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Thursday, November 30, 2017

IT APPEARS THAT THE LIBERAL PRESS' LOVE AFFAIR WITH THIS POPE IS OVER

The New York Times offers stinging criticism of the reigning Pontiff:

Pope can’t avoid criticism over Rohingya issue

YANGON, MYANMAR
In his last full day in Myanmar, Pope Francis sought to pivot away from politics and the disappointment over his decision to avoid mentioning the persecuted Rohingya Muslims and to find safer ground in Catholic liturgy and interreligious dialogue.

But even as the pope removed his shoes to meet with monks in a pagoda and celebrated Mass at a colonial-era racetrack, his decision not to directly address one of the world’s most acute humanitarian disasters cast a pall over what the Vatican sought to portray as a historic visit of bridge-building with a fledgling democracy.
“Nobody ever said Vatican diplomacy is infallible,” the Vatican spokesman, Greg Burke, said at a news briefing here Wednesday evening. He said that no one in the Vatican had second-guessed the pope’s decision to avoid mentioning the Rohingya or considered pulling the plug on the visit, which even the pope’s supporters consider a tactical blunder for a usually politically sure-footed pontiff.
“He is not afraid of minefields,” Burke said, bristling at the notion that the trip had damaged the moral authority that is the pope’s most powerful diplomatic asset.
“People are not expected to solve impossible problems,” he said. “You'll see him going ahead and you can criticize what is said and what is not said. But the pope is not going to lose moral authority on this question here.”
Myanmar presented the pope with a treacherous diplomatic tight wire. The world expected a global figure who has championed the downtrodden to speak out for the more than 600,000 Rohingya Muslims who have fled from Myanmar’s Rakhine state to Bangladesh to escape a military campaign of killings, rape and arson. But local bishops urged him to avoid addressing the issue out of concern that it could aggravate the problem and endanger the small Christian minority.
In the news conference, Burke suggested that the pope had privately raised the issue with Aung San Suu Kyi, the country’s de facto leader and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate whose own reputation has sunk with the weight of the crisis.

4 comments:

Daniel said...

Hopefully, if the Times criticizes him, conservatives will start liking him again. :)

Daniel said...

But, if you actually read the Times story, it is hardly "stinging criticism."
The bulk of it involves the Pooe's spokesman explaining away the situation, and nobody in the article actually criticizes Francis.

Victor said...

Well, at least he finally mentioned the name of Jesus during his trip. Prior to his homily, only Buddhists around him mentioned our Saviour's name, and in a complimentary way, which made me wonder if this pope were Catholic, nay Christian, at all. But I suppose proslytism is anathema at the Vatican these days, contrary to what Jesus in the Gospels mandates about evangelizing the world

Rood Screen said...

This was a very touchy situation, for which the Holy Father deserves some credit for even attempting to navigate. The article itself does not really seem very critical of him. As for whatever criticism there is, it's not clear to me why anyone thinks the Catholics can stop the Buddhists from killing the Moslims, any more that Pius XII could stop the Nazi pagans from killing the Jews.

There's no point condemning a rogue nation unless you have an army that's ready and willing to back up your condemnation.