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By Alasdair Baverstock
In 2005, then Pope Benedict quoted from an obscure medieval text
which declared that the Prophet Mohammed, founder of the Islamic faith,
was “evil and inhuman”, enraging the Muslim population and causing
attacks on churches throughout the world before an apology was issued.
Reacting within days to the statements, speaking through a spokesman
to Newsweek Argentina, then Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio declared his
“unhappiness” with the statements, made at the University of Regensburg
in Germany, and encouraged many of his subordinates with the Church to
do the same.
“Pope Benedict’s statement don’t reflect my own opinions”, the then
Archbishop of Buenos Aires declared. “These statements will serve to
destroy in 20 seconds the careful construction of a relationship with
Islam that Pope John Paul II built over the last twenty years”.
The Vatican reacted
quickly, removing one subordinate, Joaquín Piña the Archbishop of
Puerto Iguazú from his post within four days of his making similar
statements to the Argentine national media, sending a clear statement to
Cardinal Bergoglio that he would be next should he choose to persist.
Reacting to the threats from Rome, Cardinal Bergoglio cancelled his
plans to fly to Rome, choosing to boycott the second synod that Pope
Benedict had called during his tenure as pontiff.
“The only thing that didn’t happen to Bergoglio was being removed
from his post”, wrote investigative journalist Horacio Verbitsky in his
column in left-wing daily newspaper Página/24. “The Vatican was very
quick to react.”
Cristina Kirchner, the Argentina president, stated at the time that such diatribes were “dangerous for everyone”.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/the-pope/9931030/Pope-Francis-run-in-with-Benedict-XVI-over-the-Prophet-Mohammed.html
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