Pope with Roma community: A
request for forgiveness in the footsteps of tradition
Pope Francis meets with the Rom community (Vatican Media) |
The mea culpa of Pope Francis in Romania is only the latest
in a long series that has involved the most recent Popes.
By Andrea Tornielli
The words pronounced by Pope Francis during the last
engagement on his journey to Romania — asking for forgiveness from the Roma
community for the discrimination suffered in the course of history — fit into a
tradition now fully established in the Catholic Church over the course of the
past fifty years. “History tells us that Christians too, including Catholics,
are not strangers to such evil,” the Pope said, explaining his request for
forgiveness.
Already in September of 1965, Pope Paul VI showed his
concern for this community when he celebrated Mass at the International Romany
Camp in Pomezia. On that occasion, he told them, “You are within the Church;
not on the margins, but in a certain sense you are at the center, you are in
its heart. You are in the heart of the Church because you are alone.” At that
time, he recalled the abuses, discrimination, and persecution suffered by the
Romany people, though he himself did not request forgiveness; still, he was the
Pope who inaugurated an era of seeking forgiveness from other Christian
confessions for some of the dark pages of the past.
It fell to Pope John Paul II to address a specific request
for forgiveness, which he did during the penitential celebration for the
Jubilee of the year 2000: “Let us pray that contemplating Jesus, our Lord and
our Peace, Christians will be able to repent of the words and attitudes caused
by pride, by hatred, by the desire to dominate others, by enmity towards
members of other religions and towards the weakest groups in society, such as
immigrants and itinerants”.
Benedict XVI also manifested his care and understanding for
these communities when he welcomed representatives of diverse ethnic groups of
Roma and other itinerant peoples: “Unfortunately through the centuries you have
tasted the bitterness of inhospitality and at times, persecution… The European
conscience cannot forget so much suffering! May your people never again be the
object of harassment, rejection and contempt!”
Now his successor, Pope Francis, continuing along the path
already traced out by previous Popes, has explicitly renewed the request for
forgiveness; as he had previously asked for forgiveness from the native peoples
in Chiapas in 2016; or as he did in August of 2018, in response to the scandal
of the abuse of minors, writing in the Letter to the People of God, “With shame
and repentance, we acknowledge as an ecclesial community that we were not where
we should have been, that we did not act in a timely manner, realizing the
magnitude and the gravity of the damage done to so many lives.”
The path of those who ask for forgiveness is not always easy
or painless. Pope John Paul II, systematically following in the footsteps of
the Council and of Paul VI, drew various criticisms from within the Church. In
the course of his pontificate, the Polish Pope had made dozens of requests for
pardon, and had revisited various events of the past. He spoke about the
Crusades; a certain complacency on the part of Catholics in the face of 20th century
dictatorships; divisions between the churches; the mistreatment of women; the
trial of Galileo and the Inquisition; the persecution of Jews; the wars of
religion; the behavior of Christians towards native Americans and native Africans.
For Christians, asking for forgiveness, and recognizing
ourselves as sinners continually in need of purification, is normal — or should
be. And even if faults are always personal, and remain so, in every era the
Church seeks to understand and live out the Gospel message ever more
faithfully, gradually becoming more aware of false steps and of mistakes that
have been made. There is some sense to the most common objection raised against
asking for forgiveness for events of the past: one cannot judge those who have
gone before us in light of modern sensitivities. But even in past ages it was
possible to understand — as some, often unheard, prophets have understood —
that Jesus has always been on the side of the victims, and never on the side of
perpetrators; of the persecuted, and never the persecutors. And when the
Apostle Peter cut off the ear of the high priest’s servant in order to defend
Him, Jesus ordered him to put the sword back in its sheath.
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