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		Exclusive-Pope hopes China deal on bishops will be renewed soon
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		 [July 05, 2022]  
		By Philip Pullella 
 VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis said 
		that while the Vatican's secret and contested agreement with China on 
		the appointment of Roman Catholic bishops is not ideal, he hopes it can 
		be renewed in October because the Church takes the long view.
 
 Relations with China was one of the many Church and international topics 
		the 85-year-old pontiff discussed in an exclusive interview with Reuters 
		in his Vatican residence on July 2.
 
 The deal, which was first struck in 2018 and comes up for renewal every 
		two years, was a bid to ease a longstanding divide across mainland China 
		between an underground flock loyal to the pope and a state-backed 
		official church.
 
 Both sides now recognise the pope as supreme leader of the Catholic 
		Church.
 
 The accord, which is still provisional, centres on cooperation over the 
		appointment of bishops, giving the pope the final say. Its details have 
		not been made public.
 
 "The agreement is moving well and I hope that in October it can be 
		renewed," Francis said.
 
 COMPARISON TO SOVIET BLOC
 
 Francis defended the deal as being the statecraft of working with the 
		little available and trying to improve it.
 
		
		 
		He compared its opponents to those who criticised Popes John XXII and 
		Paul VI in the 1960s and 1970s over the so-called small steps policy in 
		which the Vatican struck sometimes uncomfortable deals with Eastern 
		European communist nations to keep the Church alive during the Cold War 
		and limit its persecution there.
 "Diplomacy is like that. When you face a blocked situation, you have to 
		find the possible way, not the ideal way, out of it," Francis said.
 
 "Diplomacy is the art of the possible and of doing things to make the 
		possible become a reality," he said.
 
 The chief architect of the Vatican's policy towards the communist East 
		Bloc was Agostino Casaroli, a diplomat who served under three popes 
		between 1961-1990 and ended his career as Secretary of State.
 
 "Many people said so many things against John XXIII, against Paul VI, 
		against Casaroli," Francis said.
 
 Casaroli's critics accused him of dealing with a Godless enemy, but most 
		historians agree that his work kept the Church alive in Eastern Europe 
		until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.
 
            Comparing the current situation to the pre-1989 era, 
		Francis said his appointment of bishops in China since 2018 "is going 
		slowly, but they are being appointed".
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			Pope Francis looks on during an exclusive interview with Reuters, at 
			the Vatican, July 2, 2022. REUTERS/Remo Casilli 
            
			 
            Only six new bishops have been appointed since the deal, which its 
			opponents say proves it is not producing the desired effects. In 
			addition, the deal regularised the position of seven bishops who had 
			been ordained before 2018 without Vatican approval.
 The pope called the slow process "'the Chinese way,' because the 
			Chinese have that sense of time that nobody can rush them".
 
 VOCAL OPPOSITION
 
 One of the most vocal opponents of the deal is Cardinal Joseph Zen, 
			90, the former archbishop of Hong Kong, who was briefly arrested 
			there in a national security case in May.
 
 "The Vatican may have acted out of good faith, but they have
 
 made an unwise decision," Zen told a gathering of 300 people at
 
 a small neighbourhood church on Hong Kong island last month.
 
 Zen at the time prayed for "brothers and sisters who cannot attend 
			the Mass in any form tonight - for they have no freedom now".
 
 Zen and others have accused the Vatican of turning a blind eye to 
			human rights violations in China. The Vatican says it needs to have 
			means to enter into dialogue with Beijing.
 
 The Vatican-China deal sparked a diplomatic incident with the United 
			States in 2020 when former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, in 
			an article in a conservative Catholic journal and a series of 
			Tweets, accused the Vatican of having put its "moral authority" on 
			the line.
 
 The Vatican scolded Pompeo, saying he was trying to drag the Holy 
			See into the U.S. presidential campaign, in which the Republican 
			Party's anti-China policy loomed large.
 
 The level of freedom for Catholics in China since the accord varies 
			according to areas.
 
 "They (the Chinese) also have their own problems because it is not 
			the same situation in every region of the country. It (the treatment 
			of Catholics) also depends on local leaders," Francis said.
 
 (Reporting by Philip Pullella, editing by Ed Osmond)
 
            
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