Thursday, April 23, 2015

Why Pope Francis will visit Cuba on his way to the U.S.

Why Pope Francis will visit Cuba on his way to the U.S.
By Sarah Pulliam Bailey April 22 at 9:35 AM

Pope Francis, who has taken a public role in U.S.-Cuba relations, will
visit Cuba on the way to the United States this fall, the Vatican
announced Wednesday.

The United States and Cuba have been completing the repair of diplomatic
relations, which were severed in 1961 after the Cuban revolution. Last
week, President Obama backed the removal of Cuba from a list of state
sponsors of terrorism.

The pope is expected to make his first visit to the United States as
pontiff in September, stopping in Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and New
York City. He is scheduled to address a joint meeting of Congress, as
well as the United Nations. Obama is also expected to host Pope Francis
at the White House.

Pope Francis, who followed his predecessors Pope Benedict XVI and Pope
John Paul II in visiting Cuba and calling for an end to U.S. travel and
financial restrictions on the nation, wrote letters to Obama and Cuban
President Raúl Castro urging them to settle outstanding issues and clear
the way for a deal.

The pope has proved to be a force in foreign policy and global affairs.
He drew attention for recently using the term "genocide" for the 1915
mass killings of Armenians, which drew the condemnation of the Turkish
president. He has pushed for diplomacy in Syria and decried the Islamic
State and the deaths of migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. His
forthcoming encyclical on ecology is expected to address the environment.

Before he was Pope Francis, the Argentine Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio
served as archbishop of Buenos Aires, where he was a prominent member of
the Episcopal Conference of Latin America. That group, the Vatican and
the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops advocated for diplomatic
relations between the United States and Cuba.

John Paul II made a historic visit to Cuba in 1998 — the first papal
visit to the country — in a trip that helped improve relations between
the church and the government. Pope Benedict XVI made a three-day tour
of Cuba in 2012, celebrating a Mass attended by Castro. Castro declared
that Good Friday would be a national holiday.

Opposition to a normalization of relations remains strong in Congress,
where a vote would be needed to lift the American economic embargo on
the island. Cuba has a small Catholic population (Catholics make up 27
percent of the country), but the Catholic Church remains important in
Cuba, said Andrew Chesnut, professor of religious studies at Virginia
Commonwealth University.

"Pope Francis forged a path for himself as the pope of diplomacy,"
Chesnut said. "He really sees this as a finishing job."

Cuba is one of the least Catholic nations in Latin America, where along
with a sizable number of the religiously unaffiliated, both
Pentecostalism and Afro-Cuban Santeria, an Afro-Caribbean religion, are
thriving, Chesnut said.

"It's probably more politically important than religious," Chesnut said.
"I'm sure there's also hope for some Catholic renaissance as well."

Many Mexicans could feel slighted by his visit to neighboring countries,
Chesnut said. Some in Mexico took offense to the pope's recent warning
to Argentines to avoid "Mexicanization," or further penetration of the
illegal drug industry.

It will be strategic for the pope to visit Cuba first before he heads to
the United States, said Stephen Schneck, director of the Institute for
Policy Research and Catholic Studies at the Catholic University of America.

"The relationship between the Catholic Church and government has had its
ups and downs over the years," Schneck said. "There's a bit of Latin
American solidarity going on in how the Cuban government has warmed to
this pontiff."

Source: Why Pope Francis will visit Cuba on his way to the U.S. - The
Washington Post -
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2015/04/22/why-pope-francis-will-visit-cuba-on-his-way-to-the-u-s/?wprss=rss_national

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