been
denuded, no leaves at all, streets that were cleaned up hastily for the coming
of the Pope, roads that had been paved again, etc… So just like this visit of
Pope Francis, the Philippines had been recently ravaged by a typhoon. And the
people were enthusiastic. They received Paul VI like a Grace from Heaven. And
Paul VI made sure that he went to the poor also: he visited the poor families
in the district of Tondo in Manila, known for being one of the poorest sections
of the metropolitan area. And they still remember that visit. When I went to
the parish for a feast-day, the parish priest and the leaders pointed out to me
where the house Paul VI visited used to stand. When the Pope visits, memories
and images and the effects of that visit are still there after 45 years.
Q. There are clear connections between these
papal visits: the theme of mercy and compassion flows through all of them. So
there’s a wonderful continuity.
A. Yes, there is. We need to remind people that
when Pope Paul VI visited in 1970, the Bishops of Asia went to meet him. And
there in Manila, with the encouragement of Paul VI, the Federation of Asian
Bishops Conferences was born. That was the beginning. The Pope also inaugurated Radio
Veritas Asia in 1970 so that evangelization could happen through the
radio. These are all things that remain. In a way, we consider his visit like
an Asian reception of Vatican II – with the figure of the Pope telling us to
dialogue, and the document Ecclesiam
suam. Four years later in Taipei in1974, the first plenary assembly of
the Federation of Asian Bishops Conferences took place on the theme:
Evangelization in Modern Day Asia. And, according to Paul VI, the way to
evangelize was through dialogue. So the events are really connected.
Q. And you have a special connection with Paul
VI, don’t you?
A. Yes! Starting with that 13-year-old boy who
was just curious about what a Pope is. Then I was sent by my diocese, my
bishop, to do further studies in Ecclesiology, especially Vatican II, in
Washington DC at the Catholic University of America. I discussed the programme
of studies with my professors, Cardinal Avery Dulles and Fr. Komonchek, and I
told them my purpose for coming was to study the Church and Vatican II. They told
me that so many works have already been published on the subject. So they said
we’ll try to find a door for you to enter Vatican II and Ecclesiology – but a
door that is rarely used. And behold! One day they said: “Why don’t you study
Paul VI?”.
Q. Was there already a vocation in that young
man of 13?
A. No, not a clear one. At the time, though, we
were taught how to pray and to read the Word of God so, in a way, I was already
meditating and praying the lectio divina – although I didn’t
know it. I recall how the visit of the Pope created in me, evoked in me, a
religious experience. A teacher of mine who made us write some journals told me
later: “It seemed like you had a religious experience with that visit of the
Pope”. I didn’t know, I didn’t understand, what a religious experience was.
Working on Vatican II and through Paul VI, I was able to understand. When he
came to the Philippines I still didn‘t know, I didn’t realize, that one day I
too would have to travel a journey of my own: I would have to journey into his
heart, into his mind.
Q. Not many people make connections between Paul
VI and Pope Francis. Do you?
A. Oh yes, I do! When people say, either
positively or negatively: “Pope Francis is creating a revolution, he is
dialoguing, embracing the poor”, I say I have already seen that in Paul VI, in
his own way, in his own personality. This intuition, this insight that Pope
Francis seems to be picking up and doing again, I witnessed all that in my
studies and in my encounter with Paul VI back then in the Philippines. The
symbolic gestures of Paul VI seem to have paved the way for Pope Francis.
Q. Pope Francis said that he’s coming to bring a
message of compassion to the poor, to the victims of the typhoon and the
earthquake and he wants to give them a privileged place in his public meetings.
He’s also talked about saving money.
A. Yes, that has been a mark of his papal
visits. It was the same in Korea. The Korean bishops told us Filipinos who were
in Korea for the visit, that the Pope will not be happy if he sees ostentatious
preparations. Even the design of the altar must speak of the sobriety that has
been the mark of this Pope, of his simplicity.
Q. The people of the Philippines are very
generous in expressing their affection. Has it been difficult to hold them
back?
A. In a way, yes. But then we explained to the
people, not only the desires of the Pope, but the signs of the times. We do not
want to cause scandal. Everyone can find an excuse to give him a lavish welcome
– after all he is the Pope. Still, we should be mindful of the many people we
need to welcome in our midst on a daily basis: the poor and the hungry. So
whatever savings we make from the papal trip, will go to charity, will go to
the poor. And the Pope is very explicit about that.
Q. There was a lot of world attention on the
Philippines after the typhoon, but you have often spoken about the daily
typhoons that affect the Philippines.
A. Yes, we’re used to having typhoons – an
average of 20 to 22 a year. We’re used to having earthquakes of different
magnitudes. They catch the attention of the world because of the extent of the
devastation. But as I’ve said on many occasions, we should not forget the daily
typhoons, the daily earthquakes, caused by poverty, caused by corruption,
caused by indecent business deals and unfair practices. Even when the sun is
shining, darkness sets in on the lives of so many people.
Even during the Synod of Bishops on the Family I reminded
people in the small groups how, for us in Asia, poverty is not something extrinsic
to the family. It cuts through the core, the fabric of the family. When I
visited a shelter for children and young people who are caught roaming the
streets at night, I realized that the parents tolerate it when they know there
are government agencies that can take in their children and feed them in the
shelters. This is not parents neglecting their children. These are parents who
have nothing to feed their children. So they say: “Why don’t you go out and
when the police take you to the shelter, go with them. You’ll be safe there for
the night. You have a roof above you and food for the night”.
Q. Pope Francis has said he wants the attention
to be focused not on himself, but on Jesus in the faces of the poor. What other
guidelines has he given you for this visit?
A. How can I put it? He doesn’t want to waste
time on things that might distract him from his mission, from the focus of his
mission which is really to encounter the poor and to listen to the poor. During
papal visits, many people ask: “May we spend a minute with the Pope? May we
offer this or that?”… They are all good things, but if you have only three days
you have to choose.
And he has to conserve his energy too. These long flights,
the change of climate, change of time, the change of food, etc., they could
drain a person who has turned 78 of energy that might be better used to focus
on his mission. So we’re helping him to focus. One thing we are focussing on is
his meetings with families and with young people in Manila. But even in those
encounters he will listen to stories of families in difficulty, those who have
suffered different typhoons in life, and he will listen to young people. There
is a kind of typhoon, as I said, that doesn’t happen in one place only – it
happens everywhere. The Pope will listen and he will give them a word of comfort.
But I hope for more: I hope that he, the Pope, will be strengthened in his own
faith by these poor people.
Q. What is one of the biggest challenges for
you, as Archbishop of Manila, in organizing something as complex as this visit?
A. It’s really bringing people together. We have
assembled a beautiful team from the government, from the business sector, from
the Church. This is already a fruit of the papal visit. The Universal Pastor
creates a sense of family. And I’m very happy. I’m sure that even after the
visit, this sense of communion, of working together in collaboration, will
continue. I want to sustain that collaboration.
Q. What do you think will characterise this
visit?
A. Encounters with a lot of suffering. But the
Christian message doesn’t end with suffering. There is always a Resurrection.
And I hope the Holy Father will see that among those who have suffered and
continue to suffer.
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