Don't be surprised, Girard said, if the
new pope shows flexibility on contraceptives, but don't expect him to budge on
the Catholic Church's opposition to abortion.
There's been no shortage of praise for
Francis as a passionate preacher and pragmatic man who prefers public
transportation to private cars. It goes to his reputation as an independent
thinker. But look deeper into Francis' history to see a more complicated man
who's been formed by the times he's lived in.
Dark times
Possibly the darkest period during
Francis' rise to power took place when he served as the nation's top Jesuit.
In 1976, during Argentina's dictatorship,
the navy kidnapped priests Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics. Some have
accused Francis, then provincial superior for the Society of Jesus, of not
doing enough to assert his influence and free them. They were found five months
later.
The incident led to rumors and allegations
that Francis was complicit in the dictatorship's appalling atrocity -- that he
didn't do enough to expose it and perhaps was even partly responsible for the
priests' prolonged detention, said Jim Nicholson, a former U.S. ambassador to
the Holy See.
Although the allegations against Francis
have never been proved, they continue to haunt him, so much so that the human
rights group Center for Legal and Social Studies in Argentina opposes Francis'
selection as pope.
Situations relating to the priests'
kidnappings "have not been clarified," said the group's director,
Gaston Chillier.
Many of the allegations against Francis
were researched by Argentine journalist Horacio Verbitsky, who wrote a book
about the church's role during the dictatorship.
In a 2010 column, Verbitsky alleged that
Francis had lied under oath during an investigation into the theft of babies
from prisoners during the dictatorship.
Francis testified that he never knew about
the baby-stealing until after the dictatorship had fallen, Verbitsky wrote, but
a victim Verbitsky interviewed claims that Francis knew about it at the time.
She said she had written to Francis about it.
Nicholson said there's no evidence to
support the allegations.
The Vatican pushed back Friday against the
accusations. The Rev. Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman, dismissed the
claims as false and defamatory.
"The campaign against (Jorge Mario)
Bergoglio is well known and goes back to many years ago. It was promoted by a
defamatory publication," Lombardi said at a Vatican news conference, using
the name that Francis used before he became pope.
Argentine judicial authorities questioned
Bergoglio once, but nothing was imputed against him, Lombardi said, adding that
Bergoglio denied the allegations against him.
"His role is well noted on how he
promoted reconciliation in Argentina," he said.
The fight
Then there's the fight between the archbishop
and the president.
In 2010, President Cristina Fernandez de
Kirchner led a battle to pass a bill to legalize gay marriage.
Francis, then archbishop of Buenos Aires,
put himself right in the middle of the fight, calling the proposed legislation
"a destructive attack on God's plan."
With a front-page counterpunch, the
president said the church possessed "attitudes reminiscent of medieval
times and the Inquisition."
The bill eventually became law, and
Francis left the battlefield defeated.
But some supporters hold it up as evidence
of his traditionalist views.
Perhaps it's no surprise Kirchner gave
Francis a rather dry congratulations after his election, said Rosendo Fraga, an
Argentine political analyst.
The president failed to even mention that
Francis is the first pope from Argentina or the Western Hemisphere, a signal
that her government may feel at odds with the church.
Was it a snub?
Fraga said Francis "was a critic of
corruption, of social inequality, drugs, human trafficking, which in reality
wasn't an agenda of confrontation, but that the government perceived as an
agenda of confrontation."
Girard, the retired doctor who knew
Francis during his early years in the priesthood, interpreted the war of words
differently. Francis was not lashing out at just the bill but at what he saw as
a larger effort by the government to divide the country along political lines.
This is why the cardinals selected him,
Girard said: Francis doesn't fit into a mold.
"They can be progressive or
conservative," he said. "But they're not dumb."
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