Pope Francis apologised Wednesday for slapping a woman who had grabbed him as he greeted a crowd of devotees, shortly before he delivered a speech denouncing “every form of violence against women.”
The image of a visibly annoyed Francis slapping his way free from the clutches of an admirer as he walked by Catholic faithful on New Year’s Eve instantly went viral on social media.
The pope is known to enjoy greeting the public, and also has a reputation for speaking his mind and having a determined temperament
A personal apology followed. “We lose patience many times,” Francis confessed.
“It happens to me too. I apologise for the bad example given yesterday,” the head of the Catholic church said before celebrating Mass at the Vatican. Twitter enthusiasts commented on the pontiff’s prompt riposte to the exuberant woman.
Francis had greeted children before the Nativity scene on Saint Peter’s square and was turning away when a woman who had crossed herself then cried out something, yanked his hand and almost caused him to fall.
The 83-year-old pope grimaced and scowled before managing to break free, slapping her hand twice as a security guard intervened.
The pontiff continued his tour, walking with some difficulty while maintaining a slightly greater distance from visitors, and gradually relaxed again as he met with other children. Twitter comments revealed some support for his instinctive reaction.
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“I’m not a Catholic, but the woman is wrong. It even seemed as if the Pope experienced pain at one moment,” one comment read. Others were less favourable, however.
“Yikes. She was totally wrong but his reaction was not very Pope like,” another commented. In his first Mass of the New Year, the pontiff later declared that “every form of violence against women is a blasphemy against God, who was born of a woman.”
The image of a visibly annoyed Francis slapping his way free from the clutches of an admirer as he walked by Catholic faithful on New Year’s Eve
He noted that the service traditionally celebrates the life of Mary, “the woman who wove the humanity of God.” The blessing of God for all, he said, was “not magic but requires patience, patience and love.”
The pontiff then repeated “patience and love” in a comment that was not contained in a text distributed to media ahead of time and which seemed to be his reaction to what had occurred the night before.
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The pope is known to enjoy greeting the public, and also has a reputation for speaking his mind and having a determined temperament.
Francis emphasised Wednesday that women were the “sources of life” and deplored that they were “continually insulted, beaten, raped, forced to prostitute themselves and to suppress the life they bear in the womb.”
Hope the gracious apology by #PopeFrancis gets as much exposure as some of the snarky coverage of the ‘incident’ in the first place. https://t.co/jgMBbbdWcV
— Raymond Friel OBE (@friel_raymond) January 1, 2020
He underscored that in the Christian faith, “from a woman was born the Prince of peace,” and bemoaned that women’s bodies were “sacrificed on the profane altars of advertising, of profiteering, of pornography.”
Recent controversies
Pope Francis asked for forgiveness from Amazon bishops and others at a Church assembly after conservative Catholic militants stole statues they considered pagan idols from a church and dumped them in the Tiber river.
The next day, the Vatican accused ultra-conservative Catholic social media of fomenting hate, saying in an editorial that the statues were “an effigy of maternity and the sacredness of life”.
“First of all, this happened in Rome, so as bishop of the diocese, I ask forgiveness from the persons who were offended by this gesture,” he said at the start of the last session of the three-week assembly, known as a synod.
The synod is discussing the future of the Church in the Amazon and threats to its environment.
Francis said there “was no idolatrous intention” in using the statues, which depicted a pregnant woman, at a side event in the Vatican when the assembly began.
Pope Francis' controversial meeting on the Amazon has taken a criminal twist after thieves stole indigenous fertility statues from a Vatican-area church and tossed them into the Tiber River. https://t.co/h26FwqE1et
— ABC News (@ABC) October 22, 2019
The next day, the Vatican accused ultra-conservative Catholic social media of fomenting hate, saying in an editorial that the statues were “an effigy of maternity and the sacredness of life”.
Hard-line conservative media said the statue was of a pagan goddess known as Pachamama. The Vatican said it was an indigenous traditional symbol of life.
GVS News Desk with additions from news agencies.