Pope's visit to Cuba shines light on religious freedoms
The last pope's visit led to a huge public service for evangelicals, and 
now Protestants are hoping to gain some reforms from Pope Benedict's 
March trip.
By Frances Robles
frobles@MiamiHerald.com
Pope John Paul II's 1998 landmark visit to Cuba left evangelical pastors 
all over the island wondering aloud: What about us?
Thanks to the pope's trip, within a year the growing evangelical 
religious community made history of its own by holding 18 public 
services around the nation attended by thousands of people — including 
then-leader Fidel Castro. Even now more than a decade later the 
televised "Evangelical Celebration" is still considered a watershed 
moment for Cuban Protestants.
But many others still struggle under a controlling regime to find the 
space to worship and question whether the pope's visit resulted in any 
real progress.
"Everyone went to that celebration waiting for religious sermons, and 
they got political sermons. Even Fidel Castro looked embarrassed," said 
Carlos Lamelas, a Church of God pastor who fled to Texas last summer 
after butting heads with the government for years. "I hope now that 
after the new pope's visit, Evangelical churches can come into their own."
Pope Benedict XVI will travel to Cuba March 26-28 to mark the 400th 
anniversary of the discovery of the statue of Our Lady of Charity of El 
Cobre, the island's patron saint, which was found floating in the bay of 
Nipe. The last pope's visit was considered fundamental in the history of 
Cuba's Catholic Church, capping years of modest reforms and paving the 
way for prisoner releases.
The preparations being made for Pope Benedict raise the issue for the 
estimated 800,000 Protestants whether non-Catholic churches will benefit 
from his trip. Pastors and religious experts in Cuba say they hope the 
pope's stop will provide the momentum to bring up long-standing issues 
troubling Protestants, such as the ability to build temples and have 
their religious rights spelled out in law.
"We're hoping the pope will speak to human rights issues and freedom of 
religion issues, not just for Catholics," said Teo Babun, who runs a 
Miami nonprofit church aid organization. "In Cuba there's no religious 
freedom as it is stated in the [United Nations] declaration of human 
rights and as it is practiced around the world."
For many years, the Cuban government only recognized churches that 
existed prior to 1959, when Castro took over. Jehovah's Witnesses were 
banned and sent to work camps, while most of the 15,000 Jews left the 
country after the Castros assumed power.
It wasn't until 1984, when Fidel Castro accompanied the Rev. Jesse 
Jackson to a Methodist Church in Havana, that religious freedom was 
first addressed. Jackson's stay led to a series of reforms, including 
the creation of a cabinet-level position to address religious matters.
While most Cubans are Catholic, more and more people are Protestants who 
squeeze into tiny home churches to worship. The Cuban government made it 
so hard for pastors to get permits to build churches that they started 
to preach at home. Outlawed for decades, once house churches became 
legal, the trend exploded.
The government restricts how many times a week services can be held and 
sets rules for situations like apartment buildings. In 2009, the U.S. 
State Department reported that 2,400 of the 4,500 house churches that 
applied for permits were accepted.
The pope's arrival has raised questions about what other reforms might 
follow.
"There's a mindset that there's persecution, that people are restricted 
from preaching the gospel in Cuba. That might have been the case 10 or 
15 years ago, but it's not the case now," said Brian Stewart, the Cuba 
director for Action International, a missionary group. "In Santiago de 
Cuba, the Catholics recently opened a bookstore to sell statues. That 
was groundbreaking. Evangelicals are hoping they will also now be 
allowed to open Christian bookstores. They'd love to have bible study.
"Maybe they will be allowed to do this after the pope leaves."
Experts say what pastors are allowed to do depends largely on a 
neighborhood church's relationship with local authorities.
The permissions process for everything from prison visits to building 
permits works well enough for those that are members of the 
government-controlled Cuban Council of Churches, an arm of the Communist 
Party. The council is so pro-government that its leaders serve on the 
National Assembly.
"If I ask for a permit to hold a prayer service outdoors, I will not get 
it," said Manuel Alberto Morejon, who heads Alianza Cristiana in Havana, 
which broke from the official council. "I wouldn't say that I am 
targeted for being a pastor. In fact, being a religious person helps: 
when I am cited by state security agents to come in for questioning, I 
am treated with respect. But the mere fact that you are brought in for 
questioning and have agents clip your hair for DNA samples is harassment."
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom lists Cuba as one 
of the 11 "watch list" countries where religious rights are impeded.
While the majority of church leaders would likely cite the difficulty to 
expand their temples as a chief concern, other clergy cite frequent 
detentions, sporadic arrests and harassment.
Between 2009 and 2010, one church had more than 100 of its members 
detained, usually for short spells, according to the U.S. commission's 
report. Those pastors mostly lost jobs and homes and saw religious 
materials confiscated.
Christian Solidarity Worldwide, a religious rights organization, said it 
is monitoring cases of continuous harassment of about three dozen 
pastors. A few were imprisoned and banned from preaching. Last year, the 
Cuban Methodist Church evicted the Rev. Yordi Toranzo from his church in 
Santa Clara.
"His problem was that he didn't discriminate who joined his flock," said 
Christian Solidarity Worldwide spokeswoman Kiri Kankhwende. "These days 
the government will not raze your church, but it will harass and 
intimidate."
Pastors said that's key to religious freedom in Cuba: You can pray and 
preach freely, as long as you don't bring dissidents into your 
congregation. Toranzo had gone to pray with hunger-striking dissident 
Guillermo Fariñas.
Tennessee State University professor Theron Corse said Protestant 
churches tend to be divided among pastors who appease party leaders to 
get more religious space and those who refuse.
"Religious freedom in Cuba is complicated. There's far more of it than 
people realize, but there are restrictions," said Corse, who wrote a 
book about the history of Protestant churches in Cuba. "There are 
accommodationists and rejectionists. The accommodationists get more 
freedom."
The Rev. Omar Gude, a member of Apostolic Movement, an evangelical 
charismatic network of churches in Cuba, served three of a 6 1/2-year 
sentence for trumped up "human trafficking" charges and admits that his 
case is now far more political than religious.
"This trip by Pope Benedict is one more business for the Castros to 
finance their system," he said by phone from Havana. "It's certainly not 
for opening the door to religious freedom. That man's visit will bring 
no results."
http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/03/02/v-fullstory/2672349/popes-visit-to-cuba-shines-light.html
 
 
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