Why this Peruvian town is celebrating Pope Leo XIV as one of their own: Reporter's notebook
Pope Leo XIV might be "gringo" by birth but ask the people from Chiclayo, Peru, and the man is decidedly Peruvian. A sampling of Friday's local headlines:
From Peru 21: "The Native Pope."
From Correo: "From Chiclayo to the Vatican."
From Ojo: "The Pope is Peruvian and He Misses Ceviche."
The 69-year-old Robert Prevost served in Peru for over two decades, including as bishop of the northwestern city of Chiclayo, a role he was appointed to in 2014 by the late Pope Francis.
Restaurants around town proudly write "The Pope ate here." One owner serves me Leo's favorite dish…goat with beans and rice (delicious).
There's a huge banner draped on city hall with Papa Leon's picture on it.
At a nearby church where the now pope once held mass, an elderly member of the congregation told me she yelled out in joy when she saw him elected.
"I started to cry" she said, adding that he would do so much for this town. Chiclayo and its surrounding suburbs are not rich areas. People work for everything they have here.
If the new pope is humble and close to the lives of the working poor, it is in this part of the world he learned that empathy. The pope said it as much himself.
"The people of Peru taught me what it means to walk with the poor, to accompany others in their struggles and their joy," he said in 2024.
Stop me if you've heard this before: A religious missionary goes to a more impoverished country for a few months, builds a couple houses and goes back telling everyone they're "changed" by the experience. It's the kind of poverty tourism a lot of people in lower income countries often come to resent.
This is where Pope Leo was apparently different.
Other missionaries come and go, we're told, but Leo stayed, for a few decades. He showed up during birthdays and funerals. He ate at local restaurants, he learned the language, he took his ministry out of the church and into the streets. He helped procure oxygen supplies during the pandemic.
The people here respected that. They say he earned it.
This mild-mannered guy from the Chicago suburbs has improbably captured the hearts of this part of northwest Peru in a major way.
"I feel in his heart he's more Latino than gringo," long-time friend Father Jorge Antonio Millán Cotrina told me, laughing. He texted then-Cardinal Prevost the day before the conclave and said he'd be thinking of him, that anything could happen in a conclave.
The cardinal thanked him for his prayers, no idea he was about to become the leader of the Catholic Church.
Why this Peruvian town is celebrating Pope Leo XIV as one of their own: Reporter's notebook originally appeared on abcnews.go.com
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7 hours ago
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Pope Leo XIV says there should be no tolerance for abuse of any kind in Catholic Church
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Associated Press
7 hours ago
- Associated Press
Pope Leo XIV says there should be no tolerance for abuse of any kind in Catholic Church
LIMA, Peru (AP) — Pope Leo XIV has said there should be no tolerance in the Catholic Church for any type of abuse – sexual, spiritual or abuse of authority -- and called for 'transparent processes' to create a culture of prevention across the church. Leo made his first public comments about the clergy sex abuse scandal in a written message to a Peruvian journalist who documented a particularly egregious case of abuse and financial corruption in a Peruvian-based Catholic movement, the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae. The message was read out loud on Friday night in Lima during a performance of a play based on the Sodalitium scandal and the work of the journalist, Paola Ugaz. 'It is urgent to root in the whole church a culture of prevention that does not tolerate any form of abuse - neither of power or authority, nor abuse of conscience, spiritual or sexual abuse,' Leo said in the message. 'This culture will only be authentic if it is born of active vigilance, of transparent processes and sincere listening to those who have been hurt. For this, we need journalists.' Leo is well aware of the Sodalitium scandal, since he spent two decades as a missionary priest and bishop in Peru, where the group was founded in 1971. The then-Bishop Robert Prevost was responsible for listening to the Sodalitium's victims as the Peruvian bishops' point-person for abuse victims and helped some reach financial settlements with the organization. After Pope Francis brought him to the Vatican in 2023, Prevost helped dismantle the group entirely by overseeing the resignation of a powerful Sodalitium bishop. The Sodalitium was officially suppressed earlier this year, right before Francis died. Now as pope, Leo has to oversee the dismantling of the Soldalitium and its sizeable assets. The Vatican envoy on the ground handling the job, Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu, read out Leo's message on Friday night, appearing alongside Ugaz on stage. In the message, Leo also praised journalists for their courage in holding the powerful to account, demanded public authorities protect them and said a free press is an 'common good that cannot be renounced.' Ugaz and a Sodalitium victim, Pedro Salinas, have faced years of criminal and civil litigation from Sodalitium and its supporters for their investigative reporting into the group's twisted practices and financial misconduct, and they have praised Leo for his handling of the case. The abuse scandal is one of the thorniest dossiers facing Leo, especially given demands from survivors that he go even farther than Francis in applying a zero-tolerance for abuse across the church, including for abusers whose victims were adults. ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.


CNN
12 hours ago
- CNN
Pope Leo praises work of journalists in first public comments on clerical abuse scandal
Pope Leo XIV has said the Catholic Church must establish a culture that refuses to tolerate abuse in 'any form,' as he thanked a Peruvian journalist for reporting on allegations of abuse inside a powerful Catholic group. Leo's remarks, the first he has made publicly on the church's abuse scandals since his election to the papacy on May 8, were contained in a message sent for the performance of a play which dramatizes the work of an investigative journalist, Paola Ugaz, who has faced a long campaign of legal actions and death threats due to her reporting. 'It is urgent to ingrain throughout the Church a culture of prevention that does not tolerate any form of abuse — neither of power or authority, nor of conscience or spirituality, nor sexual,' Leo wrote in a message read on 20 June. 'This culture will only be authentic if it is born of active vigilance, transparent processes, and sincere listening to those who have been hurt.' The pope said the work of journalism was essential to implementing that culture of prevention, as he praised Ugaz and other Peruvian journalists for their reporting on abuse scandals inside the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (Sodality of Christian Life, or SCV), a hugely influential Catholic society which had deep ties to Peru's powerful and wealthy. Pope Leo, who spent years working as a missionary and bishop in Peru, came face-to-face with the SCV case when working in the country with Ugaz, and several survivors have said he was crucial in ensuring action was taken against the now dissolved group. In his message, the first American pope said it was vital the church followed 'a concrete path of humility, truth, and reparation' when it came to tackling abuses and cited a landmark 2018 letter from Pope Francis, in which he pledged the church's 'commitment to guarantee the protection of minors and vulnerable adults'. Leo insisted that the response to abuse cannot simply be a 'strategy' but requires a 'conversion' by the church, which for decades has been grappling with devastating revelations of sexual abuse by priests and other church leaders. The pope's praise of journalists' work in exposing abuse scandals is significant, given that some bishops have in the past criticized the media for its reporting on them. Leo XIV, however, said the journalists who had reported on the Sodalitium had done so with 'courage, patience, and fidelity to the truth' and had faced 'unjust attacks.' The pope said the church recognized the 'wound' in 'so many children, young people, and adults who were betrayed where they sought solace' and 'those who risked their freedom and their (good) names so that the truth would not be buried.' The June 20 message from Leo was read at a performance in Lima, Peru, of the play 'Proyecto Ugaz' (Project Ugaz), which highlights Ugaz's years-long investigation into the Sodalitium. Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu, one of the Vatican investigators into the Sodalitium group, read out the message with Ugaz on stage alongside him. The work of journalists is vital, Leo insisted, in ensuring the church is a place where 'no one suffers in silence' and where 'the truth is not seen as a threat, but as a path to liberation. He praised Ugaz and fellow journalists for their courage in exposing the abuses. Pope Leo also referenced 'tensions' in Peru, which have been heightened following the removal of President Pedro Castillo in 2022, and he underlined the importance of a free media in a country where journalists have faced intimidation and attacks. 'In this time of profound institutional and social tensions, defending free and ethical journalism is not only an act of justice, but a duty of all those who yearn for a solid and participatory democracy,' he said. 'Wherever a journalist is silenced, the democratic soul of a country is weakened. Freedom of the press is an inalienable common good. Those who conscientiously exercise this vocation cannot see their voices silenced by petty interests or fear of the truth.' A few days after his election, the pope met media representatives in the Vatican and during that gathering he stressed his support for a free press and called for the release of imprisoned journalists. Ugaz was among those present at the meeting, and after his speech she greeted Leo with a broad smile, as she handed him a box of chocolates and a Peruvian scarf. That meeting with the media, Leo explained in his message on June 20, affirmed the 'sacred mission' of journalists to 'become bridges between the facts and the conscience of the people.'