Pope urges Mexicans to shun the devil’s lust for money
BY NICOLE WINFIELD AND JACOBO GARCÍA
The Associated Press
ECATEPEC, Mexico – Pope Francis condemned the drug trade’s “dealers of death” and urged Mexicans to shun the devil’s lust for money as he led a huge open-air Mass for more than 300,000 people Sunday in this violence-riddled city. “Let us get it into our heads: With the devil, there is no dialogue,” the pope said at the biggest scheduled event of his five-day visit to Mexico. Francis brought a message of encouragement on the second full day of his trip to residents of Ecatepec, a poverty-stricken Mexico City suburb of some 1.6 million people where drug violence, kidnappings and ganglandstyle killings, particularly of women, are a fact of life. “He’s coming to Ecatepec because we need him here,” said Ignacia Godinez, a 56-year-old homemaker.
However, María de la Luz Estrada, coordinator of the National Observatory on Femicide, said she was disappointed that Francis didn’t directly condemn violence against women or offer support to families of victims, saying that at the very least he could have made reference to discrimination against women. “I still feel that he owes us these words,” she said. Conchita Téllez, 65, from the border city of Mexicali, held out hope that Francis can help ease the troubled soul of the country. “The pope comes to Mexico at a very ugly moment,” Téllez said, “and he comes to pray for us and for all those who lost hope and have submerged the country in blood and violence.” Francis’ grueling schedule seemed to be taking a toll on him on Saturday, when the 79-year-old pontiff appeared to nod off at an evening Mass and also lost his balance and fell into a chair set up for him. He appeared much livelier Sunday, beaming and waving at the crowds along his route. As Francis drove down a main boulevard before adoring faithful in central Mexico City, dozens of emotional nuns rushed the metal barricades to salute the popemobile and a group of lay missionaries, mostly teenagers, sang the traditional Mexican folk song “Cielito Lindo.” At his last stop, a pediatric hospital, one girl performed a heartfelt rendition of “Ave Maria” for the pope. Another presented Francis with a handmade Valentine’s Day card with a big heart on the front. “You made this?” Francis asked as he accepted it. “Gracias.” The pope bent down and kissed dozens of sick kids, playfully mussing the hair of the older ones. Some posed for selfies with the pope. Several rose from their wheelchairs to embrace him. Francis also played doctor to one little boy, administering medicine from a dropper. The pope makes a point of stopping at children’s hospitals during his foreign trips, both to visit with the kids and to thank the staff for caring for them. While parts of the encounters are televised, Francis also visits bedridden patients in private for more personal encounters