“Dos Papas”: two types of man, two models of the Church

 I just saw the movie, Dos Papas, by Fernando Meirelles, the consecrated Brazilian filmmaker.

In my opinion the movie is technically and aesthetically well made, reproducing the grandiose spaces of the Vatican and its gardens. The movie is based on historical events, with the logical creativity this art form allows, especially in the construction of the dialogues, which reflect their respective theologies and their well known positions.

What I say here is a strictly my personal opinion. I have had the privilege of personally knowing the two Popes, with whom I maintained and maintain close relations and friendship.

 Pope Ratzinger: rigorous and refined

I owe a debt of gratitude to Professor Joseph Ratzinger for having valued positively my doctoral thesis about “The Church as a Fundamental Sacrament in the Secularized World.” It was voluminous, with more than 500 printed pages. Professor Ratzinger helped me financially with a considerable amount of money, and found an editor to publish it when no one wanted to risk publishing a book of such dimensions. The reception in the international theological community was excellent. It is considered a fundamental work, especially by the French Dominican Jean Yves Congar, a well known specialist in the theme, Church.

Professor Ratzinger is a person of a very refined manner, and extremely intelligent. Never have I heard him raise his voice, he is very timid and reserved

When I leaned that he had been elected Pope, I immediately thought: “He is a Pope who will suffer much because he perhaps has never embraced the people, least of all a woman, nor has he ever been exposed to multitudes”. 

Our friendship was strengthened by the fact that for five years, beginning in 1974, in Easter week, (which often happens around May), some 25 well known progressive men and women theologians from around the world used to gather in the city of Nimega, in the Low Countries or in other European cities.  For a week we would carry on ecumenical discussions, accompanied by a small group of scientist, even Paulo Freire, about topics relevant to the world and to the Church.  We published the magazine, Concilium, that appeared in 7 languages and is still being published, (in Brazil by Editora Vozes). In that magazine the best minds of the world collaborate in different fields of knowledge, from sexuality and Liberation Theology to modern cosmology.

Professor Ratzinger almost always would sit by my side.  After lunch, while everyone else took a nap, Professor Ratzinger and I would stroll through the gardens, discussing theological themes; our favorites were Saint Augustine and Saint Bonaventure, practically all of whose books I have read.

Each one in his role without breaking the relationship

Made Cardinal and president of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, in 1984 he had the thankless task of questioning me about my book Church: Charisma and Power. Cardinal Ratzinger fulfilled his institutional role of questioner, and I, that of the defender of my opinions. It was a strong dialogue, but was always elegant on his part, even when, after the interrogatory, there was a second part, namely, an even more difficult encounter with him and Brazilian Cardinals Don Paulo Evaristo Arns and Don Aloysio Lorscheider, who accompanied me in Rome and testified in my favor. We were three against one. I must admit, Cardinal Ratzinger felt uncomfortable.

A year later, I received the culmination of the doctrinal process, resulting in my removal from the chair of theology, from my position in Editorial Vozes, and the imposition of a “silencio obsequioso” that precluded me from talking, teaching, giving interviews or publishing anything. The final decision after the interrogation was conducted by 13 Cardinals (13 to break a tie). Later on, I learned from an emissary of his private secretary that Cardinal Ratzinger had voted in my favor, but it was the losing vote. It must be said that whenever news reporters asked Cardinal Ratzinger about me, he would answer with humor that I am “ein frommer Theologe” (a pious theologian) that one day I would deepen my true theological path.

The movie does not show the refined and elegant figure that characterizes Cardinal Ratizinger.  In one scene he raises his voice and almost shouts, which appears to me totally improbable and inconsistent with his character.

In spite of finding ourselves in different situations, he as Pope and I, a theologian promoted to laity, our friendship was never broken. In his ninety years, when  a Festschrift (a book in homage) was organized, in which many notable persons made contributions, at the request of Pope Benedict himself, I was asked to write my testimony about him, which I did with pleasure.  Friendship is stronger than any doctrine, always human.

 Pope Francis: tender, fraternal and an innovator

With reference to Jorge Mario Bergoglio, now Pope Francis, I would say the following: we met in 1972 in the Colegio Maximo de San Miguel, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was exposing the singularity of the spiritual path of Saint Ignatius of Loyola, and I, the spiritual path of Saint Francis. We discussed the hermeneutics of a French writer, whose name I don’t recall, and also aspects of the liberation theology of Argentina (the silenced people and the oppressed culture), and that of our Brazil and of Peruvian (the social injustice and the historical oppression of the poor and the Afro descendants). There is a photo of that gathering that Pope Francis kindly sent me from Rome.  That photo shows the entire group of women and men theologians who were in attendance, most of whom are no longer with us, some of them persecuted and tortured by the barbaric repression of the Argentinian or Chilean military.  After that meeting we lost track of each other.

Pope Francis: theologian of the integral liberation 

Juan Carlos Scannone, recently deceased, the main representative of the theology of liberation in Argentina and Pope Francis’ professor of theology, told me that Bergoglio entered the Jesuit Order as an adult vocation (he was a chemist before, as the movie shows). He immediately liked the theology of liberation of the Argentinian type and he made a promise he always fulfilled even as the Cardinal of Buenos Aires: each week he spent an afternoon and even a day in a slum, always alone, he would walk into the houses and would speak with everyone. He did not live in the Cardinal’s Palace, did not have a car, used the bus or the subway.  He lived alone in an apartment, and prepared his own meals.

Bergoglio was General Superior of the Jesuits from Argentina, acting especially in the region of Buenos Aires. As a young man, he was very rigorous. He had to confront a grave situation that until now he carries in his heart: two Jesuits, Father Francisco Jalics and Father Orlando Yorio (I personally met Yorio in Quilmes) lived in a shantytown with the poor and marginalized. All those who worked with the people, as in Brazil in 1964 (and perhaps even today under the new authoritarian government of Bolsonaro) were considered Marxists and subversives. They were watched by the organs of military security. Bergoglio was informed that these two Jesuits were going to be kidnapped with the accompanying torture. He tried to save them, even appealing to the vote of obedience.  It is typical of the Jesuit Order, and means that they should leave the favela in order not to be victims of violent repression.

They argued in an evangelical form: “A pastor never abandons his flock, his people; he shares their destiny; it is better to obey the God of the poor, than to obey a human religious superior”.

Ultimately, they were kidnapped and harshly tortured. Jalics reconciled with Bergoglio and lives in Germany, while Yorio felt abandoned and distanced himself from the Cardinal (Yorio died in Uruguay years ago). I could feel his personal bitterness as I tried to understand the impasse that responsible religious authority faces in extreme situations. Even then, Bergoglio hided many in the Colegio Máximo de San Miguel or helped them reach the border of another country to escape certain death.

Pope Francis: caring for the Common Home

Once he was elected Pope, we communicated again. Knowing that I had been intensely occupied with the theme of integral ecology, including the Common Home, Mother Earth, Pope Francis asked for my cooperation, which I gave assiduously. But he warned me: “do not send the texts to the Vatican, because they will not give them to me (the famous papal Curia’s sottoseder: to sit over and forget), but rather, to send them directly to me in care of the Argentinian Ambassador to the Holy See, because every day very early he takes the mate with me”. I always did that. The word goes around that my thoughts and themes are noticeable in the Encyclical letter,Laudato Si: on the Caring for the Common Home (2015). But the encyclical is the Pope’s and he can have whatever advisers he wants. I also sent him texts to the 2019 Pan Amazonic Synod  He replied giving thanks.

On selecting the name Francis, at the suggestion of his Brazilian friend, Cardinal Claudio Hummes, who whispered the name Francis to him, and on making a clear option for the poor, he was transformed. The Jesuit rigor was united with the Franciscan tenderness. He is extremely strict with the internal problems of the Vatican Curia, the pedophilia, and the financial corruption of the Vatican Bank. On the other hand, he is visibly tender and fraternal.

No Pope before him has harshly reproved the system that has lost its sensibility, its solidarity with the millions of poor and hungry, its capacity to cry and instead worships the idol of money.  Predator of nature, against life and against Mother Earth. We need not say what system he talks about. His option for the poor is strong. Due to his courageous stands on the Earth’s ecological emergency, global warming and the dehumanizing of the human relationships, Pope Francis has become a religious and political leader. His voice is listened to and respected around the world.

 Two types of man and two models of Church 

The purpose of the movie is to show two types of religious persons and two models for the Church.

First it shows that Ratzinger and Bergoglio, both human, profoundly human. In this sense, they both have their positive side, and also their dark side. For Pope Benedict XVI, it is his indulgence and lenience with the pedophiles. We must not forget that he wrote to all the bishops, under pontifical secrecy that never can be broken, not to turn the pedophile priests and bishops over to the civil tribunals. This would demoralize the institutional Church. They should confess their sin and be transferred somewhere else. Pope Benedict did not realize that it was not only about a sin that could be forgiven by confession. It was a crime against innocent human beings that the civil justice had to investigate and punish. Thought was not given to the victims, but only to safeguarding the image of the Church as an institution. That omission was strongly criticized by Cardinal Bergoglio, as is clearly shown in the movie.

Pope Benedict XVI followed the line of John Paul II, who was a moral and doctrinal conservative.  He attempted to relativize the aggiornamento of the Vatican Council II (1962-1965). He saw the Church as a fortress besieged from all sides by enemies, that is, by the errors and deviations of modernity. The proposed solution was to return to the previous great discipline from the Councils of Trent (1545-1563) and Vatican I (1869-1870). The centrality was the orthodoxy and the sane doctrine, as if preaching was what saved, and not the practices. In this line, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was strict: more than 110 men and women theologians were condemned, deposed from their chairs, silenced (in Brazil, Yvone Gebara and myself) or punished in some form. One of them, an excellent theologian, was condemned with no explanation.  He became so depressed that he thought of suicide.  He was cured only when he went to Central America to work with the Comunidades Eclesiales de Base, (Ecclesial Base Communities). The life of faith of the simple and poor people returned to him the meaning of life.

There was a severe ecclesial winter. A whole generation of priests was formed in this doctrinal style, with their eyes on the past, using the symbols of clerical power. In the same way, many bishops were consecrated who were more nearly orthodox authoritarian ecclesiastics than pastors in the midst of their people.

Pope Francis is a different type of religious personality. He comes from the ends of the Earth, far from the old and almost agonizing European Christianity. And he has brought Spring to the Church and the political world.

Pope Francis first innovated the habits. He refused to use the “mozzeta”, that small white cape filled with brocades that popes carried on their shoulders, a symbol of the absolute power of the pagan Roman emperors. In the movie Francis clearly says: “the carnival is over”. He does not accept the cross of gold and continues with his cross of iron, rejects the red Prada shoes and continues with his old black shoes. He does not declare himself as the Pope of the Church, but as the Bishop of Rome, and only from there, Pope of the universal Church. When he was presented as the new Pope, Francis asked the people to pray for him. Only after that did the new Pope bless the people. Here there clearly appears a new theological vision, according to Vatican Council II: first comes the People of God and thereafter comes the Pope and all other ecclesiastic authorities at the service of the People of God.

Pope Francis inspires the Church not with Cannon Law, but with love and collegiality, (consulting with the community of Bishops).  In his first public speech, Pope Francis said: “how I would like a Church that is poor, and for the poor”. He does not live in the papal palace, that would be an offense to the poverello from Assisi, but in a boarding house. At meal time, he stands in line like everyone else and comments with humor: “This way it is more difficult to be poisoned”.

Francis foregoes a special automobile and a body of personal protection. He mixes with the people, gives his  hand to whomever extends his to him and kisses the children. He is a father and grandfather loved by the multitudes.

His model of Church is of a “field hospital” that cares for all without asking whence they come and what is their moral situation. It is a “Church on the go” towards the human and existential peripheries. He respects dogmas and doctrines, but clearly affirms that he prefers to position himself before the historical Jesus, opting for direct encounters with the people and for the pastoral caring of tenderness. He insists that Jesus came to teach us to live unconditional love, solidarity and forgiveness. To Francis, God’s infinite mercy is central. And he says more: “God does not know eternal condemnation because God would lose in the face of evil.  And God can not lose.  His mercy has no limit”. Consequently, He calls all, once purified from their wickedness, to the home the Father and Mother of goodness have prepared for all from eternity. To die is to feel called by God; and one happily goes to the Great Encounter.

As for Ecumenism, he emphasizes that the different churches must recognize each other and together be at the service of the Kingdom of justice, solidarity, fraternity and of love, nourishing the sacred flame of spirituality hidden within every person.

It is another type of pontificate, another form of being human; one that recognizes that he lost patience when a woman grabbed his hand and forcefully pressed it. Annoyed, he slapped her hand two or tree times. But the following day, he apologized publicly.  He is naturally humble and acknowledges his weaknesses.

Two Popes: different and complementary

Pope Francis opened up all his humanity, allowing himself the right to experience the joy of living, of encouraging his favorite  team, the San Lorenzo, of enjoying the music of the Beatles; and even of getting Pope Benedict XVI to dance a tango with him… something unthinkable in a severe German academician. Here he appears not as the Pope, but as the man, Bergoglio who unravels the shy humanity of the man, Ratzinger. The two are different, but they come together as one in a tango of adult persons.

The movie is a beautiful metaphor of the human condition, with two different forms of realizing humanity, which do not oppose but compose and complete each other, one with tenderness and the other with vigor.

The movie is worth seeing, because it makes us think and offers us lessons of mutual listening, of open dialogue, of truths spoken without beating about the bush and of a friendship that grows as the relationship is extended in each encounter. The forgiveness that each gives the other, and the final embrace, long and loving, enlarges the humanity and spirituality that is present in each one of us.

 Leonardo Boff  Eco-Theologian-Philosopher, of the Earthcharter Commission

Free translation from the Spanish sent by
Melina Alfaro, alfaro_melina@yahoo.com.ar.
Done at REFUGIO DEL RIO GRANDE, Texas, EE.UU.

 

The Christmas of today’s Herods

Christmas always has its idilio. There can be no sadness when life is born, especially when Jesus, the puer aeternus, the Divine Child, comes into the world. There are angels singing, the star of Bethlehem shining, the shepherds watching their flock overnight. But principally there are Mary, the good Joseph and the Child lying in the manger, “because there was no room for them in the inn”. And behold there also appeared, coming from the Orient, wise men called magi, who opened their coffers and offered Him gold, incense and myrrh, mysterious symbols. But there was also a bad king, Herod, very cruel, so cruel that he even executed his whole family. Herod heard that in Bethlehem, the city of David, a child had been born who would be the Savior. Afraid of loosing his throne, he ordered that all the boys under two years old in Bethlehem and surrounding area be killed. The sacred texts preserve one of the most painful wails of all the New Testament: ”In Ra’má a voice was heard, lamentation, crying, and great mourning, Rachel wept for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not” (Matthew 2,18).

Christmas this year brings to mind the present day Herods who are destroying our children and youth. Between 2007 and 2019, 57 children and youth under 14 years of age have died in Brazil due to stray bullets in police actions. Just this year, 2019, the Platform of Cross Fire reports that 6 children and 19 teenagers lost their lives in Rio de Janeiro in police actions. In Rio’s metropolitan region there have been 6,058 shootouts, with 2,301 persons shot, of which 1,213 were killed and 1,088 gravely wounded. Causing more clamor was the case of Agatha Félix, an 8 year old girl killed by a stray riffle bullet to the back when she was inside a kombi van going home with her mother. Their names deserve mention. Just a few years older, they shared the destiny of the innocent children killed by Herod: Jenifer Gomes,11; Kauan Peixoto, 12; Kauã Rozário, 11; Kauê dos Santos, 12; Agatha Félix, 8; and Ketellen Gomes, 5 years old. The Governor of Rio de Janeiro and his ferocious police are accused of crimes against humanity, because he orders attacks on communities with helicopters and drones, terrorizing the people. Mayor Marcelo Crivella confessed that in the communities’ 436 schools, the children lost 7000 hours of classes due to police operations.

Together with Vanessa Francisco Sales, the mother of Agatha Félix, who carried her little daughter’s doll in the funeral, let there be heard the voices of the Biblical Rachel: the mothers of the Morro do Alemão, of Jacarezinho, of the Chatuba de Mesquita, of the Vila Moretti de Bangu, of the Complejo de Chapadão, of Duque de Caxias, of Vila Cruzeiro in the Complexo de Penha, of Maricá. Let’s hear their lamentations:

“Many voices are heard, many cries and many wails. The mothers cry for their beloved sons and daughters, killed by stray bullets. They do not want to be consoled , because they have lost their beloved children forever. They ask for an answer that does not come from anywhere. With tears and many lamentations we plead that the killing of our children stop. For the love of God stop the killing. We want our children alive. We demand justice”.

This is the context of this 2019 Christmas, worsened by an official policy that uses the perverse means of lies, fake news, anger and visceral hatred. Jesus was born poor and lived poor all his life. And there comes a President who often has the name of Jesus on his lips, but not in his heart, because he throws insults to the LGBT, the Blacks, the Indigenous, the quilombolas (Afro-Brazilians who live in the quilombos) and the women.

The President openly says that he does not like the poor, that is, he does like those of whom Jesus said: “Blessed are the poor” and called them, “my younger brothers and sisters”, and that “in the end of life they will be our judges“ (Matthew 25,40). That he does not like the poor means that he does not want to govern for the majority of Brazilians, who are poor and even miserable; for whom he would primarily govern and care.

In spite of all that, Christmas must be celebrated. It is dark, but we celebrate the humanity and joyfulness of our God. God made himself into a helpless child. What happiness it is to know that we will be judged by a child that only wants to play and to accept and give love.

May Christmas gives us a little of the light that comes from the Star that filled the shepherds of the fields of Bethlehem with joy and that guided the wise magi to the grotto. “Its light illuminates all the persons who come to this world” (John 1,9), to you and to me, to all, not only to those who have been baptized. Merry Christmas.

Leonardo BoffEco-Theologian-Philosopher,Earthcharter Commissioner

Free translation from the Spanish sent by
Melina Alfaro, alfaro_melina@yahoo.com.ar.
Done at REFUGIO DEL RIO GRANDE, Texas, EE.UU.

Lula and Bolsonaro:the clash of two visions for Brazil

The release from prison of former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, under the presidency of Jair Bolsonaro, has created a dramatic confrontation of two visions for Brazil. More than just opposite, these two visions are antagonistic. Without forcing the terms, it appears to be the realization of the Gnostic’s world vision that read history as a struggle between good and evil, or according to St. Agustin’s The City of God, a struggle between love and hate.

Actually, Bolsonaro’s vision is based on spreading hate for the homo-friendly, the LGBT, the Blacks and the poor in general, and in exalting dictatorships to the point of praising notorious torturers. For his part, Lula affirms that he harbors no hate, but a love that brought him to implement social policies for including millions of the marginalized, guaranteeing them the vital minimums.

We recognize that this projects a vision that appears dialectic, dividing history into light and dark, but, sadly, that is how it is, even when this dualism is rejected.

This is taking place in the context of world ascension of conservatism, of fundamentalism both political and religious, and the exacerbation of the logic of capitalism as expressed in ultra radical neo-liberalism, turned into the Bolsonaro government’s axial option. This radical neo-liberalism, formulated by the Vienna and Chicago schools, from where Paulo Guedes comes, maintains that “there are no rights other than the laws of the market, and poverty is not an ethical problem but reflects technical incompetence, because the poor are individuals who, due to their own shortcomings, are the losers in the competition with the others”. That theoretical presupposition implies that there is no need to worry about policies for the poor. It is a government of the rich for the rich.

Lula, by contrast, affirms the centrality of social justice; starting with the great majorities who are the victims of capitalism. Lula proposes a social and participatory democracy which includes those majorities. Instead of relying on the support of the social movements, whence he came, as was successfully done by Bolivia’s President Evo Morales Ayma, recently unseated by a classist and racist coup, he tried to realize that vision through a presidency based on a coalition of political parties, He considers this his major mistake, .

In Brazil, racism and intolerance –that were always present, but closeted– have explicitly emerged. They used to hide under the name “Brazilian cordiality”. But as Sergio Buarque de Hollanda, (in Roots of Brazil), noted, that cordiality can mean violence and hate as well as openness and love, because both live in the heart. Hence the name “cordial”.

Surfing on this national and international wave Bolsonaro was elected President and former President Lula was arrested and convicted through lawfare, the judicial body that was implementing the Lava Jato.

Jair Bolsonaro, even after being elected, frequently uses fake news, open lies, and governs with his children in a nepotistic authoritarian and often crass form.

Lula appears as a well known charismatic leader who speaks to the hearts of the forgotten masses. He proposes a social democracy, a State ruled by laws and the urgent need to regain all that has been dismantled.

Everything depends on the style in which this clash will take place. Bolsonaro is avoiding direct confrontation. Because he knows the limitations of his talents; he has left it in the hands of his Secretaries of Justice, Sergio Moro, and of the Treasury, Paulo Guedes, who are better prepared.

As I see it, Lula must avoid lowering himself to a confrontation at Bolsonaro’s level. It is important that Lula bring to light what Bolsonaro hides and cannot use: the crassness of the facts, the tragedy that devastates the great humiliated and offended majorities. There is no need for a long speech in reply to Bolsonaro, because he, himself, is self destructive. Lula must be positive as he speaks to the hearts of the destitute masses, firmly denouncing the evil perpetrated by the measures of exclusion, contrary to established rights, and life itself.

To summarize a lengthy reasoning: It would be wise to adopt the attitude of the best man the West has given, the poor and humble Francis of Assisi. With his realist sensibility, he knew that reality is contradictory, composed of the dia-bolical (that which divides) and of the sim-bolical (that which unites). He did not point to the darkest side of our reality, but emphasized instead the luminous side, so that it inundates mind and heart. As the Poverello of Assisi proclaims: “where there is hatred, I bring love; where there is discord, I bring unity; where there is desperation, I bring hope; where there is darkness, I bring light”.

This option implies a conviction that no government can stand if it is based on hatred, lies and the rejection of Earth’s most humble and poor. Truth, sincere intentions, and selfless love will have the last word. Not Cain but Abel. Not Judas but Jesus. Not Brilhante Ustra but Vladimir Herzog.

Leonardo Boff Eco-Theologian-Philosopher, Earthcharter Commissioner

A brief account of «the destruction of the Indians» in Brazil

Meditating on the PanAmazon Synod of October 2019, makes me remember what Bartolome de las Casas called «the destruction of the Indians» when he was dealing with Central America.

The first encounter of April 21, 1500, idyllically narrated by the chronicler Pero Vaz de Caminha, soon turned into a profound disappointment: due to the greed of the colonizers there was no reciprocity between the Portuguese and the Indigenous people. Rather, it was a confrontation, unequal and violent, with disastrous consequences for the future of all Native Nations.

As in the entire Latin American continent, the Indigenous people were deprived of their status as human beings. Even in 1704, the Aguiras Chamber, in Ceara, Brazil, wrote in a letter to the king of Portugal that “there is no need for missions with these barbarians because they have only the form of humans, and whoever says anything different is clearly wrong.” Before Pope Paul III had to intervene, and with the Papal Bull Sublimis Deus of July 9, 1537, he proclaimed the absolute dignity of the Indigenous peoples as true human beings, free peoples and owners of their lands.

Due to the white invader’s diseases, against which the Indigenous people had no immunity: flu, chickenpox, measles, malaria and syphilis; to the Cross and the sword; the degradation of their lands, making hunting and farming impossible; because of slavery; the wars officially declared by Don João VI on May, 1808, against the Krenak in the Rio Dulce Valley; the systematic humiliation and denial of their identity… the five million indigenous were reduced to the current 930.000. The virtual eradication for political purposes of the Indigenous peoples was accomplished, either by forced acculturation, spontaneous and planed misogynistic practices, or by pure and simple genocide, much as Brazil’s General Governor, Mendes Sá, did with the Tupiniquim of Iheus: “The corpses were placed along the beaches, aligned in the extension of a legua.” In recent times, when the great highways and the hydroelectric damns in the Amazon were opened, chemical defoliants, helicopter attacks and low level flights of airplanes were used against the Indigenous populations, plus bacteria that were intentionally introduced.

We need quote only one paradigmatic example that reflects the logic of the “destruction of the Brazilian Indians”. In the beginning of the Twentieth century, when Dominican Friars created a Mission on the banks of the Araguaia River, 6 to 8.000 Kaiapo, were at war with the collectors of natural rubber of the region. By 1918 they had been reduced to 500. In 1927 there were 27, and in 1958 there was only one surviving Kaiapo. In 1962 the Kaiapo were declared extinct in the whole region.

With the annihilation of more than a thousand nations in 500 years of Brazilian history, a human inheritance, built over thousands of years of cultural work, dialogue with nature, creation of languages and construction of a world vision friendly to life and respectful of nature, disappeared forever. We are all poorer without them.

The nightmare of a Native Terena, related by one who knows well the souls of Brazilians and the Indigenous, shows the impact of this demographic devastation on people and nations: “I went to the old Guarani cemetery in the Reserve, and saw a big cross. Some white men came and nailed me face down to that cross. They left and I lay there, desperate, nailed to the cross. Suddenly I awoke, filled with fear” (Roberto Gambini, The Indigenous Mirror, (El espejo indio, Rio de Janeiro 1980, p. 9).

This fear, due to the continuous aggression of the barbarian white (who arrogantly calls himself civilized), has been converted in the Indigenous populations into terror of being exterminated forever from the face of the Earth.

Thanks to the Indigenous organizations and the new protectionist state laws, the support of civil society and the Churches, and to international pressure, the Indigenous nations are strengthening and growing in numbers. Their organizations reveal the high level of consciousness and articulation they have accomplished. They experience themselves as adult citizens who want to participate in the destiny of the national community, without renouncing their identity, cooperating with other historical subjects, sharing their cultural, ethical and spiritual wealth.

Still, the form of the Brazilian State, especially under the Bolsonaro government, is extremely offensive to their dignity. It threatens and mistreats them through its Indigenous policies, as if they were primitive and puerile. In fact, the Native people have an integrity that we Westerners, who are hostages to a paradigm of civilization that divides, atomizes and sets one against the other to totally dominate, have lost. The Indigenous people are the guardians of the sacred and complex unity of the human being with others, immersed in nature, of which we all are part and parcel. They preserve the happy consciousness of our belonging to the Whole and the eternal alliance between heaven and Earth, the origin of all things.

When, in October 1999, I encountered, in Umeo, the Samis,the Indigenous Norwegians, they first asked me a question before our conversation:

– Do the Brazilian Indigenous keep the marriage of heaven and Earth?

I immediately understood the question and firmly answered:

– But of course, they maintain this marriage, because from the marriage between heaven and Earth all things are born.

They happily replied:

– “Then they still are as truly Indigenous as we. They are not like our brothers from Stockholm who have forgotten heaven and only stayed with the Earth. This is why they are unhappy and so many commit suicide. If we maintain the unity of heaven and Earth, of spirit and matter, the Great Spirit and the human spirit, we will then save humanity and our Great Mother Earth”.

That surely is the great mission of the Original Peoples and the enormous challenge to help us save our Pacha Mama, our Mother Earth, who generates and supports us all and without which nothing in this world is possible.

We need to listen to their message and join in their commitment, to be, as they are, witnesses to the beauty, wealth and vitality of Mother Earth.

Leonardo Boff Leonardo Boff Eco-Theologian-Philosopher and  of the Earthcharter Commission

Free translation from the Spanish sent by
Melina Alfaro, alfaro_melina@yahoo.com.ar.
Done at REFUGIO DEL RIO GRANDE, Texas, EE.UU.