Cardinal
Jorge Bergoglio takes name of Francis after accepting his election as 266th
head of Roman Catholic Church
The
cardinals of the Roman Catholic church on Wednesday chose as their new pope a
man from almost "the end of the world" – the first non-European to be
elected for almost 1,300 years and the first-ever member of the Jesuit order.
Jorge
Mario Bergoglio, the archbishop of Buenos Aires, becomes Pope Francis – the
first pontiff to take that name – an early indication perhaps of a reign he
hopes will be marked by inspirational preaching and evangelization.
But
the cardinals' choice risked running into immediate controversy over the new
pope's role in Argentina's troubled history. In his book, El Silencio, a
prominent Argentinian journalist alleged that he connived in the abduction of
two Jesuit priests by the military junta in the so-called "dirty
war". He denies the accusation.
The
new pope appeared on the balcony over the entrance to St Peter's basilica more
than an hour after white smoke poured from the chimney above the Sistine
Chapel, signalling that the cardinals had made their choice. Dressed in his new
white robes, the bespectacled Argentinian prelate looked pensive and perhaps a
little intimidated as he looked out at the sea of jubilant humanity in the
square.
The
former Cardinal Bergoglio was not among the front-runners. But he obtained more
votes than any other candidate except former pope Benedict in the 2005 conclave,
and – although his election came as a surprise – he was certainly not a rank
outsider.
According
to some accounts, he was not chosen eight years ago because he begged his
fellow cardinals not to continue voting for him. As he uttered his first words
– "buona sera" – and the
cheering died away, he told the crowd that his peers had been tasked with
finding a bishop of Rome. "And it seems that they went almost to the end
of the world to find him. But we're here," he said with a smile.
After
a prayer for his predecessor, Benedict XVI, the new pope invited the faithful
in the square to "pray for the entire world". He added: "I hope
that this path for the church will be one fruitful for evangelization."
Faced
with a sharp choice between those cardinals who wanted a thorough shake-up of
the Vatican and those who did not, it appeared the electors in the Sistine
Chapel opted for compromise. Bergoglio has a reputation for both political
canniness and reforming drive. Among the tests facing the 76-year-old will be
the awesome managerial demands of the job.
The
fumata bianca –
the white smoke signal that marks the successful conclusion of a conclave –
arrived after five ballots at the end of the second day of voting. The smoke
that poured out of the comignolo,
the copper and steel tube on the roof of the Sistine Chapel, was greeted with
cries of delight and applause from the crowd below. Soon after, the bells of St
Peter's rang out, confirming that a new pope had taken over the spiritual
leadership of the world's 1.2 billion baptised Catholics.
Inside
the Sistine Chapel after the final vote was cast, the most junior of the
cardinals, James Harvey, a former prefect of the papal household, called in the
secretary of the college of cardinals, Monsignor Lorenzo Baldisseri, and the
master of papal liturgical ceremonies, Monsignor Guido Marini, to witness the
new pope's acceptance of one of the most daunting jobs on Earth.
The
most senior of the electors, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, approached the
pope-to-be and – in accordance with tradition – asked him in Latin: "Do
you accept your canonical election as supreme pontiff?"
Having
obtained his consent, he will have asked: "By what name do you wish to be
called?" The master of ceremonies, acting as a notary, will then have
summoned two of his staff to act as witnesses, and prepared the document that
certifies the new pope's acceptance.
Newly
elected popes are taken to be robed in the Room of Tears, its name an
indication of the reluctance with which most approach the task. The last holder
of the office, Benedict XVI, introduced a change in the ritual that allows the
new pope to pray before he is announced to the world.
Benedict
abdicated on 28 February, saying that he was no longer able to cope with the
burden of his office. He was the first pontiff to resign voluntarily since
Celestine V in 1294.The world's Catholics will be looking to his successor to
provide not only spiritual inspiration but also firm leadership. The new pope
was chosen against a background of turbulence and strife unprecedented in
modern times. He takes on the leadership of a church whose faithful have been
shocked by a proliferation of clerical sex abuse scandals throughout the rich
world and dismayed by events in and around the Vatican.
The
day for the 115 cardinal-electors began at about 6.30am local time in the Casa
Santa Marta, their simple but comfortable – and highly protected – residence in
the walled city state. After breakfast, they made their way to the Apostolic
Palace, the home of the popes, for morning mass in the Pauline Chapel. By about
9.30am, they had settled themselves into the Sistine Chapel for prayers and the
resumption of voting.
Benedict's
startling decision to resign came after years of mounting tension and discreet
but venomous infighting in the Roman Curia, the central administration of the
Catholic church. Last year, some of the pope's correspondence, pointing to
bitter rivalries and maladministration – or worse – in the Vatican was
published in book form.
Benedict's
butler, Paolo Gabriele, was tried and imprisoned for leaking the documents, but
the journalist to whom the papers were passed has said that his source was part
of a much broader network of disaffected Vatican employees and officials.
Gabriele's arrest coincided with a renewed controversy over the Vatican bank,
whose chairman was summarily dismissed last May.
The
scandals – and a string of controversies over the pope's own declarations –
distracted attention from what was expected to be the central theme of his
papacy. Benedict came to the leadership of the Catholic church as the pope who
would begin the process of re-evangelising an increasingly secular western
world.
That
too will be an important challenge for his successor. In the approach to the
conclave several cardinals said they wanted a great pastor for the world's
biggest Christian denomination.
No
indication of how or why the new pope was chosen was expected to emerge. On Tuesday,
before the start of the conclave, the cardinal-electors took an oath of
secrecy, as had those Vatican employees and officials involved in the election.
Additional
precautions included a sweep of the Sistine Chapel to ensure that no listening
devices had been planted inside and the use of electronic jamming techniques.
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