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 | | Posted by admin on Monday, March 27, 2006 - 08:08 AM |
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 |  | VATICAN CITY -
Pope Benedict installed his first group of new cardinals on Friday,
elevating 15 men from Hong Kong to Boston to join the exclusive Roman
Catholic group that advises him and will one day elect his successor. Reuters
The ceremony, held on a cool day
under dull skies on the steps of St Peter’s Basilica, including a
prayer for religious freedom in China, where the Vatican says Catholics
loyal to the Pope are not allowed to practice their faith openly.
Benedict, less than a month away from his first
anniversary as Pope, gave each of the men their red cardinal’s hats and
urged them in a homily to preach a message of love and spread the faith.
"I am counting on you to see to it that the Church’s
solicitude for the poor and needy challenges the world with a powerful
statement on the civilisation of love," he said.
Handing each man his four-cornered biretta hat, he
recalled they were coloured red to signify a cardinal’s commitment to
spread and defend the faith even if it meant spilling his blood.
Twelve of the 15 new cardinals are under 80 and thus
eligible to enter a conclave to choose a pope. They are mostly from
Europe, Asia and the US.
Krakow Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz, 66, was the
best-known face, having been at the late Pope John Paul’s side during
26 years as his faithful private secretary and one of the most
influential men in the Vatican.
Dziwisz received the biggest round of applause and even
the Pope seemed filled with emotion when he embraced Dziwisz, who
remains a living symbol of the pontificate that ended a year ago.
Dziwisz’s lips could be seen saying "Thank You, Thank You" in Italian.
The most influential was William Levada, 69, the former
archbishop of San Francisco appointed by Benedict last May to replace
him as head of the Vatican’s powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith.
The biggest surprise of the new cardinals, whose names
were first announced last month, was the elevation of Hong Kong’s
Bishop Joseph Zen Ze-kiun.
Zen is an outspoken supporter of democracy and critic of
Beijing’s restrictive religious policies, which do not allow Chinese
Catholics to recognise the pope’s authority.
A prayer read to the congregation in Chinese during the
ceremony remembered"all those who still suffer for their Christian
faith" and that they would soon see the fruit of their suffering.
The Pope, whose German homeland was divided into
democratic and communist zones for 40 years, also promoted Nicholas
Cheong Jin-suk, archbishop of the South Korean capital Seoul and Church
administrator for Pyongyang in communist North Korea.
Archbishop Sean O’Malley, who took over in Boston in
2003 to clean up after a clerical sexual abuse scandal forced Cardinal
Bernard Law to resign, was the second American who received his red
cardinal’s hat at the ceremony.
Other new cardinals included archbishops Jorge Liberato
Urosa Savino of Caracas, Gaudencio Rosales of Manila, Jean-Pierre
Ricard of Bordeaux, France, Antonio Canizares Llovera of Toledo, Spain
and Carlo Caffara of Bologna, Italy.
After Friday’s ceremony, known as a consistory, the
Church has a total of 193 cardinals, 120 of them under 80 and able to
vote for the next pope.
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