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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkTravel & Outdoors | The Cuba Connection | April 2005 

Fidel Castro Sends Condolences to Vatican, Declares Three Days of Mourning for Pope's Death
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Pope John Paul II shakes hands with Cuban President Fidel Castro on 21 January 1998. (Photo: AFP/Michel Gangne)
Havana - Cuban President Fidel Castro expressed condolences for the death of Pope John Paul II, declaring three days of official mourning on the communist-run island beginning Sunday. In a letter to the Vatican published Sunday on the front page of Juventud Rebelde newspaper, Castro called the pope's passing "sad news" and expressed "the most heartfelt condolences of the Cuban people and government."

"Humanity will preserve an emotional memory of the tireless work of His Holiness John Paul II in favor of peace, justice and solidarity among all people," Castro wrote.

The Cuban leader also highlighted the pope's historic January 1998 visit to the island, saying it will remain "engraved in the memory of our nation as a transcendent moment in relations between the Vatican State and the Republic of Cuba."

Cuba became officially atheist in the years after the 1959 revolution that brought Castro to power, but the government removed references to atheism in the constitution more than a decade ago and allowed religious believers to join the Communist Party.

Cuban Catholics gathered Sunday in Havana's towering cathedral for Mass, led by Cardinal Jaime Ortega, the island's top Roman Catholic churchman.

Ortega, who was to travel to the Vatican for the pope's funeral and to participate in the conclave of cardinals that will elect John Paul's successor, extolled John Paul's virtues and his message of peace, love and justice, saying, "The pope stirred humanity, just like Jesus did."

He later spoke with reporters but declined to speculate on likely successors to the pontiff, saying the decision will not be based on "preferences for a certain person, country or continent."

"The selection of the pope isn't produced from a candidacy," Ortega said. "The church ... looks for what the church needs at this moment, and that reflection will be decisive."

John Paul's death "leaves an enormous void ... but the church continues," he added.

The Cuban government said it would send a high-level delegation to the pope's funeral, which has not yet been scheduled, but it was not yet clear who would head it.

State-run media covered little of the news leading up to the pope's death, but once his death was announced, the news was broadcast across the island on the government's Radio Rebelde.

Much of Sunday's Juventud Rebelde newspaper was dedicated to the pope, with the state decree about official mourning on the island printed on the front page.

The Cuban flag was to fly at half-staff on public buildings and military installations for three days, and several events, including anniversary celebrations for communist organizations and baseball games, were suspended.

The decree praised the pope for all of his efforts "in favor of solutions for many social ills affecting humanity," as well as for publicly criticizing four decades of U.S. trade sanctions against Cuba.

Later in the day, more than 200 Cubans lined up outside the Vatican's diplomatic offices in Havana to sign a book of condolences for John Paul.

Archbishop Luigi Bonazzi, the Vatican's ambassador to Cuba, greeted those in line, including nuns, regular citizens and wives of Cuban political prisoners.

"One can see that the friendship the pope showed to Cuba on numerous occasions endures," he told reporters.

Cuban officials - including Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque and Caridad Diego, the director of religious affairs for the island's Communist Party - also stopped by to sign the book. Bonazzi personally thanked Perez Roque for the government's gestures of solidarity.



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