January 24, 1998

Pope Urges Cuba on Catholic Schools


.c The Associated Press
By ANITA SNOW

SANTIAGO, Cuba (AP) - In the last provincial stop on his 5-day visit, John Paul II visited this center of Cuban nationalism, where tens of thousands gathered to see him and hear a message on the church's role in the country's history.

Cubans streamed into a spacious plaza in Santiago, on the eastern end of Cuba about 530 miles from Havana, for a late-morning Mass dedicated to Cuba's patron saint, the Virgin of Charity.

"All of the (pope's) Masses are special, but this one is super special'' because the city's history, as birthplace of a famous general in Cuba's independence war, Antonio Maceo, said Armando Artime, 61.

On the fourth day of his historic first visit to Cuba, the pope was visiting leprosy and AIDS patients at a shrine and clinic on Havana's outskirts.

At stop after stop, addressing young parents, country kids, the cultural elite in Havana, John Paul has returned to the same theme on his groundbreaking visit: Cuba needs Roman Catholic education.

In a land where Catholic schools have been closed for more than three decades, the school "option'' is emerging as a goal the church apparently hopes is achievable in some way under a liberalizing communist system.

Cuban President Fidel Castro told four visiting U.S. congressmen late Friday that the pope's visit "was good for the country and that there would be a growth of all kinds of religion'' in Cuba, Rep. Joe Moakley, a Massachusetts Democrat said today.

Moakley the meeting with Castro lasted about two hours, and he described the Cuban leader as "kind of laid back.''

The pope took his message Friday evening to the neoclassical halls of the University of Havana.

In sonorous, thickly accented Spanish, the pontiff told a gathering of leading academics, writers and other intellectuals, including President Fidel Castro, that Cuban "cultural institutions'' - clearly meaning universities - should work with the church in a "fruitful cultural dialogue.''

Reminding his listeners that this premier Cuban university, Castro's alma mater, was founded by the church's Dominican order, he said its roots show "its vocation to be a fountain of wisdom and freedom, an inspiration to faith and justice.''

But Castro already has let the pope know, in public, of his distaste for Catholic education. And his culture minister flatly rules it out.

The climax comes Sunday morning, when the pope celebrates Mass in Havana's Plaza of the Revolution, offering Holy Communion in a vast space flanked by towering images of communist revolutionary hero Ernesto "Che'' Guevara and the Sacred Heart - a temporary nine-story portrait of Christ.

"I haven't been to Mass in many years. Many years,'' craggy-faced retiree Felicito Gonzalez, 74, told a reporter as he waited for a bus in Havana. "But I'll be there Sunday. The whole city will be there.''

The pope began Friday with an open-air Mass dedicated to Cuban youth in Camaguey, a city on Cuba's central plain. An estimated 50,000 people attended, including thousands of young people bused in from country towns.

In his homily, John Paul declared that a Catholic education would aid in the "sowing of virtue and spirituality for the good of the church and of the nation.''

He first raised the issue in a sermon on the family Thursday, scolding the government for having deprived parents of the choice to send their children to religious schools. The government does not have "the right to take the place of parents,'' he said.

Like the church itself, Catholic schools before Castro's 1959 revolution did not have deep and extensive roots through Cuban society. They were primarily havens for a white elite in a mostly mulatto and black nation.

After the revolution, many upper-class families left the country, the church hierarchy openly resisted Castro's socialist changes, and the new government ordered a halt to Catholic education. Today, only catechism classes on church grounds are allowed.

In recent years, Castro has loosened some strictures on religion. Cuban churchmen now clearly consider achieving more "space'' in education a key to building a broader following for a weak church. Although perhaps 40 percent of Cubans are baptized Catholics, probably no more than 5 percent attend Mass regularly.

As he often does, the pope spoke only in the most general terms about the values of a Catholic education, making no specific demands.

In his "World of Culture'' address on the university campus Friday evening, he seemed to raise his aim higher, to instilling Catholic values at the level of higher education.

"The church and the cultural institutions of the nation need to meet in dialogue and so work together to develop Cuban culture,'' he said.

Just Wednesday, at the pope's arrival ceremony, Castro pointedly raised his own memories of a Catholic education - of how, he said, he was taught intolerance for other religions, and of how he would ask his teachers why no black children attended the schools.

"I have not forgotten the unconvincing answers I was given,'' Castro told the pope.

In an interview this week with The Associated Press, Cuba's culture minister, Abel Prieto, addressed the issue more directly, saying the government considers education something that "strategically we have to maintain under state control.''

AP-NY-01-24-98 1147EST




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