‘Poor man!’ says new Pope’s sister
ARGENTINA: For a man who has embraced humility, the new pope's first
moments in the spotlight must have come with mixed emotions, a fact
perhaps best understood by the woman who has known him her whole life.
“Poor man,” sympathized Pope Francis' sister, Maria Elena Bergoglio,
his only still-living sibling, as she imagined his thoughts just before
walking out on the balcony before the massive crowd in Saint Peter's
Square in his first appearance as the pontiff.
And yet, “how exciting, to hear the crowd chanting, 'Long live the
Pope!” she mused.
She said she cried when she heard the news, and only wants “to give a
hug” to her big brother, 11 years her senior.
Dressed austerely in a dark green sweater and with barely combed gray
hair, she agreed to talk to dozens of reporters waiting outside her home
in a middle class neighbourhood on the outskirts of Buenos Aires.
She said she never expected her brother to be pope.
“My brother fulfilled his duties, with increasingly more
responsibilities, but I never believed this,” she confessed.
She said she couldn't predict what her brother will do as pope, but
noted that “his inclination” has always been “to work for the poor, the
most marginalized.” She offered a prayer “that the Holy Spirit will
strengthen” Francis for his new role, and spoke of feeling pride “not
only as a family but as the Argentine people.”
Francis, formerly Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, is the oldest of five
children -- three boys and two girls. His three other siblings, Alberto,
Oscar, and Marta Regina have already died.
AFP
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