The Mercury News

Pope finds ‘heart of the church’ in the Amazon

- By Nicole Winfield and Christine Armario

From deep in the scorching Amazon rainforest, Pope Francis demanded Friday that corporatio­ns stop their relentless extraction of timber, gas and gold from God’s “holy ground,” and called on government­s to recognize the indigenous peoples living there as the primary forces in determinin­g its future.

Bare-chested and tattooed native families, many sporting feathered and beaded headgear, interrupte­d Francis repeatedly with applause, wailing horns and beating drums as history’s first Latin American pope declared the Amazon and its indigenous peoples the “heart of the church.”

In the highlight of his weeklong trip to Chile and Peru, Francis warned that the Amazon people are now more threatened than ever before, and called for a three-fold defense of their life, their land and their cultures.

“You are a living memory of the mission that God has entrusted to us all: the protection of our common home,” the pope said.

Francis travelled to the steamy city of Puerto Maldonado, the gateway to Peru’s Amazon, before even calling on President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, a protocol-bending change to the itinerary undertaken because of weather concerns that had the unintended effect of signaling that the Amazon natives were Francis’ top priority in Peru.

Francis did meet later with Kucyznski in the presidenti­al palace in Lima, where he blasted corruption as a “social virus” that must be stopped — a charged comment given the Peruvian president is under investigat­ion in Latin America’s biggest corruption scandal.

Francis’ trip to the Amazon came as the expansion of illegal gold mining, new roads, dams and farming have all turned thousands of acres of once lush green forest into barren, contaminat­ed wastelands. In his landmark 2015 encyclical, “Praise Be,” Francis demanded world leaders do more to protect what he called “one of the lungs” of God’s creation, and denounced the profit-atall-cost business interests behind its steady demise.

The issue is so important to the Argentine pope that he has called a global church meeting next year on the Amazon and its native peoples. Friday’s encounter served in many ways as an unofficial opening to the synod, giving the native peoples themselves the floor.

“The sky is angry and is crying because we are destroying the planet,” Hector Sueyo, a member of the indigenous Harakbut people, told the pope in between performanc­es of traditiona­l songs and dance in a steamy stadium in Puerto Maldonado.

Yesica Patiachi, also Harakbut, told Francis that loggers, oil workers and gold diggers all come to their lands to take the resources without even consulting with the indigenous people whose ancestors have lived there for centuries, cutting their trees, killing their fish and polluting their rivers with runoff that turns them into “black waters of death.”

“We ask you to defend us,” she said to applause.

Answering the call, Francis condemned big businesses that want to “lay their hands on” the Amazon’s riches. But he also criticized conservati­on efforts that claim to preserve the rainforest but end up walling off vast swaths of its resources from the people who live there and need it to survive.

“These problems strangle her peoples and provoke the migration of the young due to the lack of local alternativ­es,” he said. “We have to break with the historical paradigm that views the Amazonia as an inexhausti­ble source of supplies for other countries without concern for its inhabitant­s.”

He said it was “essential” for government­s and other institutio­ns to consider indigenous as legitimate partners when negotiatin­g developmen­t and conservati­on projects and said their rights, cultures, languages and spirituali­ty must be respected and recovered.

The crowd responded with a rhyming Amazonian riff on a popular papal chant: “Papa Franciso, la selva esta contigo” —”Pope Francis, the jungle is with you.”

After his speech, an indigenous man in a wheelchair who was left partially paralyzed after being shot by police during a protest placed a headdress of red and yellow feathers on the pope’s head and a necklace of native beads around his neck.

Thousands of indigenous men, women and children had traveled through the jungle by boat, on foot and in buses and cars to reach Puerto Maldonado to participat­e in what many hoped would be a turning point for the increasing­ly threatened ecosystem. Though many didn’t quite know why Francis was coming, others saw in him a bridge with Peru’s government to resolve long-standing issues like land rights.

“It was what we’d hoped to hear from the pope,” Lizardo Cauper, the president of the Amazon’s largest indigenous organizati­on, said after Francis’ speech. “He expressed what we have been demanding for some time.”

The Amazon’s native peoples hail from about 350 indigenous groups, some of whom live in voluntary isolation. In the centuries after Spanish colonizati­on, most traces of native, spiritual beliefs were lost as missionari­es converted indigenous Peruvians to Catholicis­m.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Flanked by Bishop David Martinez and Father Bruco Cadore, Pope Francis speaks to indigenous groups in Puerto Maldonado, Peru, on Friday.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flanked by Bishop David Martinez and Father Bruco Cadore, Pope Francis speaks to indigenous groups in Puerto Maldonado, Peru, on Friday.

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