Pope Francis, the Argentinian pontiff who has never returned home

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FILE PHOTO: Pope Francis attends the consistory ceremony to elevate Roman Catholic prelates to the rank of cardinal, in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican, September 30, 2023. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo

Pope Francis has made more than 45 international trips during his papacy, but Argentina was always a stop too far.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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BUENOS AIRES – Argentinians have long waited for Pope Francis to visit the homeland he left in 2013 to become the head of the Roman Catholic Church. With his health delicate as he battles double pneumonia, his return now seems increasingly unlikely to happen.

Pope Francis, 88, has been in critical condition due to a lung infection. His two weeks in Rome’s Gemelli hospital is the longest stay of his papacy and underscores his frailty.

The Pope has made more than 45 international trips during his papacy, including the first by any pope to Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Myanmar, North Macedonia, Bahrain and Mongolia.

But the one-time archbishop of Buenos Aires has never returned to Argentina.

“One of the great curiosities of his papacy was the fact that, unlike his predecessors, Pope Francis never visited his native country,” said Mr Jimmy Burns, author of the 2015 biography Francis, Pope Of Good Promise.

Mr Burns said he believes Pope Francis did not want to be seen as siding either with the left-leaning Peronists or the conservatives in the country’s polarised political environment.

“Any visit would try and be exploited by one side or the other, and he would unwittingly fuel those divisions,” he said.

Many in Argentina anticipated a visit to the country shortly after Pope Francis took office and visited Brazil. There was again chatter about a trip in 2024. But in both cases, the visit never materialised.

Father Guillermo Marco, a former spokesman for the Pope when he was Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio in Buenos Aires, told Reuters that it has been a “wasted opportunity” for Argentina.

Pope Francis, he said, had a “tango soul”, a reference to the music and dance that has its origins in the back streets of Buenos Aires.

“He would have liked to (come) if he could have made a simple trip, let’s say, where he came to visit the people he loves and, I don’t know, celebrate a mass for the people,” said Father Marco, who maintains a close relationship with Pope Francis.

“But he is fully aware there is a whole network of supporters and detractors who are fighting over him.”

Last September, the Pope told journalists he

wanted to go to Argentina

, saying “they are my people”, but that “various matters had to be resolved first”.

Father Maximo Jurcinovic, a spokesman for the Argentinian bishops’ conference, said the Church

was focused on praying

for the Pope’s health and would not comment on other matters.

Father Marco said Pope Francis sounded tired when he spoke to him in late January.

“He is 88 years old, and then you add to those 88 years the worries and pace of life that he tries to lead,” Father Marco said.

“It’s like he has a willpower, a spiritual strength that God gives him that makes his body do things, but his body is already telling him: ‘I can’t’. That’s a bit (of) what happened to him now.”

‘Chorus is divided’

During his papacy, the first ever by a Latin American pope, Argentina has been rocked by repeat economic crises and political volatility.

The current government is led by President Javier Milei, who has helped stabilise the economy but implemented tough austerity measures.

Mr Milei once called Pope Francis the devil’s representative on Earth, though he has patched things up since coming into office.

Some said Pope Francis should have visited, regardless of the political environment over the years.

Mr Sergio Rubin, an Argentinian journalist and co-author of papal biography The Jesuit, said: “The chorus is divided. There are those who say that he should have come anyway because it would have helped close the political rift a little.”

Mr Rogelio Pfirter, ambassador to the Vatican from 2016 to 2019 and a one-time student of Cardinal Bergoglio at a Jesuit school in Argentina, said Pope Francis’ drive to boost inclusivity in the Church has been the Pope’s priority.

“I have no doubt that everything Argentinian and the homeland itself is something that has a special place in his head and in his heart,” he said.

But one of the Pope’s greatest legacies has been “making a papacy for everyone”, said Mr Pfirter.

“From the Pope’s perspective, it has probably been much more important to travel to the Pacific, travel to Africa, travel to some other Latin American countries than to visit regions where the Church already has a strong position.”

Many of Argentina’s faithful would still have liked to welcome Pope Francis home and remember him as Cardinal Bergoglio, born in 1936 in Buenos Aires to Italian immigrants.

“That the Pope has not come until now hurts me, it hurts me a little,” said Ms Claudia Nudel, at a recent mass in Buenos Aires to pray for the Pope’s recovery.

Ms Silvia Leda, 70, who was also at the mass, said: “I would have liked him to come, but I think the most important thing is what he can do for the world.” REUTERS

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