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Pope Francis draws criticism for extolling Russian imperialist tsars

  • In a video address to Catholic youths in St Petersburg on Friday, Francis said: ‘You are the heirs of the great mother Russia. Go forward’
  • Ukraine said the comments, which Francis made on Friday in a video address to Catholic youths gathered in St Petersburg, were ‘deeply regrettable’

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Pope Francis at the Vatican, Rome on Wednesday. Photo: AP
Reuters
Pope Francis came under criticism on Monday for telling Russian youths to remember that they are the heirs of past tsars such as Peter the Great, who President Vladimir Putin has held up as an example to justify the invasion of Ukraine.
Ukraine said the comments, which Francis made on Friday in a live video address to Catholic youths gathered in St Petersburg, were “deeply regrettable”.

Francis read his prepared speech in Spanish but at the end, shifted into impromptu Italian and said: “Don’t forget (your) heredity. You are heirs of the great Russia – the great Russia of the saints, of kings, the great Russia of Peter the Great, of Catherine II, the great Russian empire, cultured, so much culture, so much humanity. You are the heirs of the great mother Russia. Go forward.”

Pope Francis attends a meeting with nuns at the Vatican, Rome on Friday. Photo: Reuters
Pope Francis attends a meeting with nuns at the Vatican, Rome on Friday. Photo: Reuters

The Vatican released the text of the address on Saturday but did not include the last, improvised paragraph. A video of the pope making the comments was posted by religious websites.

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“It is precisely with such imperialist propaganda, the ‘spiritual ties’ and the ‘need’ to save ‘great Mother Russia’ that the Kremlin justifies the killing of thousands of Ukrainians and the destruction of Ukrainian cities and villages,” Oleg Nikolenko, spokesman for the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, said on Facebook.

“It is deeply regrettable that such notions of being a great power, which contribute, in essence, to Russia’s chronic aggressiveness, are voiced by the pope, either knowingly or unknowingly,” Nikolenko said.

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An editorial on Italy’s Il Sismografo website, which specialises in Catholic affairs, called the pope’s words “odd” at a delicate moment in history.

It noted that Catherine, commonly known as Catherine the Great and who ruled from 1729 to 1796, annexed Crimea in 1783. It also noted that Catherine protected Jesuits in Russian-controlled lands after Pope Clement XIV suppressed the order worldwide in 1773. Pope Francis is a Jesuit.

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