The Jakarta Post,Thursday, March 29, 2012 08:55 AM
Pope Benedict XVI wrapped up his visit to Cuba on
Wednesday with a Mass before hundreds of thousands of people in the
shrine of the Cuban revolution, hoping to revive the Catholic faith in
this communist-run country and press for greater freedoms for his
church.
It was a message he was likely to repeat at his other appointment Wednesday: a meeting with Fidel Castro.
Multitudes
of Cubans filled Revolution Plaza for the morning Mass, shielding
themselves from the blistering sun with umbrellas and waving flags big
and small as Benedict passed by in his white popemobile. President Raul
Castro and leading Cabinet officials had front-row seats, wearing white
formal guayabera shirts.
"Viva Cuba! Viva el Papa!" the announcers shouted.
"The
pope is something big for Cubans," said Carlos Herrera, a tourism
worker who came to the plaza with his wife. "I come to hear his words,
wise words for the Cuban people. That helps us. It gives us peace, it
gives us unity. We do not want war."
But other suggested they were
here for less than religious sentiment, told to attend by their
employers in a country where mass shows of support for Fidel Castro have
long been a mainstay of his half-century revolution.
"I'm here to support the leaders of our government, to support our revolution," said Dioleisis Fontela, a university professor.
In
the days leading up to the pope's visit, some Cubans had said they
resented that the government was now telling them to attend the Mass,
despite preaching atheism until the early 1990s, and remaining skeptical
about the church's role in society.
This time, a huge poster of
Cuba's patron saint, the Virgin of Charity of Cobre, covered the facade
of one of the buildings facing the plaza near Che. The icon has been the
spiritual focus of Benedict's three-day visit, timed to coincide with
the 400th anniversary of the appearance of the diminutive statue.
Benedict
visited the statue in a sanctuary near the eastern city of Santiago on
Tuesday morning and prayed to her for greater freedom and renewal for
all Cubans - another gentle nudge to the government to continue opening
itself up to greater reforms.
"I have entrusted to the Mother of
God the future of your country, advancing along the ways of renewal and
hope, for the greater good of all Cubans," the pope said. "I have also
prayed to the Virgin for the needs of those who suffer, of those who are
deprived of freedom, those who are separated from their loved ones or
who are undergoing times of difficulty."
A top official in Havana
quickly responded: "In Cuba, there will not be political reform," said
Vice President Mrino Murillo, Cuba's economic czar.
Before
arriving on his trip to Mexico and Cuba, Benedict asserted that Marxism
as it was originally conceived is irrelevant for today's reality. Upon
arriving on Cuban soil, however, his language was less direct, and he
pressed instead for the Roman Catholic Church to play a greater role in
Cuban life and for Cuba's people to enjoy greater freedoms.
The
Vatican spokesman said the Holy See didn't take Murillo's comments as a
rebuff to Benedict's call, noting that the pope isn't a political leader
who can change laws or political systems. But he said Benedict does
have some concrete hopes for the visit.
Ahead of the Mass,
dissident blogs and Twitter accounts carried allegations that members of
the Ladies in White opposition group had been prevented from attending,
and that some opposition leaders were detained, reports that were
reiterated by Amnesty International.
It was impossible to reach
any of the group's leading members on Wednesday. Elizardo Sanchez, who
monitors human rights on the island and acts as a de facto spokesman for
the opposition, said he could not confirm any detentions because his
mobile phone hadn't worked since shortly after the pope arrived on
Monday. It was an experience shared by many other islanders and foreign
journalists who could not make calls on jammed lines.
The Ladies
were allowed to march peacefully the day before the pope arrived, but
dozens were arrested in a similar march the week before.
During a
nearly hour-long meeting Tuesday with Cuban President Raul Castro -
twice the normal length of papal audiences with heads of state -
Benedict asked that the government declare a holiday for Good Friday,
when Catholics commemorate the death of Christ.
The request, like
so much of this trip, was a follow-up of sorts to Cuba's decision to
declare Christmas a national holiday in honor of John Paul's 1998 visit.
Cubans hadn't had Christmas off for nearly 30 years.
"It's not
that it changes reality in a revolutionary way, but it can be a sign of a
positive step, as was the case of Christmas after John Paul's visit,"
said the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi.
The
government didn't give an immediate response, but Lombardi said it was
natural for Cuba to take time to consider it. The government frequently
declares holidays at the last minute, and Good Friday this year comes in
less than two weeks, on April 6.
Benedict also raised
"humanitarian" issues with Raul Castro, an apparent reference to
political prisoners. Lombardi said he didn't know if individual cases
were discussed.
Primarily, though, Benedict came to Cuba to try to
win a greater place in society for the Catholic Church, which has been
marginalized in the six decades of Castro family rule.
The
island's Communist government never outlawed religion, but it expelled
priests and closed religious schools after Fidel Castro came to power in
1959. Tensions eased in the early 1990s when the government removed
references to atheism in the constitution and let believers of all
faiths join the Communist Party.
John Paul's 1998 visit further
warmed relations. But despite years of lobbying, the church has
virtually no access to state-run radio or television, is not allowed to
administer schools and has not been granted permission to build new
places of worship. Only about 10 percent of Cubans are practicing
Catholics.
"Naturally a papal visit hopes to be an impulse for
further steps, be it for the life of the church or for the good of
society in its entirety," Lombardi told reporters, citing media,
education and health care as areas where the church wants a greater say.
But
in a country that once preached atheism and still is dominated by
Marxist thought, that's a hard sell for the government and for ordinary
Cubans alike.
Ana Blanco, a 47-year-old Havana resident,
complained that people were being told to attend Wednesday's Mass,
saying the pressure seemed odd in a country that in her early years
taught her religion was wrong.
"Now there's this visit by the
pope, and I don't agree with giving it so much importance or making
anyone go to the Mass or other activities," the office worker said.
"Before it was bad, now it's good. That creates confusion."

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