Archbishop Points to History as Lesson for Future
By Araceli Cantero
BARACOA, Cuba, AUG. 26, 2011 (Zenit.org).- At the end of a thanksgiving
Mass on Aug. 15, the archbishop of Santiago, Cuba, raised high the Cross
of Parra, planted by Christopher Columbus on Dec. 1, 1492, and with it
he blessed some 2,000 faithful gathered in the square.
Minutes earlier, the crowd broke out in applause on learning that the
National Cuban Commission of Monuments declared the Cross of Parra a
national monument. This cross is kept in the parish church of Our Lady
of the Assumption in Baracoa.
Historian Eusebio Leal made the announcement and described the Eucharist
in Baracoa as "a celebration of concord, a beautiful celebration for and
in our homeland, in the oldest of all the cities of Cuba."
Bishop Wilfredo Pino Estévez of Guantanamo-Baracoa began the ceremony,
welcoming the bishops of the island and government officials.
The Eucharist was presided over by Archbishop Dionisio Guillermo García
Ibáñez of Santiago de Cuba, who preached the homily, inviting his
listeners to live history as a teaching with a view to the future.
Catholics arrived from all the communities of the diocese wearing white
T-shirts with the message: "500 generations of faith, 1511-2011, I saw a
new heaven and a new earth."
At the beginning of the ceremony, young people gave a presentation on
the origins of the city, the arrival of the first Spaniards, the meeting
of cultures, and the evangelizing work of the missionaries, outstanding
among whom was St. Anthony Mary Claret, bishop of Santiago de Cuba
between 1849 and 1858, when the diocese covered virtually half the island.
The Havana historian spoke of Fray Bartolomé de las Casas, and Antonio
de Montesinos, "who raised his voice for the Indians, for the
aborigines, in Hispaniola Island and, particularly, in Santo Domingo."
He recalled that the great Cuban poet José Martí described the
missionary "as the apostle of the Indians," and described Fray De las
Casas as "one of the authors of modern humanism, who was able to discuss
in the debate of Valladolid the existence of an immortal soul in the
aborigines."
Referring to the Cross of Parra, Leal explained how the National
Commission of Monuments did an analysis to verify its historicity.
He also noted that some days before, President Raúl Castro presented the
topic of faith "as a cardinal topic of liberty."
The historian said that that address "was as important for us as the
Edict of Milan," by which Emperor Constantine in the fourth century
allowed Christians to practice their faith freely: "The right of all
those that today, for reasons of love of history or out of devotion,
recognize in that Cross a part of their people."
Baracoa is the primate city of the Caribbean country and the first
visited by Christopher Columbus in Cuba, on Nov. 27, 1492, as he himself
attested in his diary. The Diocese of Guantanamo-Baracoa was erected by
John Paul II during his visit to Cuba in January of 1998.
ZE11082606 - 2011-08-26
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-33297?l=english
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