Pope -Trump meeting “Expected” Next May

Christopher Lamb in Vatican Insider, on February 2017

 

Encounter between the two leaders highly likely when US President travels to Italy for G7 summit

 

   James     (Note:    Who are the two persons today hogging the limelight all over the world, two who are most talked about and discussed for good or bad reasons? They are Donald Trump for uncomplimentary reasons and Pope Francis for complimentary reasons.

                   That is, if your motive is mere publicity or advertising you have to become either famous or infamous, great or notorious. Though these two are antithetical like north and south poles, they are going to meet. They have at least decided on it, possibly May end. News is not news unless it is new. Dog bites man is not news, man bites dog is. What is out of the ordinary only makes news. Pope-President meet is out of the ordinary, so news.

                 This gives us also the advance information that we can expect each of these public popular figures to be exemplary and edifying in their public pronouncements about each other until May end at least. In the past Francis has been, cut and dry, matter of fact, without mincing words, when he said of Trump that one who builds walls cannot be a Christian, but one has to try to be a builder of bridges. He also said he would not be rushed into making any judgements on US President until he sees him performing, acting as President.  Now the possibility is that he will keep his mouth shut, and his eyes wide open, until he meets him in May, not to torpedo that plan.

               And Trump has said that attacking a public figure like Pope “isn’t wise” when he sits on a throne of the US president. So let us watch and see how they both are going to be responsible populist figures who lead by example, not words. james kottoor, editor).

 

VATICAN CITY:Pope Francis and President Donald Trump are expected to have their first meeting at the end of May, a moment that will bring together two of the world’s most riveting public figures.

 

Diplomatic sources have said the United States president will see the Pope when he comes to Italy for the G7 gathering of world leaders in Sicily while the White House yesterday confirmed Trump would attend the summit.  

 

Both of Trump’s immediate predecessors met Popes for the first time when travelling to Italy for G8 summits with President Barack Obama meeting Benedict XVI in 2009 and George W. Bush meeting John Paul II in 2001.  

 

The Holy See are not commenting on when a meeting between the two will take place but Vatican sources say that the 26-27 May gathering in Taormina opens the way for Francis to see Trump.  

 

“This visit gives the president an opportunity to meet the Pope,” one diplomatic source explained. “And if he came to Italy without seeing Francis it would be seen as a snub, particularly given their earlier clashes over migration. Trump also sees that wherever you sit on the political spectrum attacking the papacy isn’t wise.” 

 

Nevertheless, the meeting is set to be full of political tension due to the radically different agendas of Francis, a figurehead for the compassionate, global world order and Trump, who has adopted a nationalistic tone of “America first.”  

 

The Pope has been described as “Leader of the Global Left” by the Wall Street Journal thanks to his focus on inequality and climate change, and has already criticised Trump on the issue of migration. Francis described the Republican candidate as “not Christian” for his plans to build a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico while recently warning against populist saviours that can result in dictators like Hitler.  

 

Meanwhile, the Vatican as criticised Trump’s travel ban on people from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen entering the country and putting limits on accepting refugees.  But parallels have also been drawn between the Pope and Trump as two populist leaders shaking up their respective institutions by taking a message directly to the people.  

 

US Vatican writer John Allen has made the comparison while adding: “it’s the nature of populists to be divisive, because they upset systems and challenge business as usual.”  He points out, however, that while Trump is “a politician and a celebrity” Francis is at heart a pastor who, unlike the president, “rarely personalises his rhetoric.”  

 

The big differences in the two leaders’ global agendas will need to be bridged by the president’s ambassador to the Vatican, who is expected to be announced soon.  Previous Republican administrations appointed some heavy hitters as Vatican ambassadors such as Congressman Francis Rooney, Mary Ann Glendon, a Harvard Law School professor and Jim Nicholson, former Secretary of Veterans Affairs. 

 

Under Trump, the role will require diplomatic expertise, need someone with the ear of the president and an individual who recognises the domestic consequences to clashing with the papacy.Today, a number of people are turning to the Pope as an upholder of the liberal order, and an opponent to the forces that Trump has unleashed. So, when the two meet, some will be asking if this is a case of the United States president paying a visit to the leader of the free world?

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