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| Reformist pope, murdered archbishop to be made saints |
Vatican
City (AFP) - Pope Paul VI, who oversaw sweeping reforms of the Catholic Church
in the 1960s, will be made a saint along with a Salvadoran archbishop who was
shot dead while celebrating mass, the Vatican said on Wednesday.
Pope
Francis signed decrees giving the go-ahead for the honours on the basis of
miracles attributed to each candidate, the Holy See said in a statement.
The pope
put Paul VI on the path to sainthood by beatifying him in October 2014, while
Oscar Romero was likewise elevated to the status of "blessed" in May
2015.
Paul VI
completed the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, or "Vatican II",
which revolutionised the relationship between Catholic believers and priests
and opened the Church to dialogue with other religions.
Mass,
historically celebrated in Latin, was translated into local languages and
priests addressed their congregations face-on instead of facing the altar.
Paul VI is
credited with being one of Pope Francis' role models, a humble man to whom the
Argentine pope frequently refers in his speeches. At the beatification mass,
Francis had hailed him as a "brave Christian".
Giovanni
Battista Montini, a soft-spoken cardinal from northern Italy, was elected pope
in 1963, adopting the name Paul VI. He was pope for 15 tumultuous years, which
saw many believers and priests leave the Church as social rebellions swept
across the West.
His papacy
was marked by growing secularisation and social liberation, and while the
polarised politics of the Cold War did little to ease his task he was also
hampered by a reputation for being overly cautious.
He
reaffirmed the Church's ban on artificial contraception -- despite the fact
that his own birth control commission, set up to advise the Vatican, voted
overwhelming to lift the prohibition.
The
decision enraged many Catholics at a time when believers were embracing sexual
freedom and women were demanding the right to use the birth control pill.
'A wise
pastor'
Romero,
murdered in 1980, was beatified in San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador in
Central America, in front of 200,000 worshippers.
Cardinal
Angelo Amato read out a letter from the pope proclaiming to the frenzied crowd
that Romero "henceforth is called blessed."
Then US
president Barack Obama welcomed the beatification, calling Romero "a wise
pastor and a courageous man who persevered in the face of opposition from
extremes on both sides".
Romero's
assassination occurred at the outset of El Salvador's civil war and propelled
the country deeper into a brutal conflict that raged until 1992.
No one was
ever convicted of Romero's killing, but a UN-sponsored truth commission later
concluded it was carried out by a right-wing death squad under the orders of a
former army officer who died the year the war ended.
The
movement to make Romero a saint was long resisted by conservative Catholics and
the Salvadoran right, who saw veiled Marxism in his sermons eulogising the poor
and radio broadcasts condemning government repression.
The
petition languished for years in the Vatican, finally moving forward in
February 2015 when Pope Francis named Romero a martyr of the Church -- less
than a year after his own election to the papacy.

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