Yahoo – AFP,
Kelly Velasquez, Paula Bustamante, 11 July 2015
Asuncion
(AFP) - Pope Francis brought his message of equality to Paraguay, on the third
and final stop of a South America tour that has burnished his reputation as a
powerful voice for the downtrodden.
The pope
was greeted by tens of thousands of people as he made his way from the airport
to downtown Asuncion, where he praised Paraguay's "solid and stable"
democracy, but called on leaders to address inequality.
"An
economic development which fails to take into account the weakest and
underprivileged is not an authentic development," the first Jesuit pope
told Paraguay, which has one of the region's highest rates of growth -- and
inequality.
The pope
also paid tribute to the country's women, largely left widowed and orphaned
during the War of the Triple Alliance from 1865 to 1870, which nearly decimated
the male population.
"As
mothers, wives and widows, they shouldered the heaviest burdens," Francis
said.
"They
found a way to move their families and their country forward, instilling in new
generations the hope of a better tomorrow."
His arrival
marks the second visit by a pope to Asuncion after John Paul II in 1988 -- just
one year before dictator Alfredo Stroessner fell, making way for democracy.
"It is
not hard to feel at home in so welcoming a land," the pope said.
"Paraguay
is known as the heart of America, not only because of its geographic location,
but also because of the warmth of its hospitality and the friendliness of her
people."
The 78-year-old
Argentine pope arrived in Asuncion from Santa Cruz, Bolivia. As his Airbus
crossed over northern Argentina, he sent Argentine President Cristina Kirchner
a message of "affection for his dear country."
Francis has
not returned to his home country since his election as pope in March 2013, but
could travel there on an official visit in 2016.
On
Saturday, the pope will visit the Marian Shrine of Caacupe and on Sunday will
travel to a poor Asuncion neighborhood, ahead of a mass expected to draw a
crowd of one million.
Francis
begins his trip back to the Vatican Sunday, concluding his three-nation tour
that also saw him travel to Ecuador.
Paraguay is
home to the main base of South America's Jesuit mission. Adding to its Catholic
credentials, the country elected a bishop, Fernando Lugo, to the presidency in
2008. He served in office until 2012, when he was kicked out in a coup.
- 'Many
sins' -
Before
leaving Bolivia earlier in the day, Francis ventured into a violent,
overcrowded and gang-ridden Bolivian prison that houses children living with
their parents. He hugged and kissed inmates and urged them not to yield to the
"devil."
One
disconsolate female inmate broke down in tears and threw herself into the
pope's arms, saying she felt utterly abandoned.
The
pontiff, who specifically requested the visit to the Palmasola jail, walked
slowly through a courtyard where hundreds of prisoners and their families
awaited him.
Back inside
the penitentiary, Francis exchanged hugs and kisses with prisoners and held
children in his arms, kissing them too.
"The
man standing before you is a man who has experienced forgiveness. A man who
was, and is, saved from his many sins," said Francis, the first pope from
Latin America.
"That
is who I am. I don't have much more to give you or to offer you, but I want to
share with you what I do have and what I love. It is Jesus Christ."
The
Palmasola prison, nearly 50 years old, was built to hold 600 prisoners but is
now overflowing with nearly 5,000 men and women.
A gang war
there in 2013 left more than 30 people dead. An estimated 30 percent of the
inmates are accused of rape.
September
return
Ecuador,
Bolivia and Paraguay are predominantly Catholic and have been marked by a long
history of poverty and inequality, especially afflicting indigenous
populations.
Beginning
in the 1500s, Spanish conquerors, with the blessing of the Church, subjugated
and enslaved indigenous peoples in the Americas, annihilating native cultures
and forcing their conversion to Christianity.


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