The Palm Beach Post

Amazon is 'heart of the church' pope tells indigenous people

Pontiff calls for defense of its life, land and culture.

- By Nicole Winfield and Christine Armario

PUERTO MALDONADO, PERU

Pope Francis traveled deep — into the Amazon rainforest Friday to demand an end to the relentless exploita

tion of its timber, gas and gold and recognitio­n of its indigenous peoples as the primary custodians to determine the future of “our common home.”

Speaking to a coliseum filled with indigenous men, women and children, many of whom were bare-chested and wearing brightly-col- ored headdresse­s, Francis declared the Amazon the “heart of the church” and called for a threefold defense of its life, land and cultures. Francis warned that indig

enous peoples are now more threatened than ever before, and said it was “essential” for government­s and other institutio­ns to consider tribes as legitimate partners when negotiatin­g developmen­t and conservati­on projects. History’s first Latin American pope said their rights, cultures, languages and traditions must be respected and recovered.

“You are a living mem- ory of the mission that God has entrusted to us all: the protection of our common home,” the pope said to applause, wailing horns

and beating drums from the crowd.

“Papa Francisco!” people chanted later. “The jungle is with you!”

After his speech, an indig

enous man in a wheelchair who was left paralyzed from

the waist down 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, the steamy gateway to the Peru- vian Amazon, to participat­e in what they 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.

“His desire to be with us signals an historic reconcilia­tion with the Amazon’s indig

enous communitie­s,” said Edwin Vasquez, an indigenous leader. “We consider it a good step forward.”

Francis’ trip to the Amazon comes as the expansion of illegal gold mining and farming as well as new roads and dams have turned thousands of acres of once lush green forest into barren, contaminat­ed wasteland. Fran

cis has previously called on world leaders to protect the

Amazon, likening it to one of the “lungs of our planet.”

He is also using the trip to set the stage for a big church meeting next year on the Amazon and the native peo

ples who reside there.

 ?? L’OSSERVATOR­E ROMANO VATICAN MEDIA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis arrives Friday in a coliseum in Puerto Maldonado, Peru, the city considered a gateway to the Amazon.
L’OSSERVATOR­E ROMANO VATICAN MEDIA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis arrives Friday in a coliseum in Puerto Maldonado, Peru, the city considered a gateway to the Amazon.

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