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The Americas

Cuba: new centre for evangelisation

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 Contents - Sep 2015AD2000 September 2015
Refugees: Give priority to Syria’s persecuted Christians: Archbishop Fisher
The Americas: Pope Francis’ challenge to American Catholics - AD2000 Report
The Americas: Cuba: new centre for evangelisation - AD2000 Report
Preview: Mercy and compassion: focus of Synod of Bishops - Peter Westmore
Apostolic Letter: Pope Francis proclaims Year of Mercy - AD2000 Report
Concordat: Catholic Church signs concordat with East Timor - Peter Westmore
Hebrew: The Sign of the Cross - Andrew Sholl
Letters: Victoria stops class-time religious instruction - Arnold Jago
Letters: The nature of Heaven - Frank Mobbs
Letters: Media bias on “same-sex marriage” - Robert Bom
Books: YEAR OF THE LORD’S FAVOUR: A Homiliary for the Roman Liturgy, Aidan Nichols OP - Paul Simmons (reviewer)
Reflection: The proper celebration of the Mass - Cardinal Robert Sarah

Clear signs of a relaxation of the persecution of Christianity in Cuba have emerged with the imminent visit of Pope Francis, before arriving in the United States in the last week of September.

Although most of its people are Catholic, Cuba has been a communist state since Fidel Castro seized power in a popular uprising in the late 1950s. Since then, the church has been persecuted, foreign missionaries expelled, and millions of Cubans have fled, many ending up in Florida.

In response to continued violations of human rights and Cuba’s role in fomenting revolution in Latin America, the US ended diplomatic relations and imposed a trade embargo which made Cuba dependent on the Soviet Union.

Since the collapse of the USSR, Cuba has been desperate to end its diplomatic and trade isolation.

When it was announced last December that the United States would normalise its relations with Cuba, it also became known that a key mediating role had been taken by the Holy See and Pope Francis.

Cuban President Raúl Castro paid a call on Pope Francis at the Vatican last May to thank him for working toward Cuban-US detente — and Castro later said he was so impressed by the pontiff that he is considering a return to the fold of the Roman Catholic Church.

While the re-opening of embassies attracted most of the headlines, many view Catholicism’s increasing public presence on the island since Raúl Castro succeeded his brother Fidel as President in 2008 as revolutionary. But the history of the Castro family with the Catholic Church is a longer and more complex story.

Fidel Castro was educated in Jesuit schools. It is perhaps at Belén High School where he received his first taste of class consciousness, scorned by his elite classmates for his provincial background. The Jesuits who educated Castro were not the liberation theologians often chronicled in 1960s and ’70s accounts of the Catholic Church in Latin America but Spanish-born priests with a strong anti-fascist and anti-communist message.

Nonetheless, Castro highlighted the sense of discipline and justice he learned from his Catholic educators. “The Jesuits clearly influenced me with their strict organisation, their discipline and their values,” he wrote in the collection of writings “Fidel: My Early Years.” “They contributed to my development and influenced my sense of justice.”

In 1961, Castro dismantled the Catholic educational system, arguably the church’s most concrete influence on Cuban life, through the nationalisation of all schools on the island. As a result of those actions and growing hostility toward the church, over a hundred priests were exiled, and hundreds of others left.

The isolation of the Catholic Church on the island led to its isolation in the Americas, remaining sheltered from the ground-breaking reforms of Vatican II and the revolutionary insights of liberation theology. While this can be interpreted as a rejection of his Catholic education, a 1985 collection of interviews by Frei Betto, “Fidel and Religion,” reveals that, far from rejecting religion entirely, Castro had a nuanced understanding of the impact of religion on him personally and Cuba as a whole.

In 1991, after the collapse of Soviet communism, atheism was removed as a requirement for membership in the Communist Party in Cuba, and the Cuban Constitution was amended to redefine Cuba as a secular rather than atheist state.

Fidel Castro began to speak more publicly about religion. In a 1998 speech he aligned the teachings of Jesus with his ideology, claiming, “If instead of being born and elaborating his ideas when he did, Christ had been born in these times, you can be sure — or at least I am — that his preaching would not have differed much from the ideas or the preaching that we revolutionaries of today try to bring the world.”

The new openness toward religion has been praised as indicative of growing tolerance, but one cannot help being suspicious of the political gain found in those actions, notably economic aid from the U.S. that entered the island under the umbrella of religion.

But the clear turning point for the Roman Catholic Church’s engagement with Cuba was John Paul II’s 1998 visit. His celebration of Mass on the Plaza de la Revolución represented the public reconciliation of the church and the Cuban government. As a result of the trip, Castro made Christmas a national holiday.

Raúl Castro’s presidency, beginning in 2008, marked a new era in Cuban-Catholic relations. The 2010 opening of a Roman Catholic seminary in Havana was the first of its kind since the 1959 revolution. Raúl Castro attended, along with Archbishop of Havana Jaime Ortega and Archbishop of Miami Thomas Wenski, forming a symbolic trinity of a new era in Cuban, Cuban-American and Catholic relations.

Pope Benedict XVI’s Cuba visit in 2012 was overwhelmingly interpreted as supportive of Ortega, positioning the church as a political player and a human rights advocate on the island. The visit revealed that Catholic parishes in Cuba were providing education and community outreach, that Catholic charity Caritas was engaged in relief work and that church attendance on the island increased. Castro later granted the pontiff’s request to make Good Friday a national holiday.

“Raúl Castro has given the church a role of mediator with other sectors of Cuban society,” Enrique Lopez Oliva, a professor of religious history at the University of Havana, told The Washington Post in 2012.

Much has been written about Francis’ and the Vatican’s role in brokering the US-Cuba détente. Affirming the importance of the pope’s role, Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin said in an interview on Vatican radio, “I would like to repeat the satisfaction of the Holy See for this important step in the relations between the United States and Cuba and also to stress that the role of the Holy Father was very significant in this conclusion.”

The church has been able to further these efforts as well as become a player on the political scene by remaining quiet and reserved in its negotiations with the government.

In spite of this increasing openness, the church has many challenges ahead. US politicians have critiqued its engagement with the Castro regime and the slow pace of reform, particularly in the area of human rights violations.

The church is confronting a generation of Cubans who were not raised religious, as a result of the persecution of the Catholic Church and the legacy of the government’s hostile relationship with religion.

Perhaps no symbol represents the past and future of religion on the island more than Our Lady of Charity, its patron saint.

Evoked in independence struggles against Spain in the late 19th century; prominent in Cuban Catholicism, Santería and popular home-based religions; honoured by Benedict on the 400th anniversary of her appearance; and respected by communists as a symbol of Cuba’s national identity, she reveals the complexity of religion on the island and its deep-rooted presence in the lives and identity of Cuban people.

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Reprinted from AD2000 Vol 28 No 8 (September 2015), p. 3

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