Peruvians celebrate new Pope as one of their own

People celebrate at the Cathedral of Saint Mary in Chiclayo, Peru with a banner saying Pople XIV has a Chiclayo heart. REUTERS
People celebrate at the Cathedral of Saint Mary in Chiclayo, Peru with a banner saying Pople XIV has a Chiclayo heart. REUTERS

LIMA – Halfway through Leo XIV’s first speech as pope, which he delivered in Italian, he stopped and asked if he might say a few words in Spanish.

Smiling, he continued: “A greeting to all and in particular to my dear Diocese of Chiclayo, in Peru.”

The first American pope is a citizen of Peru and has spent much of his life there, travelling between the two countries for decades until 2014, when Pope Francis appointed him bishop of the Chiclayo Diocese in the country’s north.

Peruvians rejoiced at the appointment of one of their own to the highest position in the Catholic Church.

Standing near Lima’s cathedral shortly after bells rang out in celebration of the appointment, elementary school teacher Isabel Panez said: “For us Peruvians, it is a source of pride that this is a pope who represents our country.”

Prevost would often say that he had “come from Chicago to Chiclayo – the only difference is a few letters,” Diana Celis, who attended several Masses officiated by the then Bishop Robert Prevost, told the Associated Press news agency.

He reportedly referred to Peru, where around three quarters of people are Catholic, as “mi segunda patria” – my second homeland.

Peru’s president, Dina Boluarte, described Pope Leo as Peruvian “by choice and conviction”.

“The pope is Peruvian; God loves Peru,” she said.

Born in Chicago in 1955, he is the son of Louis Marius Prevost, of French and Italian descent, and Mildred Martinez, of Spanish descent.

After completing studies in theology in Chicago and in canon law in Rome, the Catholic Church sent him to Peru for the first time.

He arrived at the Augustinian mission in Chulucanas, in the Peruvian department of Piura, in 1985, aged 30, and the following year, joined the mission in Trujillo. For almost three decades, he worked between the US and Peru.

Then, in 2014, Pope Francis appointed Prevost bishop of Chiclayo, a position he assumed the following year, after becoming a Peruvian citizen.

Jose Luis Perez Guadalupe, who was the minister responsible for signing Prevost’s naturalization, told BBC Mundo that he was “a very attentive and very thoughtful man, who listened more than he spoke.”

These were his first encounters with a country that would come to shape his life.

Janinna Sesa, who met Prevost while she worked for the church’s Caritas nonprofit, told the Associated Press during torrential rains in 2022 he waded through mud to help people in Chiclayo and nearby villages.

He also delivered food and blankets to remote Andean villages, driving a white pickup truck and sleeping on a thin mattress on the floor. There, Sesa said, Prevost ate whatever was offered to him, including the peasant diet consisting of potatoes, cheese and sweet corn.

But, if the opportunity came up, he would enjoy carne asada – one of his favorite dishes – accompanied by a glass of Coca-Cola.

He also had an interest in cars. “He has no problem fixing a broken-down truck until it runs,” Sesa said.

Prevost was the driving force for the purchase of two oxygen-production plants during the coronavirus pandemic, which killed more than 217,000 people across Peru.

“He worked so hard to find help, that there was not only enough for one plant, but for two oxygen plants,” Sesa said.

Edinson FarfΓ‘n, the Peruvian Bishop of Chiclayo since 2024, said Pope Leo would continue Pope Francis’s legacy of working with the poor and advocating for “a Church with open doors”. He was “very close to Pope Francis”, he said. (BBC)

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