According to an Argentine priest, Pope Francis when he was Archbishop of
Buenos Aires helped save a young mailman from the abyss of drug
addiction and became his spiritual father.
Jesuit priest and Vatican Radio commentator Father Guillermo Ortiz
recounted to CNA knowing then-Cardinal Jorge Bergolio when he was still
provincial superior of the Jesuits in Argentina, as well as his own
personal introduction to the young man.
“When I was living in Buenos Aires,” he recalled, “I met this guy. He
listened to me on the radio and since he was a mailman, he knew the
address of my office and he began seeking me out to talk about spiritual
questions. He was getting out of drugs thanks to prayer, and he always
asked for spiritual guidance.”
After a while, however, the young man stopped coming to visit, and Fr.
Ortiz began to worry, until one day he ran across him on the street and
found that he had completely recovered.
“Do you know who I have been with, Father? Cardinal Bergoglio!” the
young man said. “I went by the chancery and I left a note with my name
and number saying I wanted to speak with him, and the next Saturday I
was in my room resting and my father knocked on the door.”
“I said, 'Don’t knock, this is my day off and I want to sleep a little
bit more!' But my father said, 'No, you can’t right now, the cardinal is
on the phone,'” he remembered.
“The cardinal himself had called to tell him when he could meet,” Fr.
Ortiz said. “Without any calendar, he answered him immediately! These
things are wonderful and one can only ask, 'How did he find the time?'”
Fr. Ortiz said the young mailman eventually overcame his addition
through prayer and spiritual direction from priests and in this case
from Cardinal Bergoglio, who helped him “continue his struggle against
drugs.”
What he most admired about the cardinal was his “closeness to the
people. He didn’t have any boundaries. Even as bishop and as cardinal he
didn’t have a secretary and he called people himself and met with
everyone that he could,” Fr. Ortiz said.
Fr. Ortiz is currently the director of Vatican Radio's Spanish-language
broadcast. Since the election of Pope Francis, he has spoken with the
pontiff on several occasions.