VATICAN CITY, April 21 (Reuters) - Pope Francis, the first Latin American leader of the Roman Catholic Church, has died, the Vatican said in a video statement on Monday, ending an often turbulent reign marked by division and tension as he sought to overhaul the hidebound institution. He was 88, and had recently survived a serious bout of double pneumonia.
"Dear brothers and sisters, it is with profound sadness I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis," Cardinal Kevin Farrell announced on the Vatican's TV channel.
"At 7:35 this morning the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father."
Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected pope on March 13, 2013, surprising many Church watchers who had seen the Argentine cleric, known for his concern for the poor, as an outsider.
He sought to project simplicity into the grand role and never took possession of the ornate papal apartments in the Apostolic Palace used by his predecessors, saying he preferred to live in a community setting for his "psychological health".
He inherited a Church that was under attack over a child sex abuse scandal and torn by infighting in the Vatican bureaucracy, and was elected with a clear mandate to restore order.
But as his papacy progressed, he faced fierce criticism from conservatives, who accused him of trashing cherished traditions. He also drew the ire of progressives, who felt he should have done much more to reshape the 2,000-year-old Church.
While he struggled with internal dissent, Francis became a global superstar, drawing huge crowds on his many foreign travels as he tirelessly promoted interfaith dialogue and peace, taking the side of the marginalised, such as migrants.
Unique in modern times, there were two men wearing white in the Vatican for much of Francis' rule, with his predecessor Benedict opting to continue to live in the Holy See after his shock resignation in 2013 had opened the way for a new pontiff.
Benedict, a hero of the conservative cause, died in December 2022, finally leaving Francis alone on the papal stage.
Francis appointed nearly 80% of the cardinal electors who will choose the next pope correct as of February 2025, increasing the possibility that his successor will continue his progressive policies, despite the strong pushback from traditionalists.
Give me an example then (and no, I won't accept trans people sharing their traumatic experiences with Christians denying their human rights).
How do you think calling the recently deceased pope a pedophile would go over with the vast majority of Catholics? This is like the edgy "how old was Aisha when Mohammed married her?" digs, just reformulated for a context where anti-Christian sentiment is acceptable.
Only a few of those comments say, "I'm trans and this is my trauma" but I think a forum of communists should be wary of accepting bigotry so long as it is done by people of a given identity. For example, have you ever met a liberal justifying war crimes by shared identity? Hell, I've met self-described communists in communist parties that did that. Thankfully with the latter it blew back on them.
While this is a confused forum that selectively takes itself seriously, I do think it is a good idea to consistently consider the approach you'd want to take when doing irl organizing. If you had an irl audience, would you include the "the Pope is a pedophilr" dig? Would it actually be funny? Would you be self-conscious about alienating members or prospective members? You don't have to be a Very Serious Communist all of the time, but I do think flippant dismissals and disrespect blesd into offline socialization. And the replies here are far from kind to the parent, who is sharing a concern about irl organizing because they had the impression this was a communist space by people trying to build communism and this thread is discordant with that.
It is not bigoted to call Francis out for his sanctioning of the pedophile cover ups, and his refusal to even allow the punishment of known child abusers (Nevermind punishing them himself, he sanctioned the intervention on their behalf to get them out of punishment). If a Christian is offended by someone pointing out that Francis didn't do anything to end the church's official doctrine of covering up sex crimes on behalf of its members, then quite frankly fuck that Christian, but fuck that Christian in particular. Most people, I suspect most catholics too, don't think the pope should cover up pedophilia, and it is something over which the papacy and Francis himself has been criticised BY CATHOLICS, and pretending that isn't the case is indicirectly accusing every Catholic of a crime of which they are not guilty.
The widespread sex crimes were horrible, and I think a major reason it took decades to solve was that, instead of debating actual solutions, each side just weaponized it for its pet cause. Traditionalists blamed the modernizing reforms of the Second Vatican Council. Conservatives blamed tolerance of homosexuality and lack of discipline. Progressives blamed celibacy, male-only priesthood, and opposition to abortion. With all these people foaming at the mouth while yelling at the others, the problem could not be solved.
It that context, I strongly suspect the claim "Francis didn’t do anything to end the church’s official doctrine of covering up sex crimes on behalf of its members" is propaganda. What I know is that there was a decades-old rule that the Church would not share evidence with the State, arguing that was necessary to protect the privacy of the victim and the accused, so the victim had to give a second testimony before the State. But Francis abolished that rule, did he not? And don't most people who are not conservatives (conservatives believe in Vigano's conspiracy theories) credit Pope Francis with alleviating the problem? Wikipedia, citing The Guardian and CNN, says "Pope Francis made sweeping changes that allow for greater transparency". Yes, Guardian and CNN are capitalist, but that only makes them suspect for certain subjects (such as actually existing socialist states). I have never seen anyone accuse The Guardian and CNN of pro-Catholic bias.
So you can plausibly argue that Pope Francis was too slow, but please check your sources and do not grossly inflate his actual errors.