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Around the world, high hopes expressed for new pope

New pontiff is embraced, but some worry
about his vision for church in transition

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Pope Benedict XVI travels through the crowd after his inaugural Mass in St Peters Square in the Vatican
  Inaugural Mass
Benedict XVI is installed as pope in a Mass in St. Peter's Square on Sunday. Click to view the photographs.
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RATZINGER
  The making of a pope
From boyhood to war to seminary to the Vatican, images trace the career of Joseph Ratzinger, elected as the 265th pope of the Catholic Church.
updated 8:18 a.m. ET April 20, 2005

MANILA, Philippines - Officials and churchgoers from around the world expressed hope Wednesday that the new pope will continue the work of his predecessor by building interfaith bridges. Even China said icy ties with the Vatican could improve — but only if the church breaks off relations with Taiwan.

Parishioners applauded loudly in Manila’s Redemptorist Church, where John Paul II once celebrated Mass, after a priest announced the election of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger as Pope Benedict XVI, head of the world’s 1.1 billion Roman Catholics.

“I’m happy, in near tears. I hope he would continue the work left behind by our Pope John Paul II,” said Cynthia Leano.

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“May this be the seed for ending the conflicts that divide us,” said President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo of the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines.

President Gen. Pervez Musharraf of Muslim-dominated Pakistan said that while divisions between religions and countries need political and socio-economic action to resolve, the pope can play a significant role.

“He can bring some harmony into the tough process, into the thinking of the world, which today is divided,” Musharraf said during a visit to Manila. “He can play a role in suppressing this kind of negative thought ... and bringing a better environment toward resolution of disputes.”

China hints at improved ties
An immediate challenge is improving contentious relations with China, which demands that Catholics worship only in churches approved by a state-controlled church group that does not recognize the pope’s authority.

“We hope under the leadership of the new pope, the Vatican side can create favorable conditions for improving the relationship between China and the Vatican,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement.

China’s officially atheist government broke ties with the Vatican in 1951 and has said it will consider opening relations only if the Vatican cuts links with rival Taiwan, which split with the mainland in 1949 amid civil war. Qin also said the Vatican “must not intervene in China’s domestic affairs, including not intervening in domestic affairs in the name of religion.”

In the United States, bells rang out the news of the new pope’s election at Roman Catholic churches nationwide. The Chicago Tribune offered a rare extra edition for a city visited three times by Pope John Paul II.

Some not happy
Not everyone was pleased. Many rank-and-file American Catholics — as well as gay-rights advocates, women’s-rights activists, and groups representing victims of abuse by priests — were disappointed at the selection of an unabashed conservative.

Manila Archbishop Gaudencio Rosales said he met Ratzinger during a gathering of bishops from around the world and found him “a very warm man.” Rosales said he believes the new pope was chosen so quickly because “aside from prayer, those cardinals had the feeling that they owe it to the flock that someone must continue the mind of the previous pontiff.”

Australian Prime Minister John Howard called Ratzinger a “sound theologian” who, like his predecessor, would bring together people of different faiths.

"He comes to the leadership of the Catholic Church at a very important time of both challenge and opportunity for Christianity,” Howard told reporters in Japan. “I believe that he will give great leadership to the Catholic Church and will be a source of reassurance to the Christian church generally throughout the world.”

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun sent a congratulatory message to the new pope and wished him to “bring fresh hope and blessing to the people of the world, who thirst for peace irrespective of their race and national borders.”

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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