Pope's presence in South Sudan marks unique moment in time
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis wrapped up his visit to the East African nation on Sunday. He ended the long-awaited and postponed journey with words of encouragement and hope for the impoverished and war-ravaged people, telling them never to forget that Jesus knows their pain and loves them.
During his stay in Juba, he also had strong words for the country’s leadership, openly expressing his disappointment for not having honoured the pledges they had made to cement peace and work for reconciliation and development.
His voice wasn’t a solitary one: his visit took the form of an ecumenical pilgrimage for peace in the company of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.
Together they prayed with the people and called for unity; the three voices were one issuing a powerful appeal for peace and reconciliation in the divided nation. Together they challenged the country’s political leaders to stand true to their pledges to work for the common good, and to shy away from corruption and personal benefits.
Miklos Gosztonyi is a political analyst and humanitarian expert with many years of experience in South Sudan. He spoke to Vatican Radio about the significance of the spiritual leaders‘ presence in the world's youngest nation and about how it empowered civil society actors who have been struggling to get their voices heard in the country and beyond.
Noting that Pope Francis had postponed this visit last year because of health problems, Gosztonyi said he came across as fa figure far from fragile, never stepping back from raising critical issues and calling South Sudan’s political leaders to account.
"If the political élite in South Sudan thought that they would encounter a frail Pope" engaged exclusively in a spiritual mission, he said, “without getting involved in some of the toughest parts of politics, they were absolutely wrong”.
In many ways, he added, “I felt that the Pope thought of this trip as a way of holding leaders accountable for not having lived up to the commitments they made to him when they visited the Vatican in 2019 and he shockingly kissed their feet, and they didn't live up to that.
Gosztonyi also agreed that Pope Francis' appeal to empower young people and protect and promote women touched on an extremely vital point for development.
He said that the vast majority of those living in camps in Juba, “are underage and they are living a really difficult life, very difficult future.”
“The country started its civil war in 2013, and immediately these Protection of Civilians sites were created in the country, and people have been living there since 2013, tens of thousands of people, and in many cases, they are children," he said.
Their future, he continued looks very much the same, given the larger political challenges the country is facing, and so “it is crucial that the Pope talked about them”.
Gosztonyi also said gender-based violence in South Sudan is “really, really appalling” and that life is especially hard for women in many, many ways.
Ecumenical Pilgrimage
Gosztonyi was at pains to highlight the importance of the ecumenical aspect of the visit “in which both the Pope and the leader of the Anglican Church and the Church of Scotland” sent “exactly the same message".
Noting that for the people of South Sudan, the spiritual dimension is extremely important, he said that the fact that a very clear message resonated across the different confessions of Christianity made for a very powerful and a very unique occasion.
Political gestures of goodwill
Gosztonyi expressed scepticism regarding the South Sudanese President’s gestures to lift the suspension of the peace talks and grant clemency to some prison inmates during the Pope’s presence in the country.
“Given the way in which people live in jails in South Sudan,” giving them amnesty is really important he said, adding that “nobody should be subject to that kind of punishment.”
Regarding the Rome negotiations, he said “they are important in so far as any negotiations are and keeping a table and dialogue ongoing is important,” but he said, “in many ways, the Rome negotiations have been a way [for the political leaders] to keep the appearance that potentially bringing more actors to the Peace Agreement, that was signed in 2018, would have a stabilising effect in the country, while the reality is that most of the violence continues independently from that, and in many cases is fuelled by the leadership in Juba.”
The joy of the people for the Pope’s presence
Anyone who watched footage of the events during the Pope’s presence in Juba saw that, notwithstanding dismal living conditions, desperate poverty and a seeming lack of future, the people of South Sudan appeared incredibly joyful.
Gosztonyi agreed, and described “the feeling of the past three days of being somehow reminiscent of the joy of independence back in 2011”.
“In many ways,” he continued, “It makes me think of my own personal background: I am from Argentina, and Pope John Paul II visited Argentina in 1987. Argentina had undergone military dictatorship, tens of thousands of people had been killed, it had undergone the Falklands war, a huge economic crisis and a very difficult transition to democracy.”
He said that although he was a child at the time, he remembers the Pope’s visit to Argentina:
With all the differences of the case, he said, he can relate to how they [the South Sudanese] felt after they had been virtually abandoned by the world in 2013.
Those who unleash war betray the Lord
Reiterating his opinion regarding the importance of the ecumenical dimension of this visit, Gosztony concluded highlighting the symbolism of the three Christian leaders who came to Juba with the same message for the country’s rulers.
He commented on the Pope’s words during the Ecumenical Prayer on Saturday in which the said “Those who choose Christ choose peace, always; those who unleash war and violence betray the Lord and deny his Gospel.” Noted that the entire political leadership of the country was present, Miklos Gosztonyi pointed out that the Pope was telling them “they are not living a moral Christian life.”
“So when you have the three leaders of the Church who come and send a clear, unequivocal message to leaders who claim to be Christian, that also is a way of empowering all the civil society actors who have been struggling to get their voices heard in the country.
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