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Pope’s Washington Mass for saint will be in Spanish

- Gregory Korte @gregorykor­te USA TODAY

When Pope Francis celebrates a canonizati­on Mass for a Spanish-American missionary in Washington this month, he will do so in a language that the new saint, Junípero Serra, would recognize: Spanish.

There’s a number of reasons for that, said Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington who will host the pope on the Washington leg of his threecity U.S. visit this month.

First, Spanish is the pope’s mother tongue; he was born in Argentina.

“But it’s also a recognitio­n of how large the Hispanic population in the United States is,” Wuerl said. “And also because he is canonizing a Spanish speaker. And he’s coming as the first pope from the New World, and the lan- guage, the predominan­t language of the Western Hemisphere, is Spanish.”

Hispanics make up one-third of the U.S. Catholic church. “They’re the biggest source of population growth in the church,” said Julia Young, a professor at the Catholic University of America, a pontifical­ly chartered university in Washington, who has written about the history of Hispanic Catholics in America.

“But most Latinos and Hispanics, coming here from counties that are majority Catholic, are facing challenges to their Catholic identity. There have been a number of Pentecosta­l denominati­ons that have been appealing to that community and have been making inroads,” she said. “So from the perspectiv­e of the institutio­nal church, which obviously wants to keep people in the church, there’s a real need to reach out to the next generation of Latinos and make sure they’re becoming part of the church.”

The canonizati­on Mass is also a reminder that “the Latino Catholic church in the United States is actually older than the United States itself,” Young said. “So as a historian, it’s interestin­g that this is a nod to the deep Latino history of Catholicis­m.”

Serra was born on the Spanish island of Mallorca in 1713, became a Franciscan friar and sailed to Mexico in 1749. He establishe­d a series of missions along the California coast. John Paul II set his cause for sainthood into motion by beatifying him in 1988, but his sainthood is controvers­ial among some Native American groups for the sometimes coercive methods he used to convert tribes to Christiani­ty.

The canonizati­on Mass will be outdoors at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception and the adjoining campus of the Catholic University of America. Tickets are being distribute­d by the archdioces­e to parishes, mostly in the Washington area, and Wuerl said he’s had 10 requests for every ticket. “I have found that I have far more dear friends than I ever realized,” he said. “So the balancing act is how do you get an equitable distributi­on of those seats. ... That’s a good problem to have.”

 ?? MANDEL NGAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A man looks at an exhibition on Junípero Serra at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.
MANDEL NGAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES A man looks at an exhibition on Junípero Serra at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.

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