Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Who Will Succeed Cardinal Ortega?

Who Will Succeed Cardinal Ortega? / Reinaldo Emilio Cosana Alen
Posted on November 11, 2013

Havana, November 2013 — Cardinal Jaime Ortega turned 77 on October 18 of
this year. Canon law sets the retirement age for cardinals at 75. Pope
Benedict XVI asked Cardinal Ortega to postpone his retirement but
Benedict is no longer in charge at the Vatican. Time has passed and the
Cardinal is looking exhausted. Finding his replacement can no longer be
put off.

Numerous questions arise. Who will be his successor? What might his
relationship with a dictatorial government be? Will he retain Ortega's
policies? Will he maintain a middle-of-the-road position or will he
shift in favor the opposition?

Applauded by many and criticized by others, Cardinal Ortega is a saint
to some while others criticize him for a lack of energy, for caving in
to government pressure and for remaining silent in the face of acts of
repudiation against peaceful dissidents, most notably the Ladies in White.

The Catholic Church has made several announcements of prisoner releases.
On February 11, 2011 it announced "the impending release of opposition
figure Elías Biscet, one of Cuba's most prominent political prisoners.
Biscet, who was serving a twenty-five-year sentence for crimes against
the independence and territorial integrity of the state, is one of
several opposition figures who have rejected exile as a condition for
release from prison."

Cardinal Ortega was a spokesman for those pardoned and served as the
inmates' "mediator", or more precisely a "facilitator," arranging the
release and expatriation of nearly two hundred political prisoners.

During that time the church and the government developed close ties
after half a century of conflict and political strife. This seems to
have been the main reason that Benedict XVI did not accept the
cardinal's retirement as proscribed by canon law.

Ramona Muñiz Hernández — the 84 year old director of a Catholic
congregation, the Daughters of Mary, and resident of Tarará in Eastern
Havana — told us, "You have to acknowledge the cardinal's patience. The
'beasts' have been tamed. There was no other way to confront the government.

"This is a government that, when I worked as a hair dresser in a
state-run hair salon, docked 70 pesos from my 280 peso paycheck for
being Catholic, for going to mass and for not hiding my beliefs. I could
not live without God.

"When Jaime Ortega, who is now Cardinal Ortega, and Troadio Hernández,
the current pastor in Bejucal, were seminarians studying for the
priesthood, the government took them and others out of school and forced
them into obligatory military service. They spent three years interned
in camps on the Isle of Pines. It was almost like being banished."

"The Church put up a tremendous fight, and Jaime and Troadio were able
to return to the seminary and finish their studies. Ortega is from
Matanzas, the only child of Catholic parents. He has always fought
against the 'beasts' with kindness and love for God. How many relatives
of political and common prisoners have been been able to survive because
the Church quietly gave them two hundred pesos a month? It is always
engaged in works of charity. Many people never find out about this. The
cardinal does good, and triumphs! He is a saint."

Ortega was archbishop of Havana when he was named a cardinal in 1981. He
paved over differences between the church and the communist government
to gain authorization for visits to Cuba by John Paul II and Benedict XVI.

Ortega was the architect of the lavish celebration of the 500th
anniversary of the appearance in the northeastern Bay of Nipe of Our
Lady of Charity of El Cobre, the patroness of Cuba. The pilgrimage of
the virgin's statue across the island — beginning in Cobre, where she is
venerated, and ending in Santiago de Cuba — served to significantly
revive the Christian faith of the Cuban people after half a century of
state-imposed Marxist doctrine.

Because of the cardinal's involvement, Cayo de la Virgen and Playa
Morales — two sites on the virgin's trek after her appearance in the Bay
of Nipe — were recently declared national monuments. Other locations
were designated "sites of historic interest."

December 25, Christmas day — long eliminated from the official calendar
— was reinstated as a holiday after Pope John Paul II petitioned Fidel
Castro to do so during his pastoral visit to Cuba, asking that "Cuba
open itself to the world." Will they retain the day of rest?

The archdiocese regained possession of the splendid church in Tarará,
which had been confiscated and turned into a warehouse and later into a
mundane nightclub. It was a move that had the hallmarks of efforts by
the cardinal, who will soon leave behind a controversial legacy bathed
in light and shadow. Ultimately, Pope Francis and time will have the
last word on Cardinal Ortega and who his successor will be.
cosanoalen@yahoo.com

Cubanet, 6 November 2013

Source: "Who Will Succeed Cardinal Ortega? / Reinaldo Emilio Cosana Alen
| Translating Cuba" -
http://translatingcuba.com/who-will-succeed-cardinal-ortega-reinaldo-emilio-cosana-alen/

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