Fr Campbell-Johnston spent many years as a priest in San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador.
The church there was persecuted by a western-supported military
dictatorship – responsible for the murder of Archbishop Oscar Romero in
1980, six Jesuits, two US nuns and many other Christian leaders.
Jesuit provincial
He recounts how, during a visit to the order’s social institutes in Latin America in 1977, he met Fr Bergoglio.
The
Argentinian had been Jesuit provincial for Argentina for four years.
“At the time,” Fr Campbell- Johnston says, “there were an estimated 6,000 political prisoners in Argentina and another 20,000
desaparecidos
, people who had been ‘disappeared’.”
In some countries, the Jesuit social institutes
were forced to act underground and in secrecy, he writes, “ but . . .
our institute in Buenos Aires was able to function freely because it
never criticised or opposed the government. As a result, there were
justice issues it could not address or even mention. This was the topic I
remembered discussing at length with Fr Bergoglio.
Inconclusive
“He naturally defended the existing situation, though I tried to show him how it was out of step with our other social institutes on the continent. Our discussion was lengthy . . . [but] we never reached an agreement.”
Back in Rome, Fr Campbell- Johnston says he
received a copy of a letter to the pope signed by more than 400
Argentinian women who had “lost” children or other relatives and who
begged the Vatican to intercede with the military dictatorship.
“I took it into the [Vatican] secretariat of state but never received any acknowledgement,” Fr Campbell-Johnston reports.