Pope Francis preferred carrying
out "a silent diplomacy" in helping victims versus leading a more public
outcry during Argentina's "dirty war," said an Argentine Nobel Peace
Prize laureate.
"The pope had nothing to do with the dictatorship ... he was not an
accomplice," Adolfo Perez Esquivel told journalists after his private
meeting with Pope Francis at the Vatican March 21.
While the Vatican released no details about the meeting, Perez, 81, told
journalists that he and the pope spoke about the so-called "dirty war"
period "in general terms" during their 30-minute encounter.
Perez, who won the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize for his work on human rights
during the 1976-1983 dictatorship, said the future pope, then-Jesuit
Father Jorge Mario Bergoglio, "was not among the bishops who were in the
front line of the defense of human rights because he preferred a silent
diplomacy to ask about the missing, about the oppressed."
He said leaders and members of the Catholic Church reacted and behaved
differently during the period as regards to either collaborating or
resisting the regime.
"There were bishops who were accomplices with the dictatorship, but not Bergoglio," he said.
Then-Father Bergoglio was head of the Jesuit province in the country
from 1973 to 1979, the height of the clandestine war that saw as many as
30,000 Argentines kidnapped, tortured, murdered or disappeared, never
to be seen again. He then served as rector of Colegio Maximo and a
parish priest in the Diocese of San Miguel until leaving for Germany to
complete his doctoral thesis in 1986.
Some claims had been made that Pope Francis played either a direct role
in the kidnappings of two Jesuit priests during the country's murderous
military dictatorship or that he allegedly failed to protect the two
young priests -- Fathers Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics -- from
kidnapping by Argentina's military junta in 1976. Both priests were
later freed.
The Vatican spokesman, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, said March 15,
"This was never a concrete or credible accusation," adding that the
future pope had been "questioned by an Argentine court as someone aware
of the situation but never as a defendant. He has, in documented form,
denied any accusations."
"Instead, there have been many declarations demonstrating how much (the
future Pope Francis) did to protect many persons at the time of the
military dictatorship," the spokesman said.
Father Jalics has recently emphasized that he and the late Father Yorio
had never been denounced by the future pope to the military junta.
Perez made a public statement on his website March 14, saying the pope "was not directly complicit" with the regime.
He said the pope "did not have ties with the dictatorship," even though
he may have "lacked the courage to stand with us in our struggle for
human rights."
After his March 21 meeting with the pope, Perez told reporters "there is
no proof" of the pope's complicity with the regime "because he was
never an accomplice, of this I am sure."