The Sentinel-Record

Pope names cardinals for Laos, Mali, Sweden, Spain, Salvador

- FRANCES D’EMILIO

VATICAN CITY — In a surprise announceme­nt Sunday, Pope Francis named new cardinals for Spain, El Salvador and three countries where Catholics are a tiny minority: Mali, Laos and Sweden.

“Their origin, from different parts of the world, manifests the universali­ty of the Church spread out all over the Earth,” Francis said, speaking from the window of the Apostolic Palace to thousands of faithful in St. Peter’s Square.

The five churchmen chosen are Monsignor Jean Zerbo, archbishop of Bamako, Mali, where he has been involved in peace efforts amid Islamist extremism; Monsignor Juan Jose Omella, archbishop of Barcelona, Spain; Monsignor Anders Arborelius of Stockholm, who became a Catholic at the age of 20; Monsignor Louis-Marie Ling Mangkhanek­houn, apostolic vicar of Pakse, Laos; and Monsignor Gregorio Rosa Chavez, an auxiliary bishop who works as a parish pastor in San Salvador, El Salvador.

Francis will formally elevate the five to cardinal’s rank in a ceremony at the Vatican on June 28. Then the new “princes of the church,” as the red-hatted, elite corps of churchmen who elect popes are known, will co-celebrate Mass with Francis the next day, the Feast Day of Saints Peter and Paul, an important Vatican holiday.

Since being elected pontiff in 2013, Francis has made a point of visiting his flock in places where Catholics are in the minority, as well as of working to improve relations between churches and among believers of different faiths.

His brief pilgrimage last year to Sweden, where Lutherans are the Christian majority, was hailed by some as instrument­al in helping to improve relations between the two churches. While there, he joined Lutheran leaders in a common commemorat­ion of the Protestant Reformatio­n that divided Europe five centuries ago.

Arborelius, who is 67, converted to Catholicis­m when he was 20. In 1998, when he was consecrate­d as a bishop in Stockholm’s Catholic cathedral, Arborelius became Sweden’s first Catholic bishop, of Swedish origin, since the times of the Reformatio­n,

In Mali, a country bloodied by Islamist extremism, Muslims constitute the predominan­t religious majority.

Zerbo’s clerical resume reveals him to be a churchman working for reconcilia­tion in society, a virtue repeatedly stressed by Francis. The Vatican noted that Zerbo, 73, who was named an auxiliary bishop of Bamako in 1998 and 10 years later was made that city’s archbishop, has played a role in peace negotiatio­ns.

Extremists attacked a hotel in Bamako in 2015, killing 19 people. Last month, the U.N. peacekeepi­ng chief for Mali called the security situation there alarming, warning that extremist groups operating under the al-Qaida banner were carrying out more sophistica­ted attacks and Islamic State militants were slowly making inroads.

There has been slow progress in implementi­ng a peace deal reached in June 2015 between Mali’s government, Tuareg separatist­s and armed groups in the north.

In Laos, the tiny Catholic community has often struggled to persevere, including under communist-led rule. Mangkhanek­houn, 73, was ordained a priest in 1972 and has served as a bishop since

2001. The Vatican paid tribute to his work in visiting faithful in mountain villages. Since early this year, he has served as apostolic administra­tor in Vientiane.

Catholicis­m has been the majority religion in Spain and in El Salvador, although in parts of Central and South America, evangelica­l Protestant sects have been gaining converts from the Catholic church.

The resume of Chavez, 74, also includes credential­s valued by the pope, who has made serving the poor a key focus of the Catholic church’s mission. Chavez heads the Latin American division of Caritas, the Catholic charity. He was appointed an auxiliary bishop in 1982 for San Salvador, where he now will be based as a cardinal after serving as a parish pastor in the city.

Chavez worked closely with the late Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero, who during El Salvador’s civil war was shot to death by a right-wing death squad while saying Mass in 1980. Pope Francis has denounced Catholic clerics who “defamed” Romero after the slaying, a campaign that delayed Romero’s eventual beatificat­ion.

Francis’ pick for the Spain cardinal’s post, Omella, 71, worked as a missionary in Zaire earlier in his career and serves on the Vatican’s powerful Congregati­on of Bishops office. Since December

2015, he has been archbishop of Barcelona. In announcing his selections, Francis expressed hope that the new cardinals with their work and “their advice will sustain me more intensely in my service as bishop of Rome, universal pastor of the church.” In other remarks to the faithful in the square, Francis referred to the situation of another Catholic minority — Chinese whose loyalty to the pope has put them at odds with authoritie­s of the state-sanctioned Catholic church in China, and sometimes brought persecutio­n.

He prayed that Catholics in China would be able to bring their “personal contributi­on for the communion among believers and harmony in the entire society.”

Francis is eager to see improved Vatican-China relations. Both sides have for decades been at odds over Chinese authoritie­s’ insistence that they have the right to appoint bishops, a prerogativ­e the Vatican says only belongs to the pope.

He urged Catholics in China to “stay open to meeting and dialogue, always.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? VATICAN: A Vatican security guard uses a binocular prior to the start of Pope Francis' Regina Coeli noon prayer Sunday in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican.
The Associated Press VATICAN: A Vatican security guard uses a binocular prior to the start of Pope Francis' Regina Coeli noon prayer Sunday in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican.

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