Pope Francis leaves after met cardinals during a second day of consistory to discuss family issues at the Vatican on February 21, 2014. After a two-day meeting with cardinals from around the world, Pope Francis will formally appoint 19 new cardinals for the first time of his pontificate on February 22.
VATICAN CITY, Saturday
Pope Francis will create
his first batch of cardinals on Saturday, with nine of the 19 coming
from South America, Africa and Asia.
The new "princes
of the Church" will be presented with scarlet-red birettas and gold
rings at a grandiose ceremony in St. Peter's Basilica that Vatican
observers say should help correct a perceived bias towards European
cardinals.
Sixteen of the 19 cardinals are under the
age of 80 and can therefore take part in the secretive conclave that
elects new popes from among their ranks.
In an
indication of the importance of the developing world for the Argentine
pope -- a fierce critic of economic inequality -- half are
non-Europeans, including five cardinals from South America, two Africans
and two Asians.
"Becoming a cardinal is not a
promotion, nor an honour or a decoration; it is simply a service which
requires a broadening of the gaze and a widening of the heart," Francis
said in a letter to each new cardinal-to-be, according to La Stampa
daily.
Francis is keen to nourish faith in developing
countries, to combat the decline of practicing believers in Europe, the
Church's traditional power base.
The first non-European
pope in nearly 1,300 years will bestow the honour of the red cap on the
archbishops of Buenos Aires in Argentina, Rio de Janeiro in Brazil,
Santiago in Chile, Managua in Nicaragua and Les Cayes in Haiti.
Aurelio
Poli, 66, took over the post of Buenos Aires archbishop from Francis,
who was a regular visitor to the city's slums before he became pope
almost a year ago.
Chibly Langlois, 55, will be the Church's first cardinal from Haiti, one of the poorest countries of the world.
According
to Vatican watcher John Allen, Francis is taking the idea of
privileging the periphery even further, by choosing Haiti over the
region's three Catholic powerhouses -- Cuba, Puerto Rico or the
Dominican Republic.
For Africa, the new electors will
be the archbishops of Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso and Abidjan in Ivory
Coast, while Asia will be represented by the archbishops of Cotabato in
the Philippines and Seoul in South Korea.
The pope's
choices echo his desire to emphasis the pastoral side of the Church --
choosing for the most part leaders engaged with the problems affecting
their local communities rather than favouring administrative heads.
Only
four are members of the Curia -- the Vatican's government -- including
Italian Pietro Parolin, 58, the new secretary of state, as well as
German Gerhard Mueller, 66, who heads the Vatican's doctrinal
congregation.
Among the most prominent in the group is
Britain's Vincent Nichols, the 68-year-old Archbishop of Westminster,
who has been likened to Francis for his determination to speak out for
the marginalised.
Just a week before the Vatican
ceremony, he waded into British politics to condemn welfare cuts and is
best known for winding up the Church's conservative arm in 2010 by
defending London masses for gay and transgender Catholics.
Nichols
will be joined by Gerald Lacroix, the lord archbishop of Quebec in
Canada and one of the youngest electors to be chosen at the age of 56.
The
oldest "new prince" will be Loris Francesco Capovilla, the 98-year-old
former secretary to pope John XXIII, who will not be attending because
of his reduced mobility but is likely to receive his red cap at home.
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