Pope Francis came under fire Wednesday after lavishing praise on China in a move widely seen as part of Vatican moves to improve relations with Beijing.
Close watchers of the Holy See
were taken by surprise by the content of an interview with the Asia
Times in which the Argentinian pontiff said the world need not fear
China's growing power and avoided any mention of human rights or the
restrictions on Catholics and other Christians' freedom of worship in
the world's most populous nation.
"A
superb example of Realpolitik pushed to the extreme," was the verdict
of Sandro Magister, one of Italy's leading Vatican experts.
Writing
on his blog for Italian weekly L'Espresso, Magister lamented Francis's
"total silence" on questions of religion and freedom and what he
interpreted as an "unrestrained absolution" of the Chinese communist
regime's historical record.
In
the interview, Francis said China had always been, for him, a
"reference point of greatness" and "a great culture, with an
inexhaustible wisdom."
The
Argentinian pope made only the lightest of allusions to China's troubled
recent history, saying a people sometimes "makes a mistake and goes
backwards a little, or takes the wrong path and has to retrace its steps
to follow the right way."
Beijing recognises the country's estimated 12 million Catholics' right to exercise their fai … |
The
Vatican has not had diplomatic relations with China since 1951, with
the rupture having come only two years after the founding of the
People's Republic.
- 'Flexible, pragmatic attitude' -
All
attempts to restore them have since floundered with Beijing insisting
that the Vatican must first give up its recognition of Taiwan as a
sovereign state and promise not to interfere in religious issues in
China.
Magister contrasted Francis's optimistic portrayal of
China's potential future with the gloomy outlook of Gianni Criveller, a
Catholic missionary and China expert based in Hong Kong.
A Chinese worshipper attends the Christmas Eve mass at a Catholic church in Beijing |
Criveller recently
published an article voicing fear for Hong Kong's basic freedoms and
highlighting the case of Wei Heping, a priest serving an underground
Catholic community found dead in a river in Shanxi province in November
in what the authorities have deemed to have been a suicide.
"Many
believe he met a violent death because of his influence with young
people and online," Criveller wrote. "For many Catholics he is a
martyr."
- Imprisoned, intimidated bishops -The plight of Catholics in China, including a recent campaign to remove crosses from church buildings and imprisonment and intimidation of clerics, was also highlighted by American Vatican commentator John Allen in his www.cruxnow.com column.
"Those
paying a price for their faith in China today may be disappointed that
the pontiff did not address their fate more directly," Allen commented,
while recalling that dilemmas related to how engage China were not
restricted to the Church.
"Time will tell ... whether the goodwill
a pope buys by skipping over such matters will produce results down the
line," Allen wrote.
Francis
was given an easier ride in the Italian Catholic daily Avvenire by
Stefania Falasca, who praised the pontiff for applying "the geopolitics
of mercy" to the challenges raised by China's growing weight in the
world.
The pope's interview follows a discreet visit to the
Vatican by a delegation of Chinese officials in January which raised
hopes of a breakthrough on the contentious issue of the pope's right to
appoint Catholic bishops in China.
Beijing
recognises the country's estimated 12 million Catholics' right to
exercise their faith but insists they do so under the auspices of the
state-controlled "Catholic Patriotic Association."
Within
the Vatican there has been a long-running debate between those who
argue that the Church should seek to improve relations with China first
and hope that yields greater freedom for its followers, and those who
maintain that abuses must not go unchallenged.
Francis's
latest interview suggests the former camp has the upper hand for now -
and they will have been encouraged by China's guardedly positive
reaction.
Culled from Yahoo
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