
The March 2013 election of the Argentine Jorge Mario Bergoglio as the Supreme Pontiff at the age of 76, when he was not among the favorites, marked the culmination of a meteoric ascent. Appointed Archbishop of Buenos Aires in February 1998, he was the first Jesuit to be appointed primacy of Argentina by John Paul II, on January 21, 2001. In the Vatican, Archbishop Bergoglio had seen his reputation of his reputation of his peers for his peers for his peers for his pers for his pers for his persals for his pers for his SISS for his siss for his pairs. Final Report. The main rapporteur, Archbishop Edward Egan in New York, could not complete his mission or terrorist attacks on September 11. He fell to Cardinal Argentino to carry out most of the work.
Despite this meteoric career, he remained “very humble, leading a discreet and fashion life”, according to his former spokesman in Buenos Aires, Father Guillermo Marco. Archbishop Bergoglio continued to maintain this austerity within the Vatican.
He was intellectual: a chemical engineer, Hey Hero Trays in Philosophy and Theology. Following the tradition of the followers of San Ignacio de Loyola in Latin America, he was a man of action, involved in social realities. Despite his fragile health, Bergoglio, who had lived with an amputated lung since he was 20, was always a man of the people. In Buenos Aires, he spent his weekend visiting the most disadvantaged parishes, traveling by bus or subway, and speaking with priests in the low neighborhoods and prisons.
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