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Pope presses environment in Ecuador, says defending planet a requirement

WATCH: Pope Francis challenged Latin America’s youth to take up his environmental protection call, saying the defence of God’s creation isn’t just a recommendation but a requirement.

QUITO, Ecuador – Pope Francis challenged Latin America’s youth to take up his environmental protection campaign Tuesday, saying the defence of God’s creation isn’t just a recommendation but a requirement.

Francis appeal, delivered at Quito’s Catholic University, is particularly relevant for Ecuador, a Pacific nation that is home to one of the world’s most species-diverse ecosystems in the Galapagos Islands and Amazon rain forest, but is also an OPEC country heavily dependent on oil extraction.

Francis told students and professors that God gave humanity the Earth to not only cultivate, but to care for – a message he framed earlier this month in his headline-grabbing encyclical on the environment.

READ MORE: Vancouver mayor to talk climate change with Pope

“It is no longer a mere recommendation, but rather a requirement because of the harm we have inflicted on it by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed it,” he said.

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He challenged universities to ensure that students’ educations aren’t aimed only at profitable careers but at helping the poor and the environment.

“There is a relationship between our life and that of mother Earth, between the way we live and the gift we have received from God,” he said.

Francis’ environmental message has been cheered by indigenous groups, who have complained of being increasingly marginalized by Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa as he pushes mining and oil drilling in the Amazon. That push, coupled with high crude prices, allowed Correa to lift 1.3 million people out of poverty in his eight years in office.

Francis has called for environmentally responsible development, one that is aimed at helping the poor without sacrificing the planet.

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It was a message he was likely to repeat later in the day at a meeting with indigenous groups, and then later this week in Bolivia, the next stop on his three-nation South American tour. Bolivian President Evo Morales has been hailed as an environmental hero to many for demanding rich nations do more to halt global warming, but he has been assailed by conservationists at home who say he puts oil and gas extraction ahead of clean water and forests.

Francis began his last full day in Ecuador with an open-air Mass that drew more than 1 million people and featured readings in Quichua, the native language mostly spoken in Ecuador, and Ecuadorean vestments for the pope.

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WATCH: Pope Francis conducts large public mass in Ecuador

 

 

In his homily, Francis urged Latin Americans to channel the same urgency that brought them independence from Spain two centuries ago into spreading the faith on a continent where Catholicism is losing souls to evangelical movements.

The Mass location, at Quito’s Bicentennial Park, was appropriate given that Ecuador was where the first cries of independence against Spanish rule arose in Latin America in 1809.

“There was no shortage of conviction or strength in that cry for freedom which arose a little more than 200 years ago,” Francis said. “But history tells us that it only made headway once personal differences were set aside.”

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He urged Latin Americans to channel that same purpose and unity into spreading the faith. Latin America counts 40 per cent of the world’s Catholics, but the church is losing out to Protestant evangelical ministries that have focused on the continent’s poorest communities with real-life guidance on employment and education.

While the drop-off in Spanish-speaking South America hasn’t been as sharp as it has been in Brazil, it is notable: Some 95 per cent of Ecuador’s population was Catholic in 1970, and now the figure is down to 79 per cent, according to the Pew Research Center.

READ MORE: At huge outdoor Mass in Ecuador, Pope Francis stresses healing power of families

In a bid to counter the trend and return the Catholic Church to its evangelizing origins, Francis has called for the church to return to being a missionary church that looks out particularly for society’s poorest and most marginalized. It’s a message he crafted for the entire Latin American church when he played a leading role in a 2007 conference of bishops in Aparecida, Brazil.

“Evangelization doesn’t consist in proselytizing, but in attracting by our witness to those who are far off, in humbly drawing near to those who feel distant from God and the church, those who are fearful or indifferent,” Francis told the crowd. “Proselytism is a caricature of evangelization.”

Francis arrived at Bicentennial Park to cheers of people who camped out overnight for a good spot. They were rewarded with a pre-dawn deluge that sent some 20 people to paramedics with hypothermia, said city operations director Cristian Rivera. But the sun broke out as Francis arrived in his popemobile, with fans tossing confetti on him as he zoomed by.

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“The joy at seeing the pope gives us the warmth we need,” said Abel Gualoto, a 59-year-old seafood vendor as he rubbed his cold hands together to try to stay warm.

Tuesday was expected to end with a visit to the Church of the Society of Jesus, known locally as Iglesia de la Compania. The Jesuit church, a gem of Spanish Baroque, is one of the oldest and most well-known in Ecuador. It houses a painting of the Virgin Mary that was said to shed tears in 1906.

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