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On 1st anniversary, pope defends slum priests¹

March 17, 2014 · 

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Associated Press

12:09 pm | Friday, March 14th, 2014

A woman touches a religious figure beside a banner of Pope Francis reading in Spanish, ³The Pope of the people of the slum² as she attends a mass in his honor at the 1-11-14 slum¹s church in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Thursday, March 13, 2014. On the day of the first anniversary of the Pope¹s election, people from the 1-11-14 slum gather at their church to watch an interview that Pope Francis gave recently from his residence at the Vatican to FM Bajo Flores, a community radio station that broadcasts from the slum. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

el papa de los villeros

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina‹On his first anniversary as pontiff Thursday, Pope Francis defended ³slum priests² from the accusation their advocacy for the downtrodden reflects a different, leftist church that is remote from conservative Vatican values.
³The work of the priests in the slums of Buenos Aires is not ideological, it¹s apostolic, and therefore forms part of the same church. Those who think that it¹s another church don¹t understand how they work in the slums. The important thing is the work,² Francis insisted in an interview made public Thursday.

As Argentina¹s top Roman Catholic leader before he was elected pope, Jorge Mario Bergoglio assigned many priests to parishes in the crowded slums that grew up around the capital. His support made him a cherished figure among the very poor who felt marginalized, especially during the bloody 1960s and ¹70s, when military dictatorships ruled the South American country.
³Francis is a slum pope. It¹s not a cliche. He was quite involved in this slum before he was elected pope,² said Eduardo Najera, who directs the community radio station FM Bajo Flores that broadcasts from the Villa 1-11-14 slum across from the San Lorenzo soccer stadium, where the pope¹s favorite team plays.

The station interviewed the pope two weeks earlier at his residence in the Vatican, and the dialogue was played for the first time in public Thursday on a huge screen before a crowd gathering inside the slum¹s gymnasium.
Francis was asked about Padre Carlos Mugica and other members of Argentina¹s Movement of Third World Priests, a branch of liberation theology, which the Vatican tried to stamp out for years. Mugica was labeled a communist subversive by the right, but he also spoke out against armed revolution before he was murdered in 1974.

³They were not communists. They were great priests who fought for life,² insisted the pope, who has sought to rehabilitate church views of liberation theology, a Latin American-inspired approach in which priests advocate for the poor.
The interview was warmly received. Agustina Mendoza, who has lived nearly half her 63 years in the slum, said Bergoglio used to sit in her house, sharing herbal mate tea and eating ³sopa Paraguaya,² a hearty kind of cornbread. ³I know he remembers my Œsopa Paraguaya.¹ His simplicity really stuck with me,² she said.

³He used to be so serious. He never smiled. Now he¹s bonded with the entire world. Francis has met all expectations,² she added.
Francis spent Thursday¹s anniversary in seclusion. The Vatican said he planned only prayer and meditation. But a tweet was sent from his official account saying, ³Please pray for me.²
The pope was asked why he has said that so often since the rainy night one year ago when he stepped onto the balcony at St. Peters and asked for the crowd¹s blessing.
³Because I need it,² he answered. ³What I need most is that the people of God support me.²

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