Francis yesterday became the first Pope to enter Mexico’s National Palace to meet the president, marking a new step in church-state reconciliation in a staunchly Catholic nation hit by violence and poverty.
Thousands thronged the streets of Mexico City to wave at the Argentina-born Pontiff as the popemobile took him to the historic Zocalo square housing the palace and the capital’s cathedral.
“He’s our spiritual guide and we hope that he supports us in this difficult moment for our country,” said Magdalena Caballero, a 50-year-old government worker whose nephew was kidnapped a few weeks ago. “His presence fills us with hope.”
President Enrique Pena Nieto gave Pope Francis a red-carpet welcome at the ornate National Palace, a symbolic location as it is the seat of governments that were militantly secular throughout the 20th century.
Previous visiting popes, John Paul II and Benedict XVI, were not invited to the palace, which features a mural of Mexico’s history by communist painter Diego Rivera.
While Mexico is the world’s second most populous Catholic country after Brazil, diplomatic relations with the Vatican were only restored in 1992.
The Pope’s presence at the National Palace “closes a cycle,” said Mexico’s ambassador to the Vatican, Mariano Palacios Alcocer.
Mexicans hope the Pope will use the visit to push Pena Nieto to fix the nation’s persistent problems, like a prison riot that killed 49 inmates on Thursday or the disappearance of 43 students in 2014.
“Since relations with the Vatican have improved, the government will maybe change its views and listen to the pope,” said Adan Gonzalez, 68, a retired industrial contractor who arrived at the Zocalo at 2am to ensure he would be close enough to see Francis.
The palace meeting “offers a study in contrasts” between a popular pope and “an unpopular head of state who faces one setback after another,” said Andrew Chesnut, religion professor at Virginia Commonwealth University.
“It’s the Mexican president, of course, who has the most to gain from basking in the glow of one of the world’s most popular figures,” Chesnut told AFP.
Hours before landing in Mexico late on Friday, Pope Francis took care of another, much older rift by holding a historic meeting with the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, in Cuba in a bid to end a 1,000-year-old Christian rift.
The 79-year-old Francis, in white robes and a skullcap, and Kirill, 69, in black robes and a white headdress, exchanged kisses and embraced before sitting down smiling for the historic meeting at Havana airport.
“At last we meet. We are brothers,” said the Pope as they met. “Clearly this meeting is God’s will.”
The two religious leaders called for “unity,” while Francis later said they had talked about a possible program of “activities in common.”
Francis stepped off a plane in the sunshine and shook hands with Cuban President Raul Castro on the tarmac at Jose Marti Airport before heading into the private meeting with Kirill.
The white-bearded Orthodox leader was also greeted by the 84-year-old Castro after arriving on Thursday.
After his meeting with Pena Nieto, the Pope was to undertake a pilgrimage to the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, a major Catholic shrine.
The basilica houses the image of a dark-skinned Virgin Mary that Catholics believe miraculously became imprinted on a piece of fabric after she appeared before an indigenous peasant in 1531.
“The Pope’s encounter with Guadalupe will be monumental - he’s strongly Marian and she’s not only Queen of Mexico but Empress of the Americas,” Chesnut said.
The Pope has asked for time alone to pray quietly in front of the image after the mass.
The following days will take the pope to some of Mexico’s notoriously poor and violent regions.
“The Mexico of violence, corruption, drug cartels: That’s not the Mexico that Our Mother loves,” he said days before his visit, referring to the Virgin. “I don’t want to cover up any of that.”
The Pope has chosen to visit regions affected by many of these problems.
Today, he will lead a massive outdoor mass in Ecatepec, one of the many Mexico City suburbs hit by crime and an epidemic of murders against women.
The next day, he travels to Chiapas, the poorest state in the country, where he will preside over a mass that will be conducted in three indigenous languages and approve a decree allowing native languages at Churches.
On Tuesday, Francis goes to Morelia, the capital of the western state of Michoacan, were farmers formed vigilante forces in 2013 to combat the cult-like Knights Templar drug cartel.
He will cap his trip on Wednesday in Ciudad Juarez, the former murder capital of the world across the border from Texas. There, he will lead hundreds of thousands in a cross-border mass, with the parents of the 43 missing students expected to be in the crowd.