Las Vegas Review-Journal

In a brief visit to Budapest, Pope Francis asked Hungary to extend its arms to everyone.

Statements conflict with Orban’s border policies

- By Nicole Winfield and Justin Spike

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Pope Francis urged Hungary on Sunday to “extend its arms towards everyone,” in a veiled critique of Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s anti-migrant policies, as the pontiff opened a four-day visit to Central Europe in his first big internatio­nal outing since undergoing intestinal surgery in July.

Francis, 84, appeared in good form during his short visit to Budapest, presiding over a lengthy Mass and standing as he waved to crowds from his open-sided popemobile. He used a golf cart to avoid walking long distances indoors and confessed at one point that he had to sit because “I’m not 15 anymore.” But otherwise he kept up the typical grueling pace of a papal trip despite his ongoing recovery.

Francis spent just seven hours in Budapest before arriving Sunday afternoon in neighborin­g Slovakia to start a four-day tour. The lopsided

itinerary suggested that Francis wanted to avoid giving Orban — the type of populist nationalis­t he frequently criticizes — the political boost that comes with hosting a pope for a proper state visit ahead of elections in Hungary next spring.

Francis did meet upon arrival with Orban, whose refugee policies clash with the pope’s call to welcome and integrate those seeking better lives in Europe. After the meeting, Orban wrote on Facebook: “I asked Pope Francis not to let Christian Hungary perish.”

The Vatican said the meeting was held in a “cordial atmosphere” and lasted longer than expected — 40 minutes.

“Among the various topics discussed were the role of the church in the country, the commitment to the protection of the environmen­t, the protection and promotion of the family,” said a Vatican statement.

Vatican and Hungarian officials have insisted Francis wasn’t snubbing Hungary by staying for such a short time, noting that the Hungarian church and state only invited him to close out an internatio­nal conference on the Eucharist on Sunday.

It was at the end of that Mass that Francis urged Hungarians to remain steadfast in their religious roots, but not in a defensive way that closes them off from the rest of the world.

“Religious sentiment has been the lifeblood of this nation, so attached to its roots,” he said. “Yet the cross, planted in the ground, not only invites us to be well-rooted, it also raises and extends its arms toward everyone.”

He said Hungarians should stay firm in their roots while “opening ourselves to the thirst of the men and women of our time.”

“My wish is that you be like that: rounded and open, rooted and considerat­e,” he said.

Orban had a front-row seat during the Mass.

“Diversity always is scary because it puts at risk acquired securities and provokes stability,” he said. “But it’s still a great opportunit­y because opens the heart” to the Gospel message of loving one another.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Pope Francis exchanges gifts with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban at Budapest’s Museum of Fine Arts on Sunday.
The Associated Press Pope Francis exchanges gifts with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban at Budapest’s Museum of Fine Arts on Sunday.

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