The Columbus Dispatch

In democracy’s birthplace, pope warns of populist threats

- Nicole Winfield and Derek Gatopoulos

ATHENS, Greece – Pope Francis warned Saturday that the “easy answers” of populism and authoritar­ianism are threatenin­g democracy in Europe and called for fresh dedication to promoting the common good.

Arriving in Greece, the birthplace of democracy, Francis used a speech to Greek political and cultural leaders to warn Europe at large about the threats facing the continent. He said only robust multilater­alism can address the pressing issues of the day, from protecting the environmen­t to fighting the pandemic and poverty.

“Politics needs this, in order to put common needs ahead of private interests,” Francis said. “Yet we cannot avoid noting with concern how today, and not only in Europe, we are witnessing a retreat from democracy.”

Later Saturday, Francis met with the leader of Greece’s Orthodox Church, Archbishop Ieronymos, and was briefly heckled as he arrived at the archbishop’s residence.

“Pope, you’re a heretic!” an elderly Orthodox priest shouted three times before police took him away. Francis appeared not to notice and proceeded inside, but the disturbanc­e was a reminder of the lingering tensions between Catholics and Orthodox Christians in Greece.

Francis, who lived through Argentina’s populist Peronist era as well as its military dictatorsh­ip, has frequently warned about the threat of authoritar­ianism and populism and the danger it poses to the European Union and democracy itself.

He didn’t name any specific countries or leaders during his speech. The EU, however, is locked in a feud with members Poland and Hungary over rule-of-law issues, with Warsaw insisting that Polish law takes precedence over EU policies and regulation­s.

Outside the bloc, populist leaders in Brazil and the administra­tion of former U.S. President Donald Trump pressed nationalis­t policies on the environmen­t that contrasted sharply with Francis’ call to care for “our common home.”

Opening the second leg of his fiveday trip to Cyprus and Greece, Francis recalled that it was in Greece, according to Aristotle, that man became conscious of being a political animal and a member of a community of fellow citizens.

“Here, democracy was born,” Francis told Greek President Katerina Sakellarop­oulou. “That cradle, thousands of years later, was to become a house, a great house of democratic peoples. I am speaking of the European Union and the dream of peace and fraternity that it represents for so many peoples.”

That dream is at risk amid the economic upheaval and other disruption­s of the pandemic that can breed nationalis­t sentiments and make authoritar­ianism seem “compelling and populism’s easy answers appear attractive,” Francis said.

“The remedy is not to be found in an obsessive quest for popularity, in a thirst for visibility, in a flurry of unrealisti­c promises ... but in good politics,” he said.

As an example, Francis praised the “necessary vaccinatio­n campaign” promoted by government authoritie­s to tame the coronaviru­s. He referenced another Greek doctor-philosophe­r – Hippocrate­s – in response to vaccine skeptics and virus deniers, who count many religious conservati­ves among them.

Francis cited the Hippocrati­c oath to not only do what is best for the sick, but to “abstain from whatever is harmful and offensive to others,” especially the elderly.

Greece’s president echoed the sentiment in her speech. “The virus spreads and mutates, helped by the irrational denial of reality and inequaliti­es in our societies,” Sakellarop­oulou said.

Greece is grappling with its highest level of coronaviru­s infections since the start of the pandemic with deaths approachin­g record levels. A quarter of the country’s adults remain unvaccinat­ed, and Parliament recently approved a vaccine mandate for people over age 60.

Francis’ trip has been clouded by the Dec. 2 death of the Vatican’s ambassador to the European Union, Archbishop Aldo Giordano. He and the president of the Italian bishops’ conference were among several prelates who tested positive after celebratin­g Francis’ final Mass in Slovakia in September.

The Vatican’s EU embassy insisted that Giordano caught the virus days earlier during a European bishops’ meeting in Hungary.

Francis’ visit to Cyprus and Greece also has focused on the plight of migrants as Europe hardens its border control policies. He is scheduled to travel Sunday to the Aegean Sea island of Lesbos, where he visited five years ago to meet with migrants at a detention camp.

In Athens, Francis is also met with Archbishop Ieronymos, the head of Greece’s Orthodox Church.

In 2001, Pope John Paul II became the first Catholic leader to visit Greece in more than 1,200 years, and he used the occasion to beg forgivenes­s for the sins “by action or omission” of Catholics against Orthodox over the centuries. Francis’ visit 20 years later is expected to further try to heal Catholic-orthodox ties, still wounded by the Great Schism that divided Christiani­ty as evidenced by the heckling incident Saturday.

Francis has accelerate­d interfaith initiative­s, as the two churches attempt to shift from centuries of competitio­n and mistrust toward collaborat­ion.

Orthodox churches are also seeking alliances amid a deepening dispute over the independen­ce of the Ukrainian church, which was historical­ly governed by the Russian Orthodox Church.

Up to 4,000 police officers were readied for duty in Athens for the pope’s visit, and authoritie­s banned protests and large public gatherings in parts of central Athens over the weekend.

The pope’s visit ends Monday.

 ?? IMAGES VATICAN MEDIA/AFP VIA GETTY ?? Pope Francis, left, signs a document next to Archbishop Ieronymos II, of the Orthodox Church, in Athens, on Saturday.
IMAGES VATICAN MEDIA/AFP VIA GETTY Pope Francis, left, signs a document next to Archbishop Ieronymos II, of the Orthodox Church, in Athens, on Saturday.

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