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Pope Francis can do without Cristina Fernandez

Wednesday, March 20th 2013 - 07:31 UTC
Full article 21 comments

By Jimmy Burns (*) - This is the same President that has viewed Jorge Bergoglio as an opponent when he served as Cardinal Archbishop of Buenos Aires and has allowed her allies in the Argentine media to try and wreck his reputation by claiming, unjustly, he was complicit in the military regime’s dirty war.

Trust Argentina’s President Cristina Fernandez to use her first audience with Pope Francis to press her country’s claim over the Falklands Islands.

With the demagoguery that has marked her time in office, Fernandez has seized the opportunity to try and restore her own dwindling popularity by raising a cause that Argentines have historically rallied around.

This is the same President that has viewed Jorge Bergoglio as an opponent when he served as Cardinal Archbishop of Buenos Aires and has allowed her allies in the Argentine media to try and wreck his reputation by claiming, unjustly, he was complicit in the military regime’s dirty war.

Quite apart from the evident whiff of hypocrisy surrounding La Presidenta’s latest cynical headline grabbing initiative, Cristina Fernandez has shown a crass misunderstanding of what Pope Francis represents, and the role expected of him by Catholics and non-believers alike.

As the international Catholic weekly The Tablet noted in its editorial, there is a paradox to Pope Francis being the centre of the world’s attention, the lead item on every news bulletin. In the Tablet’s words: “One of his chief tasks is to divert that attention away from himself as a personality and away from the Church as an institution, towards the gospel message and the person of Jesus Christ. He will do that by assuming the role of teacher, prophet and preacher. And as a truly global figure, he has to transcend his own race and nationality.”

Much as Cristina Fernandez would like this Jesuit to convert to the cause of the late Hugo Chavez, this is a priest I believe with sufficient independence of mind to know that in order to belong to everyone, he has, as the Tablet wisely recommends, to belong to everyone- not the exclusive domain of a Latin American populist ideology with a tendency towards authoritarianism and conflict.

In her attempt to define the parameters in which Francis should conduct himself, Cristina Fernandez has quoted the historical precedent of the Papal mediation over Argentina and Chile’s disputed sovereignty claim over the Beagle Channel.

The comparison barely stands up to close inspection. The mediation over the Beagle Channel by a non-Argentine Pope involved a willing negotiation by two Catholic countries under the auspices of a non-Argentine Pope. Any attempt by Pope Francis to mediate in the Falklands/Malvinas dispute would be rejected outright by Britain, on the grounds of the Pope’s nationality, and religious bias.

But the question is whether Pope Francis would allow himself to be used politically by the Cristina Fernandez government. I believe the answer must be no. For the goodwill that has grown up around the figure of Pope Francis has been largely thanks to a humility in style, practice, and word that is in striking contrast to the court of Mrs. Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, its confrontational politics, and bogus radicalism. When Mrs. Fernandez reaches for her make-up, Francis washes feet.

(*) Jimmy Burns is the Chairman of The Anglo-Spanish Society. He is a Spanish born English author and journalist with long experience in Latin America and Argentina. He arrived in Buenos Aires in the middle of a military palace coup and three months before the 1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands by the Argentine armed forces sparked off a three-month war with Britain. Well beyond the conflict he remained in Argentina, covering the country's transition to democracy, as well as political developments in Chile, Uruguay, and Paraguay. He continued to regularly contribute articles on Latin America to other media outlets in the UK, Europe, and the US.
 

Top Comments

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  • Gordo1

    The Pope is a “porteño” - what more can be said!

    Mar 20th, 2013 - 07:50 am 0
  • HansNiesund

    Next up, the Grand Mufti.

    Mar 20th, 2013 - 10:30 am 0
  • ChrisR

    He is just too polite to tell her to fcuk off.

    Mar 20th, 2013 - 11:02 am 0
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