Salib palu-sabit (lambang Komunis) menimbulkan kejutan dalam kunjungan PF ke Bolivia
Silakan lihat aslinya disini : http://cnstopstories.com/2015/07/09/hammer-sickle-crucifix-raises-eyebrows-during-popes-visit-to-bolivia/
Presiden Bolivia, Evo Morales, menghadiahkan
sebuah patung kayu berbentuk palu dan sabit (lambang komunis) dengan patung Yesus
yang disalibkan, kepada PF di istana pemerintah di La Paz, Bolivia, 8 Juli 2015
yang lalu.
(CNS/L’Osservatore Romano)
By Cindy
Wooden Catholic News Service
Morales
menjelaskan bahwa patung itu dibuat oleh seorang imam Jesuit, Pastor Luis
Espinal, yang terbunuh pada tahun 1980 setelah aktiv dalam gerakan pro
demokrasi di negeri itu.
SANTA CRUZ,
Bolivia (CNS) — When Bolivian President Evo Morales gave Pope Francis a
crucifix atop a hammer and sickle, eyebrows were raised, including the pope’s.
But, as
Morales explained, the cross was created by Jesuit Father Luis Espinal, who was
assassinated in 1980 after being active in the country’s pro-democracy
movement.
The pope and
president were surrounded with clicking cameras July 8 during the gift
presentation in the government palace in La Paz.
A
Vatican television camera was present but, as Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi,
Vatican spokesman, told reporters, the audio is almost impossible understand.
At least one
media outlet reported the pope saying, “That’s not right,” (“No esta bien eso”)
but several others said the pope, who was speaking Spanish, responded, “I
didn’t know that” (“Eso no lo sabia”) when Morales explained the cross was
based on a design by Father Espinal.
Father
Lombardi, who said neither he nor the Jesuit pope had ever seen or heard of
Father Espinal’s crucifix, said he believes it is much more likely that the
pope admitted to not knowing its origin than to saying it was wrong.
After
discussing the cross with several Jesuits July 9, Father Lombardi said that
Father Espinal, who “was an artist, very creative,” made the crucifix as an
expression of his belief in the need for dialogue involving all Bolivians at a
time of great political tension and upheaval.
For Father
Espinal “it was not ideological,” Father Lombardi said; he was not giving “a
Marxist interpretation of the faith.”
How other
people interpret the piece or use it today is another question, the spokesman
said.
“Certainly,
though, it will not be put in a church,” he said.
The crucifix,
he added, was “an expression of what Father Espinal was living” at the time he
made it.
Asked his
personal reaction to the piece, Father Lombardi said he tried to understand the
origin of the piece and what Father Espinal intended when he made it.
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