Pope
Francis arrives in Cuba, encourages reconciliation
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis began his apostolic visit to Cuba Saturday, touching down
in the nation’s capital Havana where he was greeted by the country’s president
Raúl Castro, other authorities, and bishops.
The
Holy Father’s 19-22 September visit to the island nation coincides with the
eightieth anniversary of the renewal of diplomatic relations between the
Republic of Cuba and the Holy See.
This
year, the country also celebrates one hundred years since our Lady of Charity
of El Cobre was named patroness of Cuba by Pope Benedict XV.
Pope
Francis is the third pontiff to go to the Caribbean nation, which was visited
by Saint John Paul II in 1998, and Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI in 2012.
Please
find below the full prepared text of Pope Francis’s speech at the welcoming
ceremony at the Havana airport:
Mr
President, Distinguished Authorities, Brother Bishops, Ladies
and Gentlemen,
I
thank you, Mr President, for your greeting and your kind words of welcome in
the name of the government and the entire Cuban people. I also greet the
authorities and the members of the diplomatic corps present at this ceremony.
My
gratitude also goes to Cardinal Jaime Ortega y Alamino, Archbishop of Havana,
the Most Reverend Dionisio Guillermo García Ibáñez, Archbishop of Santiago de
Cuba and President of the Episcopal Conference, the other bishops and all the
Cuban people, for their warm welcome.
I
thank, too, all those who worked to prepare for this Pastoral Visit. Mr
President, I would ask you to convey my sentiments of particular respect and
consideration to your brother Fidel. I would like my greeting to embrace
especially all those who, for various reasons, I will not be able to meet, and
to Cubans throughout the world.
This
year of 2015 marks the eightieth anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic
relations between the Republic of Cuba and the Holy See. Providence today
enables me to come to this beloved nation, following the indelible path opened
by the unforgettable apostolic journeys which my two predecessors, Saint John
Paul II and Benedict XVI, made to this island. I know that the memory of
those visits awakens gratitude and affection in the people and leaders of
Cuba. Today we renew those bonds of cooperation and friendship, so that
the Church can continue to support and encourage the Cuban people in its hopes
and concerns, with the freedom, the means and the space needed to bring the
proclamation of the Kingdom to the existential peripheries of society.
This
Apostolic Journey also coincides with the first centenary of Pope Benedict XV’s
declaration of our Lady of Charity of El Cobre as Patroness of Cuba. It
was the veterans of the War of Independence who, moved by sentiments of faith
and patriotism, wanted the Virgen mambisa to be the patroness of Cuba as a free
and sovereign nation. Since that time she has accompanied the history of
the Cuban people, sustaining the hope which preserves people’s dignity in the
most difficult situations and championing the promotion of all that gives
dignity to the human person. The growing devotion to the Virgin is a
visible testimony of her presence in the soul of the Cuban people. In
these days I will have occasion to go to El Cobre, as a son and pilgrim, to
pray to our Mother for all her Cuban children and for this beloved nation, that
it may travel the paths of justice, peace, liberty and reconciliation.
Geographically,
Cuba is an archipelago, facing all directions, with an extraordinary value as a
“key” between north and south, east and west. Its natural vocation is to
be a point of encounter for all peoples to join in friendship, as José Martí
dreamed, “regardless of the languages of isthmuses and the barriers of oceans”
(La Conferencia Monetaria de las Repúblicas de América, in Obras escogidas II,
La Habana, 1992, 505). Such was also the desire of Saint John Paul II,
with his ardent appeal: “May Cuba, with all its magnificent potential, open
itself to the world, and may the world open itself to Cuba” (Arrival Ceremony, 21
January 1998, 5).
For
some months now, we have witnessed an event which fills us with hope: the
process of normalizing relations between two peoples following years of
estrangement. It is a sign of the victory of the culture of encounter and
dialogue, “the system of universal growth” over “the forever-dead system of
groups and dynasties” (José Martí, loc. cit.). I urge political leaders
to persevere on this path and to develop all its potentialities as a proof of
the high service which they are called to carry out on behalf of the peace and
well-being of their peoples, of all America, and as an example of
reconciliation for the entire world.
I
place these days under the protection of our Lady of Charity of El Cobre,
Blessed Olallo Valdés and Blessed José López Pietreira, and Venerable Félix
Varela, the great promoter of love between Cubans and all peoples, so that our
bonds of peace, solidarity and mutual respect may ever increase.
Once
again, thank you, Mr. President.
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