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Pope Francis, the Argentine pontiff, never returned home
Lucila Sigal - Reuters -
21/04
Argentines long waited for Pope Francis to visit the homeland he left in 2013 to become the head of the Roman Catholic Church. With his death on Monday at the age of 88 after a long illness, those hopes for his return end unrealized.
Summary
Argentine Pope Francis never returned home during his papacy
The pope visited dozens of countries but never his homeland
Polarized political situation at home complicated a visit
Some in the country regret that he never returned
BUENOS AIRES, April 21 (Reuters) - Argentines long waited for Pope Francis to visit the homeland he left in 2013 to become the head of the Roman Catholic Church. With his death on Monday at the age of 88 after a long illness, those hopes for his return end unrealized.
The Vatican announced that Pope Francis, the first Latin American pontiff, who shook up the Catholic Church, had died after he battled a bout of double pneumonia that had hospitalized him for weeks before he was discharged on March 23.
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Francis made more than 45 international trips during his papacy, including the first by any pope to Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Myanmar, North Macedonia, Bahrain and Mongolia.
But the one-time Archbishop of Buenos Aires never returned to Argentina, where he divided opinion but gained the moniker of the "slum pope" for his focus on the poor and spending time in the capital's tough urban neighborhoods, or 'villas'.
"One of the great curiosities of his papacy was the fact that, unlike his predecessors, Francis never visited his native country," Jimmy Burns, author of the 2015 biography "Francis, Pope of Good Promise", told Reuters weeks before his death.
Burns said he believed Francis did not want to be seen siding either with the left-leaning Peronists or the conservatives in the country's pola... [Short citation of 8% of the original article]
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