Restoration of ties with US a sign of hope, Pope says
in Cuba
Havana,
Cuba, Sep 19, 2015 / 02:55 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis landed in Havana on Saturday,
the first of his 9-day visit to Cuba and the United States, telling officials
that the recent normalization of relations between the two countries is a sign
of hope and victory.
“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,” the Pope said Sept. 19, after landing in the Cuban capital
of Havana.
Quoting
Cuban hero and tireless fighter for the country’s independence, José Martí,
Francis said the restoration of ties “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.’”
He
urged political leaders continue down this path and to “develop all its
potentialities” as a sign of the service they are called to on behalf of the
“peace and well-being of their peoples, of all America, and as an example of
reconciliation for the entire world.”
Pope
Francis landed in Havana’s International José Marti airport at 4p.m. local
time, where he was greeted in an official welcoming ceremony by Cuban president
Raul Castro and Cardinal Jaime Ortega y Alamino of Havana, among others.
Pope
Francis will spend three days on the island before heading to the United States
the afternoon of Sept. 22, where he will address the United Nations, U.S.
Congress, and participate in the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia.
While
in Cuba, Pope Francis will meet with the country’s bishops, families, and
youth, and will pay a special visit to Santiago’s shrine of Our Lady of Charity
of El Cobre, patroness of Cuba.
In
addition to meeting with Cuban president Raul Castro and the country’s
authorities, Francis will likely also meet with former president and elder
brother to Raul, Fidel Castro, the leader of Cuba’s communist revolution.
Francis
offered a special greeting to Fidel when he landed, telling Raul in his speech
to “convey my sentiments of particular respect and consideration to your
brother Fidel.”
Pope
Francis said that as an archipelago facing all directions, Cuba has “an
extraordinary value as a key between north and south, east and west.”
The
country's natural vocation, then, “is to be a point of encounter for all
peoples to join in friendship.”
He
noted that 2015 marks the 80th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic
ties between the Republic of Cuba and the Holy See, and said that providence
has allowed him to follow in the footsteps of both St. John Paul II in 1998 and
Benedict XVI in 2012, in visiting the nation.
“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,” he said.
Pope
Francis also observed how his trip coincides with the centenary of Benedict
XV’s declaration of our Lady of Charity of El Cobre as Patroness of Cuba.
It
was the veterans of the Cuban War of Independence who, “moved by sentiments of
faith and patriotism,” wrote a letter to Benedict XV officially asking him to
declare her patroness of the country.
Growing
devotion to the Virgin of Cobre “is a visible testimony of her presence in the
soul of the Cuban people,” he said, explaining that he will visit her shrine as
“a son and pilgrim,” in order to pray for Cuba and all its people, “that
it may travel the paths of justice, peace, liberty and reconciliation.”
Pope
Francis concluded his address by entrusting his visit to Our Lady of Charity of
El Cobre, as well as Blessed Olallo Valdés, Blessed José López Pietreira and
Venerable Félix Varela, all of whom are Cubans on the path to sainthood.
Francis
has played a key role in normalizing relations between the Cuba and the United
States, who on Dec. 17, 2014 announced a prisoner exchange as well as a
historic shift in their relationship, which for decades has been marked by an
embargo and lack of formal diplomatic relations.
Official
ties between the two countries were severed in 1961, shortly after the
communist revolution, a diplomatic gulf widened by an embargo on travel and
trade.
However,
the Obama administration had made small changes to existing policy starting in
2009, including Cuban-Americans having a limited freedom to travel between the
countries and send money to Cuba.
In
2013, secret talks between diplomats began to open up relations, aided by the
support of the Vatican. Pope Francis made a personal to both U.S. president
Barack Obama and Cuban president Raul Castro to come to a deal, particularly
regarding diplomacy and long-held prisoners.
Full
diplomatic relations were officially restored as of midnight July 20, and
embassies were re-opened and flags raised later in the day as an outward sign
of the diplomatic thaw.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét