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Pope addresses one million faithful and calls for dialogue and inclusion at all levels

Wednesday, July 8th 2015 - 09:14 UTC
Full article 9 comments
“Fight for inclusion at all levels,” implored Francis, while pleading for “dialogue” on the third day of a tour that also includes Bolivia and Paraguay. “Fight for inclusion at all levels,” implored Francis, while pleading for “dialogue” on the third day of a tour that also includes Bolivia and Paraguay.
Recalling his encyclical which appealed for quick action against climate change, Francis called for the Earth to be left a better place for future generations. Recalling his encyclical which appealed for quick action against climate change, Francis called for the Earth to be left a better place for future generations.
The pope addressed over 900,000 faithful who braved the cold and rain to hear his homily in Bicentennial Park, Quito The pope addressed over 900,000 faithful who braved the cold and rain to hear his homily in Bicentennial Park, Quito

Pope Francis called for dialogue in front of nearly one million people at an outdoor mass in Ecuador's capital, before launching an appeal for better care of the Amazon. The pope addressed over 900,000 faithful who braved the cold and rain to hear his homily in Bicentennial Park, Quito -- a city recently rocked by anti-government protests.

 Francis focused his message on “our revolution,” the need to spread the Roman Catholic faith.

“The enormous richness of variety... moves us away from the temptation of offers that are closer to dictatorships, ideologies or sectarianism,” said Francis, the first Latin American pope.

“Fight for inclusion at all levels,” he implored, while pleading for “dialogue” on the third day of a South American tour that will also take him to Bolivia and Paraguay.

Later, in a meeting with social organizations -- including indigenous peoples opposed to oil extraction on their lands -- the pope stressed the important role the Amazon plays in the “global ecosystem” and said that its “enormous diversity” requires particular care.

“Ecuador - together with other countries with Amazonian land -- has a chance to practice the teachings of integral ecology” he said.

The pope, recalling his encyclical last month which appealed for quick action against climate change, called for the Earth to be left a better place for future generations.

“One thing is clear, we cannot continue turning our back on reality, on our brothers, on Mother Earth,” he said during a meeting with teachers and students in northern Quito.

Environmental issues have created a headache for President Rafael Correa's eight-year-old administration, with ongoing protests by indigenous peoples over land damage that they say is due to mining and oil extraction.

The government has been beset by a separate set of protests in recent weeks over Correa's socialist policies, which have angered business leaders as well as the upper and middle classes, who want him to step down.

Correa, an admirer of the pope, had a private meeting with Francis late Monday. The pope later said he would bless the country so that internal differences might be reconciled.

During Tuesday's mass, the pope invoked South America's independence movements from Spain 200 years ago. “That cry for liberty... did not lack conviction or force, but history tells us that it was only convincing when personalism, the desire for single leaderships, were put aside,” Francis said.

Pope Francis met with Ecuadoran bishops before the Quito mass. The pope already celebrated a huge outdoor mass with 800,000 people at a park in the coastal city of Guayaquil, where he focused on the theme of family as the heart of society.

Poverty will also be a major topic during this South American tour by “the pope of the poor.”

It is the first visit by a pontiff to Ecuador in three decades. His first visit to Latin America as pope was in Brazil in 2013.

The Ecuador leg of his trip ends Wednesday with a visit to a sanctuary to the Virgin of El Quinche outside Quito before heading to Bolivia. He will then travel to Paraguay on Friday where police said they would prohibit signs alluding to hot-button social issues such as abortion and gay marriage.

Categories: Politics, Latin America.

Top Comments

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  • CaptainSilver

    How about backing birth control then? That would help the human race to resist the urge to flatten the rain forest so that new farms can feed the ever increasing population fueled by Catholic rabbits?

    And what about apologising for genocide of innocent indiginous peoples in SA?

    Jul 08th, 2015 - 10:38 am 0
  • Conqueror

    Nearly i million nutjobs that “believe” in an old beardy guy that lives on a cloud? Anyone seen “him”? Thought not.

    SoAms just want to believe that they are “select”. Indeed they are. Selected to be the dross of the planet. Brazil “selected” to commit more murders per year than any civilised country. Colombia “selected” to move more narcotics than any other country. Ecuador “selected” to have no respect for its people or world civilisation. Argieland “selected” to demonstrate how NOT to run an economy, how to lie 24/7, how to be corrupt, criminal and degenerate, how to “believe” it's of relevance to the world. Uruguay “selected” to be pointless. Venezuela “selected” to “elect” a cretin, how to destroy a “country”, how to attempt thievery from other countries.

    Jul 08th, 2015 - 03:46 pm 0
  • Brasileiro

    My beautiful America! Blessed!

    Roma Vive!

    Jul 08th, 2015 - 04:55 pm 0
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