Heroes: Inspiration for All Ages by Robert S. Swiatek - HTML preview

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Jorge Bergoglio

Jorge Mario Bergoglio was born on December 17, 1936, in Buenos  Aires  to  Mario  Bergoglio, originally  from Marshe,  Italy, and Regina Sivoni. Mario was a hard working accountant who had a degree when he arrived in Argentina. Unfortunately, they didn't accept it so he did the factory gig. Since he couldn‟t write, his pay was  less  than  the  other  workers.  His  wife  was  a  homemaker. Jorge‟s  siblings  include  Oscar,  Marta,  Alberto  and  Maria  Elena. They lived  in a small  house  having a  large kitchen.  We‟ll  come back  to  that   later.  When  Jorge  was  thirteen,  he  went  to   his grandmother‟s  house during the day –  she and  her  husband  lived close by. He returned  in the evening,  learning Piedmontese  in the process.

Back  home,  Mario  spoke  Castillian  to  the  children  and talked  of  Italy,  so  they  would  not  forget  their  homeland.  Jorge played cards,  including  briscola, and  occasionally joined  his dad when the  latter played basketball. The arts were  instilled  in Jorge and  his siblings by Marshe, who  treasured opera. She  also  knew how  to  cook  and  insisted  that  the  five  offspring  learn to  do  the same.  Mario  died  of  a  heart  attack  when Jorge  was  a  teenager. Maria Elena related that her father had always been joyful and that Jorge  followed  in the  same  vein.   The  family  was  a  happy  one. Sunday involved going to Mass  followed by extravagant  lunches, some as  long as seven courses.  Dinner  wasn't  necessary. Marshe produced    delicious    chicken,    cappelletti    and    ragú    risotto piemontese. She  learned  fast and  well because  frying an egg was no easy task for her when she and Mario first married.

The  family  wasn't  rich,  but  they  never  went  without  the basics.  Nothing was  thrown out,  but  Jorge‟s  dad  wouldn't  allow the same meal the next day. I‟m sure that Marshe was very creative with  the  leftovers.  Much repair  was  done  on clothing  and  then reused.  The  son  who  would  become  a  priest  developed  frugal tastes,  except  when  it  came  to  food.  Jorge  played  soccer  and  at twelve  had  a  girlfriend,  Amalia  –  sort  of.  She  considered  him a gentleman and related the words he said to her, If you don’t marry me, I’m going to be a priest.

After  finishing primary school,  his  father  insisted  that  he needed to find work while attending secondary school. He labored in  a  sock  factory,  did  cleaning  and  administrative  tasks,  while studying accounting. In his fourth year, he  learned food chemistry and worked in a  lab. His classes lasted until eight  in the evening, but he was appreciative of his dad‟s directive.

While  Jorge  was  in  the  lab,  his  boss  there  was  Esther Balestrino   de   Carteaga,   a   commie   sympathizer.   One   day   he finished his work quite quickly and brought the results to her. She was surprised and asked if he had done all the verifications, which he  hadn't.  She  then said,  you  have  to  do  things  right,  It  was  a reminder which stayed with him. He admired  her and saw Esther as a great individual.

Bergoglio  was  seventeen and  about  to  celebrate  a  spring holiday,  Student  Day.  The day was September 21  –  don‟t  forget this was in the Southern hemisphere. There was a girl in one of his groups to whom he was attracted. A picnic had been planned and he went to San José de Flores church first.  There he  met a priest who brought spirituality to Jorge. The latter made his confession to the padre and Bergoglio realized he had a vocation. He decided not to join  his  friends  for  Student  Day.  That experience  changed  his life so much that he didn't propose to the girl that day at the picnic.

He wouldn't start seminary right away.  That would take four  years.  He  stayed  at  work  in  the  lab, completing school and realized that he wasn't quite ready, even though he knew his fate. He just  wasn't concentrating on religion and  needed to  settle  his unrest.  He read  Nuestra palabra y proposito, a Communist Party publication, but never joined the group. He became ill with a lung infection  before  entering  the  seminary,  being  diagnosed  with pneumonia.  This was overcome, but not before a part of his  lung was removed.

He recovered and while in the hospital was visited by Sister Dolores, who told him, keep imitating Jesus. This inspired him as he realized that suffering can be virtuous. It wasn't removed but it became  significant.  Jorge  would  eventually  say,  what  a  person who is suffering needs is to know that there is someone with him, who wishes him well, who respects his silence and prays that God may enter into this space that is sheer solitude. Sister Dolores was the   one   who   worked   with   him   before   he   made   his   First Communion.

Jorge entered seminary in 1957, choosing the Jesuits. One reason was because of its missionary approach. He considered the possibility of working in Japan, but because of his illness, was not allowed to pursue it. His choice of becoming a priest wasn't quite accepted  by  his  mom,  even  though  she  had  instilled  religious spirituality into his  life. She welcomed Jorge when he came home but  never  visited  him  in  the  seminary.  On March 11,  1958,  he began  the  Jesuit  novitiate,  completing  his  studies  of  humanities five  years  later.  He  came  back  to  Buenos  Aires  and  earned  a degree  in  philosophy  at  Saint  Joseph  Major  Seminary  in  San Miguel.  This was  followed by teaching psychology and  literature at Immacolata College and the University of El Salvador. He was ordained a priest on December 13, 1969. In April 1973, he took his perpetual vows and was then a Jesuit.

Once ordained,  Jorge  assumed a  number  of roles,  mixing teaching and pastoral duties. In the early 1970s,  he  was rector of the  major seminary and  taught  theology at  Villa  Varilari.  He did time in the kitchen on the weekend, when there was no other cook, doing it for the students. Asked about how good the food was, he said,  well,  I never killed anyone with my food. Rumor  has  it  that Bergoglio makes an outstanding stuffed calamari. Besides learning this  culinary  behavior  from  his  mother,  he  was  also  a  lover  of opera and the tango with an appreciation for Edith Piaf.

Eventually  Jorge  was  elected  Provincial of the  Argentina

Jesuits  and  served  in  that  capacity  for  six  years.  This  time  was characterized by the dictatorship of Jorge Rafael Videla Redondo, who came to power after Isabelita Perón. Torture and assassination were prevalent  then when the  desaparecidos rebelled against  the regime,  resulting  in their abduction and death. As a result,  many false  accusations  were  tossed  at  Bergoglio.  Journalist  Horacio Verbitsky   credited   the   Jesuit   with   serious   misdeeds.   Many, including historian Matteo Luigi Napolitano, stood up for Jorge as he  denounced  all  the  lies.  In  March  2013,  Vatican  spokesman Father  Federico  Lombardi  called  these  efforts  against  Bergoglio defamatory and scandalous.

While  a  bishop  of  Buenos  Aires,  he  did  a  great  deal  of traveling. One day a young man approached him in great distress, asking for  his confession to be  heard.  Bergoglio was on his way, fearing  he  would  miss  his  train,  and  said  that  a  priest  would  be there  shortly  to  accommodate  him.  He  began  walking away but then returned and said that he would hear the lad‟s confession. He comforted the young man, putting him in the care of Our Lady and then left. Actually, the train didn't leave on time so Jorge realized he did the right thing. He knew that this was a sign from the Lord that told me: You see that  I am  directing the story. How  often in life  it  is  better  to  slow  down  and  not  try  to  settle  everything  at once.

As an archbishop, he was kind and considerate to the other priests, just as he had been before. He told the others to call him at any  time.  He  refused  to  live  in  anything  other  than  a  humble residence, with no private secretary. He traveled by bus or subway with the people. He was one of them. In 2001, Pope John Paul II made him a cardinal. Jorge didn't care for all the fancy red clothes, preferring alterations  to  what  was  already  there.  For  those  who cared to join him in Rome, he asked them to donate the cost of the trip to help the poor. Frugal may be a description here but I prefer merciful.

Bergoglio was a man of the poor, celebrating Mass often in the  villas  miserias.  The  book,  El  Jesuita,  tells  of  one  of  those visits. Men of the group congregated and a bricklayer stood up and praised Jorge: I am  proud of  him, because whenever I passed by here, with my co-workers, I always saw  him  sitting in one of  the last  rows, like anyone else. It wouldn't be long before the people would proclaim, now the lowly have a friend in Rome. Mariam had slept  in the dumpsters and sought  money for  el paco, drugs. She was down on her luck and felt her case was hopeless, but she kept meeting a priest who assured her, God loves you. She now teaches catechism and sees much hope.

In the early twenty-first century, Pope John Paul II‟s health deteriorated, especially his Parkinson‟s Disease. On April 2, 2005, he died, shortly before his eighty-fifth birthday. Two weeks  later, Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger became the  new pope, taking the  name Pope Benedict  XVI.  The  second  choice  with the  most  votes  was Jorge  Bergoglio.  Ratzinger‟s  tenure  ended  less  than  eight  years later when he left because of health problems, doing so on the last day of February 2013.  On March 11,  Bergoglio  didn't  celebrate Mass  that  morning.  Instead  he  was  a  server.  This  was  also  a practice of Pope John Paul I.

It didn't take long as Bergoglio was elected Pope on March 13, 2013, becoming the first Latin American Pope, the  first Jesuit and  first to take the name of Francis. For those  who wonder why he  chose  this  name,  he  made  the  connection  to  St.  Francis  of Assisi, the man of peace, and patron of the creatures of the earth. Assisi  represents  poverty  and  was  always  concerned  about  the environment – a conservationist before it was fashionable.

When  he  first  encountered  the   masses  after  becoming Pope, he preferred being referred to as the Bishop of Rome and his humble   greeting  was,   good  evening.  He  bowed  before   them, blessed and asked them to pray for him. He did this because he was a man of the people: old and young; rich and poor; Catholic, Jew or any other faith. After he finished, instead of going by limousine, he  took the bus  to the  next  stop.  He rode with the cardinals and would  continue to  do  that.  The  next  day,  he  prayed  alone  at  the Basilica  of St.  Mary Major.  He  also  paid  for  his  hotel  lodging. Amazingly, he notified the man in Buenos Aires who brought him the paper so the subscription could be cancelled.

The  new  Bishop of Rome  had a  flight booked  for  Buenos

Aires  for March 23,  mentioning an  appointment  with the  Jewish community.  His  words  were,  I  must  return to my  spouse,  which referred to  those  in Argentina  who  he  administered  to.  The  only people who were surprised by the wife reference were those who had   never   heard   of  Jorge.  As  the   new   head   of  the  church, Bergoglio didn't care for the red shoes or the red cape, nor did he want to replace his iron cross for a more opulent one. His ring was fine, too. Just as in South America, he wanted to identify with the commoners.