Cardinal Vidal as Pope?
Chicago prelate says electors should look at LatAm, Philippines
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CARDINAL Ricardo Vidal, archbishop of Cebu, as the next Pope?
Why not?
Cardinal Francis George of Chicago said in an interview carried by the Chicago Tribune that if the cardinals want the new pope to focus on the plight of the poor, they should look at candidates from Latin America and the Philippines.
There are three Filipino cardinals. Retired Manila Archbishop Jaime Sin, 76, however, is ailing and has been advised by his doctors to skip the Conclave of Cardinals which must open between 15 and 20 days after the death of Pope John Paul II on April 2.
The third Filipino cardinal, Vatican-based Jose Sanchez, at 85 is no longer eligible to take part in the conclave as electors must be below 80 years old. There are 117 eligible electors in the coming conclave.
Vidal said in Manila before flying to Rome he was not interested in the papacy as he was sickly and already old at 74.
Vidal underwent angioplasty to open blocked heart arteries in November.
Asked about the possibility of the new pope coming from the Third World, he was quoted as saying, "We leave that to the Holy Spirit; we cannot dictate."
"I hope he will follow the same path as of John Paul II, especially in matters of preserving the faith of the Church, and at the same time he will give us a true guide in this moment of crisis in the world in the modern times," he said.
John Paul created Vidal a cardinal on May 25, 1985.
Cardinal George did not name Vidal as a contender. But his reference to electing a pope from Latin America and the Philippines came amidst an uncharacteristic openness to speculations that were starting to worry the cardinals gathered in Rome.
In a report from the Vatican, Reuters said George took the bold step of listing two cardinals he saw as strong candidates.
George said Dionigi Tettamanzi of Milan has shown he can defend Church beliefs in the face of modern science, and Nigeria's Francis Arinze had strong qualities in interfaith relations and spreading the gospel.
Cardinal Zenon Grocholewski of Poland openly gave his views to TVN24 television there on two purported frontrunners - Germany's Joseph Ratzinger was very intelligent but probably too old while Nigeria's Arinze was popular and charming.
The General Congregation - the daily cardinals' meeting in the Vatican during the gap between popes - could decide to muzzle all "princes of the Church" on Wednesday, another official said.
"There is a lot of concern about letting the media dominate the pre-conclave period," that official added. "The impression is that this is coming from Third World cardinals, for whom the media are a strange beast."
The first papal election in the global communications era has attracted extensive coverage on satellite television and in newspapers, magazines and radio available on the Internet. The Italian press runs daily speculative pieces on frontrunners.
Many of the 117 cardinals due to enter the conclave in about two weeks do not know all their fellow electors and say they want to keep an open mind for their discussions ahead. But the world's media are already buzzing away about who might win.
The prelates are not supposed to discuss possible candidates in public, but many have spoken to their local media in general terms explaining what they were looking for in a candidate.
For many of the cardinals, the job description is clear - they want someone a lot like the last one.
"Perhaps the best way to sum it up: we need another John Paul," said Cardinal Wilfrid Napier of South Africa. "A people's Pope, one who's especially got an appeal and a challenge for the youth."
"I feel that Pope John Paul was accepted by everyone, inside and outside the church community, and I think he was the Pope figure that could fulfill the hopes of everyone," said Cardinal Julius Darmaatmadja of Indonesia.
Such views are perhaps not surprising given that all but two of the 117 cardinals eligible to choose the new pope owe their present positions to John Paul.