Stay united in fight for change, Pope Francis urges in Paraguay shanty visit

Pope holds Mass for a million people as three-country ‘homecoming’ trip ends

Pope Francis arrives in Banado Norte, near Asuncion, Paraguay, on Sunday. Photograph: Ciro Fusco/EPA
Pope Francis arrives in Banado Norte, near Asuncion, Paraguay, on Sunday. Photograph: Ciro Fusco/EPA

Pope Francis I, wrapping up his three-country tour of South America, yesterday urged people living in a flood-prone shanty town in Paraguay to stay united in their struggle for better conditions. The pope looked moved as he heard harrowing tales of life in Banado Norte, a warren of shacks not far from Asuncion that is home to about 100,000 people, many of whom are squatting after being forced from their farms.

“Our expulsion from the countryside, the high prices of land and housing in the city, coupled with low incomes . . . are the reasons we find ourselves in the ‘Banado’,” local organiser Maria Garcia told him. The area’s residents want title deeds to their homes.

Pope Francis drew cheers when he said he could not leave Paraguay without first “spending some time with you, here on your land”.

The Argentinian pontiff has made defending the poor a major theme of his "homecoming" trip, which also took him to Ecuador and Bolivia.

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On Saturday, he appealed to world leaders to seek a new economic model to help the destitute, and to shun policies that “sacrifice human lives on the altar of money and profit”.

Murals

In Banado Norte, murals adorned the walls of houses made of corrugated metal, wood and cement blocks. One of them read: “Yes to life, no to drugs, fight for change.”

“We built our neighbourhoods inch by inch, overcoming difficult terrain, floods and hostile public authorities,” Garcia told the pope. “It’s been a tough fight to put up a home in the midst of hardship, but we never gave in nor let ourselves be swept away by sadness.”

The pope, who prayed in a chapel in the slum, told them, “Keep going. Don’t let the devil divide you”, noting that “a faith without solidarity is a dead faith”. At the end of his visit he asked them say the Lord’s Prayer in the Guarani language.

Pope Francis regularly entered slums in Buenos Aires, the Argentine capital, when he was archbishop and has visited some of Rome's poorer neighborhoods.

From Banado Norte, he went to hold a Mass for more than a million people in a disused air base.

The altar’s backdrop was designed by a local artist, who used corn cobs, coconuts, squashes, beans, seeds and other local produce to create huge murals of St Francis of Assisi, from whom the pope took his name, and St Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits, the religious order to which he belongs.

Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, flew in to attend the Mass, and greeted Pope Francis at the altar at the end of the service. She and the pope had a tricky relationship when he was an archbishop because of his criticisms of the government’s economic policies.

On his trip, Pope Francis has used two major speeches to excoriate unbridled capitalism and uphold the rights of the poor. He has also warned of irreparabledamage to the planet. In Bolivia last Thursday, he urged the downtrodden to change the world economic order and called for the poor to have the “sacred rights” of labour, lodging and land.

On Saturday, he urged politicians and business leaders “not to yield to an economic model which is idolatrous, which needs to sacrifice human lives on the altar of money and profit”. Food and shelter were essential to human dignity, he said.

He said those charged with promoting economic development must ensure it had “a human face” and he blasted “the idolatry of money and the dictatorship of an impersonal economy lacking a truly human purpose”.

“Corruption is the plague, it’s the gangrene of society,” he said during a mostly improvised speech at Saturday’s rally. – (Reuters)