Pope: ‘I am the devil’ next to John Paul
VILNIUS (AP) — Pope Francis has acknowledged that his reputation pales a bit compared to St. John Paul II — at least as far as Poles are concerned.
Greeting journalists Saturday en route to Lithuania, Francis was given a book about the former pope by Polish photographer Grzegorz Galazka. Receiving the large book with a beaming John Paul on the cover, Francis quipped: “(Pope John Paul II) was a saint, I am the devil.”
Laughing, Galazka immediately corrected him: “No, you are both saints! You are both saints!”
Francis’ quip appeared to acknowledge that he has his detractors, particularly among conservative Catholics who long for the more doctrinaire papacies of John Paul and Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI.
The criticism of Francis by conservatives has grown more vocal recently amid the church’s sex abuse scandals and the distress over his opening to letting divorced and civilly remarried Catholics receive Communion.
Meanwhile, Lithuania’s president has expressed gratitude to Pope Francis for paying tribute to Holocaust victims in the Baltic nation.
Francis landed Saturday in Vilnius for a four-day visit to the Baltics. He will visit a memorial site of the Vilnius Ghetto today, the 75th anniversary of its final destruction.
President Dalia Grybauskaite said Saturday: “In a country brutalized by both Nazi and Stalinist crimes, many people stood up to rescue Jews because they saw humanity as the ultimate good.”
On Sept. 23, 1943, the remaining residents in the Vilnius Ghetto were executed or sent off to concentration camps by the occupying forces of Nazi Germany.
Francis’ visit will also include neighboring Latvia and Estonia.
Pope Francis is urging Lithuania, which endured decades of Soviet and Nazi occupation, expulsions and executions, to be a model of solidarity in a world riven by intolerance as he began a visit to three Baltic nations.
Francis arrived in Lithuania on Saturday to encourage the faith and mark the 100th anniversary of Baltic independence, kicking off a grueling, four-day trip that will also take him to Latvia and Estonia.