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Pope Francis |
Credit: Reuters
A last-minute no-show by Pope
Francis at a concert where he was to have been the guest of honour has sent
another clear signal that he is going to do things his way and does not like
the Vatican high life.
The gala classical concert on
Saturday was scheduled before his election in March. But the white papal
armchair set up in the presumption that he would be there remained empty.
Minutes before the concert was
due to start, an archbishop told the crowd of cardinals and Italian dignitaries
that an "urgent commitment that cannot be postponed" would prevent
Francis from attending.
The prelates, assured that
health was not the reason for the no-show, looked disoriented, realising that
the message he wanted to send was that, with the Church in crisis, he - and
perhaps they - had too much pastoral work to do to attend social events.
"It took us by
surprise," said one Vatican source on Monday. "We are still in a
period of growing pains. He is still learning how to be pope and we are still
learning how he wants to do it."
"In Argentina, they
probably knew not to arrange social events like concerts for him because he
probably wouldn't go," said the source, who spoke anonymously because he
is not authorised to discuss the issue.
The picture of the empty chair
was used in many Italian papers, with Monday's Corriere della Sera newspaper
calling his decision "a show of force" to illustrate the simple style
he wants Church officials to embrace.
Since his election on March 13,
Francis, the former cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina, has not spent a
single night in the opulent and spacious papal apartments.
He has preferred to live in a
small suite in a busy Vatican guest house, where he takes most meals in a
communal dining room and says Mass every morning in the house chapel rather
than the private papal chapel in the Apostolic Palace.
The day before the concert,
Francis said bishops should be "close to the people" and not have
"the mentality of a prince".
On Saturday, while the concert
was in progress in an auditorium just metres (yards) away, Francis was believed
to be working on new appointments for the Curia, the Vatican's troubled central
administration.
The administration was held
responsible for some of the mishaps and scandals that plagued the eight-year
reign of Pope Benedict before he resigned in February.
Francis inherited a Church
struggling to deal with priests' sexual abuse of children, the alleged
corruption and infighting in the Curia, and conflict over the running of the
Vatican's scandal-ridden bank.
Benedict left a secret report
for Francis on the problems in the administration, which came to light when
sensitive documents were stolen from the pope's desk and leaked by his butler
in what became known as the "Vatileaks" scandal.
The Vatican source said he
expected Francis to make major changes to Curia personnel by the end of the
summer.
Anger at the mostly Italian
prelates who run the Curia was one of the reasons why cardinals chose the first
non-European pope for 1,300 years.
The key appointment will be the
next secretary of state, sometimes referred to as the Vatican's prime minister,
to succeed the Italian Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, who has been widely blamed
for the failings of the Curia.
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