Pope acknowledges his Russia comments were badly phrased

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Pope Francis holds a news conference aboard the papal plane on his flight back after visiting Mongolia, September 4, 2023. Ciro Fusco/Pool via REUTERS

Pope Francis holding a news conference aboard the papal plane on his return flight from Mongolia on Sept 4.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Pope Francis acknowledged on Monday that his recent comments on Russia, seen by Ukraine as praise for imperialism, were badly phrased and said his intention was to remind young Russians of a great cultural heritage and not a political one.

Speaking to reporters aboard the plane returning from Mongolia, the Pope also said he wanted to assure China, with which the Vatican has difficult relations, that the Roman Catholic Church has no ulterior motives and should not be seen as a foreign power.

“I was not thinking of imperialism when I said that,” the pontiff said about his comments in August.

In unscripted remarks to young Russian Catholics in a videoconference on Aug 25, he spoke of past tsars Peter I and Catherine II – both of whom expanded Russian territory – and told his listeners that they were the heirs of the “great Russian empire”.

The comments caused an uproar in Ukraine because Russian President Vladimir Putin has invoked the legacies of the two Russian monarchs in justifying his invasion of Ukraine and the annexation of its territory.

The remarks were welcomed by the Kremlin, which praised the Pope for his knowledge of Russian history.

“Maybe it wasn’t the best way of putting it, but in speaking of the great Russia, I was thinking not so much geographically but culturally,” the Pope said, while mentioning Russian literary icon Fyodor Dostoevsky, one of his favourite authors.

“It was an off-the-cuff comment that came to mind because I studied it (Russian history) in school,” he said, explaining why he mentioned Peter I and Catherine II.

“Russian culture is of such beauty, such profoundness. It should not be cancelled because of political problems. There were dark political years in Russia but the heritage is there, available to all,” he said.

The Pope was asked about China, which was in the backdrop of his trip to Mongolia.

At a mass on Sunday, in his latest overture to the leaders of the communist country to ease restrictions on religion, the Pope called its citizens a “noble” people and asked its Catholics to be “good Christians and good citizens”.

Church not a foreign power

With regard to Vatican-China relations, the Pope said: “I think we have to move forward in the religious aspect in order to understand each other better, so that Chinese citizens do not think the Church does not accept their culture and their values and (do not think) that the Church represents another foreign power.”

Beijing has been following a policy of “Sinicisation” of religion, trying to root out foreign influences and enforce obedience to the Communist Party.

A 2018 agreement between the Vatican and China on the appointment of bishops has been tenuous at best, with the Vatican complaining that Beijing has violated it several times.

“Relations with China are very respectful. Personally I have great admiration for the Chinese people,” the Pope said.

Separately, Catholics from communist-run Vietnam, which recently upgraded its relations with the Vatican, travelled to Mongolia to see the Pope and said they wanted him to visit their country too.

Asked if he would visit Vietnam, he joked: “If I don’t go surely John XXIV will go,” he said, speculating on the possible name of a future pope.

“There certainly will be (a papal trip to Vietnam),” he said.

Pope Francis, who uses a wheelchair and a cane, was coy about what trips he would make in 2024 after a visit to the French city of Marseilles later in September.

“Travelling is not as easy as it was at the beginning (of his papacy in 2013),” he said. REUTERS

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