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Pope urges battle against injustice

Mexico’s priests mustn’t be resigned to violence.

- By Jacobo Garcia, Nicole Winfield and Peter Orsi Associated Press

MORELIA, Mexico — Pope Francis urged Mexico’s priests Tuesday to fight injustice and not resign themselves to the drug fueled violence and corruption around them, issuing a set of marching orders to shake up a Mexican church known for its cozy ties to the rich and powerful.

Francis traveled to a hotbed of Mexico’s drug trade for a Mass with the country’s priests and nuns. It was the first event of a daylong visit to Morelia, the capital of Michoacan state, that includes a meeting with young people, a fixture of papal trips that often produces some of the most memorable and spontaneou­s moments.

Francis’ visit was also a symbolic vote of confidence for the city’s archbishop, Alberto Suarez Inda.

Like Francis, Suarez Inda has called for Mexican bishops to be closer to their people and not act like bureaucrat­s or princes. Last year, Francis made him a cardinal — an unambiguou­s sign that Francis wants “peripheral” pastors like him at the helm of the church hierarchy.

In his homily, Francis admonished the priests and nuns to not become resigned to the problems around them or give in to paralysis, which he called the devil’s “favorite weapon.”

“What come to temptation can us from places often dominated by violence, corruption, drug traffickin­g, disregard for human dignity and indifferen­ce in the face of suffering and vulnerabil­ity? What temptation might we suffer over and over again when faced with this reality, which seems to have become a permanent system?” Francis asked.

“I think we can sum it up in one word: resignatio­n,” he said.

It was a clear reference to the situation in Michoacan, a major methamphet­amine production hub, as well as the nation at large, where gangs and drug lords have thrived thanks in part to the complicity of police and other public authoritie­s.

That corruption came to light most recently in the case of drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, who escaped for a second time from a maximum security prison in July and was recaptured after an October meeting with actor Sean Penn.

Rather than give up in the face of such corruption, Francis urged the clerics to look to the model of Vasco de Quiroga, a 16th-century Spanish bishop who came to New Spain and founded Utopian-style indigenous communitie­s where agricultur­e and handicraft­s were taught.

Francis said that, when de Quiroga saw Indians being “sold, humiliated and homeless in marketplac­es” due to colonial exploitati­on, he did not resign himself to inaction but rather was inspired to fight injustice.

Since beginning his Mexico trip Friday night, Francis has repeatedly taken to task the Mexican church leadership, many of whom are closely linked to Mexico’s political and financial elite and are loath to speak out on behalf of the poor and victims of social injustice.

“Sometimes the violence has made us give up, either out of discourage­ment, habit or fear,” said Fausto Mendez, a 23-year-old seminarian who attended Tuesday’s Mass. “That’s why the pope comes to tell us not to be afraid to do the right thing.”

On Saturday in Mexico City, Francis scolded what he called gossiping, careermind­ed and aloof clerics and admonished them to stand by their flock and offer “prophetic courage” in facing down the drug trade. In an inscriptio­n in a seminary guest book, he urged future priests to be pastors of God and not “clerics of the state.”

“Although on Saturday he spoke strongly to the bishops, it was also directed at us,” said Uriel Perez, a 20-year-old seminarian at Tuesday’s Mass. “Because the pope is demanding and he wants us to be prepared and on the streets shoulder to shoulder with our flock.”

Francis wraps up his five- day Mexico trip Wednesday with a visit to Ciudad Juarez, across from El Paso, Texas, for a crossborde­r Mass expected to focus heavily on the plight of migrants.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? Pope Francis receives a warm welcome Tuesday in Morelia, Mexico, a hotbed of the country’s drug trade.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP Pope Francis receives a warm welcome Tuesday in Morelia, Mexico, a hotbed of the country’s drug trade.

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