He is being hailed
with pride and wonder as the "first Latino pope," a native Spanish
speaker born and raised in the South American nation of Argentina. But
for some Latinos in the United States, there's a catch: Pope Francis' parents were born in Italy.
Such recent European heritage is
reviving debate in the United States about what makes someone a Latino.
Those questioning whether their idea of Latino identity applies to Pope
Francis acknowledge that he is Latin American,
and that he is a special inspiration to Spanish-speaking Catholics
around the world. Yet that, in their eyes, does not mean the pope is
"Latino."
—"Are Italians Latino? No," says Eric Cortes, who has been debating the issue with his friends.
—"The most European alternative and the closest thing to an Italian,"
is how Baylor University professor Philip Jenkins described Pope
Francis in the Chronicle of Higher Education.—"Does a Latino have to have indigenous blood?" asked the LA Weekly newspaper of Los Angeles beneath the headline, "Is The New Pope Latino?"
—"Latinos come in all colors and shades and features," Ivette Baez said in an emotional debate on the "Being Latino" Facebook page.
The swirling discussion indicates just how much the man formerly known as Jorge Mario Bergoglio, whatever his ethnicity, means to Catholic Latinos around the world.
To read entire story:
http://news.yahoo.com/pope-revives-latino-134354010.html
Source: AP/Jesse Washington. Photo: Associated Press/Pablo Leguizamon, File - FILE - In this 2008 file photo, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, second from left, travels on the subway in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Bergoglio is being hailed with pride
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