logo
Opinion - Pope Leo XIV condemned Putin. Will he confront Maduro next?

Opinion - Pope Leo XIV condemned Putin. Will he confront Maduro next?

Yahoo6 days ago

Earlier this week, Nicolás Maduro's regime in Venezuela staged parliamentary and regional elections stripped of any legitimacy. The leading opposition coalition, led by María Corina Machado and Edmundo González Urrutia, boycotted the vote after key candidates were barred and electoral conditions rendered fair competition impossible. Maduro's party declared near-total victory, seizing 253 of 277 seats and 23 of 24 governorships. For most Venezuelans, it was not an election — it was a farce.
Just over two weeks earlier, white smoke had risen over St. Peter's Square in Rome, announcing the election of Cardinal Robert Prevost as Pope Leo XIV. Shortly after, the Kyiv Independent reported on a previously published interview with the Peruvian outlet Semanario Expresión, in which the then-cardinal denounced Russia's war on Ukraine as 'a true invasion, imperialist in nature, where Russia seeks to conquer territory for reasons of power.'
Though spoken before his election, the statement stands out for its moral clarity, especially in contrast to the often-diplomatic language of the late Pope Francis, who was frequently criticized for his reluctance to condemn authoritarian regimes, even on his home continent.
A member of the Order of Saint Augustine, Pope Leo XIV spent decades in pastoral and missionary work in Peru's impoverished Chiclayo region, embodying what it means to be 'American' in the universal, catholic sense. His Augustinian roots — and his choice of the name Leo — have drawn early attention. Likely a nod to Leo XIII, who guided the Church's response to modern social upheaval, the new pope's new name, coupled with his motto, 'In Illo Uno Unum' ('In the One, we are one'), reflects a charism of interiority, communal life and the restless pursuit of truth rooted in both faith and reason.
Yet the decisiveness of his remarks suggests not only a theological commitment but a cultural one. Although he is the first American pope, 'Papa León XIV' speaks with a distinctly Hispanic moral urgency — shaped, perhaps, by the rugged, impoverished and spiritually rich Andes.
That urgency calls to mind another León: Luis de León, the 16th-century Augustinian poet and friar, and a towering figure of the School of Salamanca. In 1582, he was imprisoned by the Inquisition and held for nearly five years in the Convent of San Pablo in Valladolid, Spain, accused of heresy by rivals who feared both his intellect and his outspoken defense of Scripture and human liberty.
Pope Leo XIV's invocation of Augustinian tradition and prophetic clarity in denouncing the Kremlin's war invites a powerful comparison. And there are others, too, in that same lineage of Hispanic, Catholic conscience.
In 1511, Dominican friar Antonio de Montesinos delivered a sermon in Santo Domingo condemning the Spanish Crown's treatment of native peoples. Accusing the colonizers of mortal sin 'by reason of the cruelty and tyranny' they practiced, the humble friar inspired the first international human rights debate. He set a precedent for a Church willing to speak truth to power.
Morally shaken, by 1512, King Ferdinand of Aragon issued the Laws of Burgos — the first legal code intended to regulate the treatment of Indigenous people in the Americas.
By 1537, the moral shockwaves of Montesinos's sermon were still rippling through the Catholic world. Similarly inspired, Pope Paul III issued the papal bull Sublimis Deus, declaring that Indigenous peoples were fully human, possessed rational souls, and held an inherent right to liberty and property. It was the first of many such declarations coming from both the Hispanic world and the Vatican.
Four centuries later, Salvadoran archbishop Oscar Romero showed similar courage. On March 24, 1980, shortly after ordering the regime's repression to end in the name of God, Romero was assassinated while celebrating Mass in San Salvador. 'In the name of this suffering people,' he cried out in his final homily, moments before his martyrdom, 'whose cries rise to heaven each day more tumultuous; I beseech you, I beg you, I order you … stop the repression.'
But the model of courageous witness extends beyond the Hispanic World. When St. Pope John Paul II urged the world to 'be not afraid' in his inaugural homily in 1978, it was more than spiritual advice. His encyclical Redemptor Hominis, released months later, condemned communism as a system that denied human dignity and freedom. During his visit to Poland in 1979, he awakened a national conscience and laid the groundwork for the fall of Soviet totalitarianism. The communist security apparatus stood no chance against the will of a free people guided by the Spirit.
Yet the Maduro regime remains unchallenged by the papacy. Once one of Hispanic America's wealthiest nations, Venezuela is now defined by hunger, repression, collapsed infrastructure and one of the world's highest homicide rates. Inflation hit 130,060 percent in 2018; today, nearly 80 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. More than 7.7 million Venezuelans have fled since 2015, creating the largest displacement crisis in the Western Hemisphere.
For the Hispanic Scholastics, such debasement would not be seen merely a failure of policy, but rather a form of tyranny. As Jesuit Juan de Mariana wrote in his 1609 De Monetae Mutatione: 'If the prince is not the master but, rather, the administrator of the private possessions of his subjects, then he is not allowed to take away arbitrarily any part of their possessions for this or any other reason, as occurs whenever money is debased, … And if the prince is not empowered to levy taxes on unwilling subjects and cannot set up monopolies over merchandise, then neither is he empowered to make fresh profit by debasing money, because this tactic aims at the same thing, namely, robbing the people of their wealth.'
In this moment of deepening catastrophe, Hispanic America needs its first 'Peruvian' pope to act not just as a global statesman but as a prophetic voice in the wilderness.
His clear condemnation of Russia was a bracing sign of moral leadership. That same clarity would offer hope to Venezuelans facing violence, starvation and exile — the loss of home and human dignity.
For millions of Venezuelans, just like millions of others suffering across the globe, that sense of exile is existential, and perhaps unbearable without a sense of hope. As Uruguayan poet Mario Benedetti wrote about his own experience with exile, 'I sense that within the country I no longer recognize lies the one I always knew.'
It is to that Venezuela, and its scattered people, that the Holy Father must now speak.
In Evangelii Gaudium, Pope Francis wrote that 'each individual Christian and every community is called to be an instrument of God for the liberation and promotion of the poor … attentive to the cry of the poor and to come to their aid.' Now, Catholics across the world wonder whether Pope Leo XIV's voice will rise in defense of Venezuela's dignity and pain, answering the cry heard so clearly across history and in the witness of the Gospel.
Johannes Schmidt works in public relations and is a foreign language expert with the National Language Service Corps.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Opinion - Trump's ‘return to office' crusade smothers its pronatalist promise
Opinion - Trump's ‘return to office' crusade smothers its pronatalist promise

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Opinion - Trump's ‘return to office' crusade smothers its pronatalist promise

The White House trumpets a 'baby bonus' — $5,000 wired days after delivery — to reverse America's record-low 1.6 fertility rate, documented by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Vital Statistics Reports. In the same breath, it orders every federal employee back to the office five days a week. But Stanford's new 'Working from Home in 2025' survey of 16,422 professionals upends that logic: women with children desire 2.66 remote days each week, higher than any other demographic. The administration vows to grow families while vaporizing the flexibility that makes new children feasible, creating a collision that risks empty cribs and hollow offices alike. Time rules parenthood. The average American commute consumes 55 minutes round-trip, meaning a traditional five-day schedule eats up almost another five hours of free time each week. Those hours fuel bedtime routines, homework patrol and marriage maintenance; without them, parental stress spikes. Stanford's survey shows parents steer toward hybrid work precisely because several home days help restore that bandwidth. Parents still collaborate on site yet dodge traffic's cortisol surge. The federal badge doctrine yanks that option, forcing caregivers back into rush-hour gridlock and shredding the very capacity the 'baby bonus' seeks to reward. The White House defends the order as a downtown-revitalization plan, yet empty playgrounds undermine long-term urban vitality far more than shuttered salad bars. The response has been swift — over 260,000 civil-service resignations, buyouts or early retirements since the mandate, a wave led by mid-career women. These departures bleed institutional knowledge, spike contractor costs and prove that rigid schedules push out precisely the workers the baby-bonus scheme aims to empower. Direct payments headline well, yet history shows money alone seldom moves fertility. France, Hungary and South Korea all dangled cash but saw sustained birth-rate gains only after they paired subsidies with affordable childcare and generous leave. We've seen the same skepticism here, with women calling the $5,000 proposal 'meager' without schedule support. In fact, policymakers still debate whether a bonus would move the needle at all. Child-care tuition already tops mortgage payments in many metro areas, and the gas, parking and wardrobe costs tied to full-time commutes burn up the bonus long before a first birthday. Rigid attendance therefore turns the 'baby bonus' into a consolation prize for exhaustion. The persistent declines in births stem from soaring childcare costs, student debt and delayed milestones such as homeownership — all problems amplified by longer daily commutes. When the administration mandates five badge scans a week, it inflates every hidden parenting expense the subsidy intends to ease. The result is policy whiplash: a check in one envelope, a time audit in the next. The Stanford survey reinforces that economic calculus: women with children value schedule control more than any other employment perk, ranking it higher than pay or promotion prospects. Force them back, and many abandon growth plans — at work and at home. The administration's own ranks testify. Treasury's internal return-to-office guidance, issued in February, acknowledges 'heightened retention risk' among caregivers, yet it still enforces five days on-site. Pronatalism that ignores workplace physics turns into press-release theater. One pivot resolves the clash: Replace the blanket five-day decree with a disciplined three-day anchor model for roles that do not handle classified hardware or wet-lab equipment. Stanford's Steven Davis and Nicholas Bloom show firms keep productivity steady — or lift it — under such hybrid rules, while recruitment costs fall because talent pools widen geographically. Eighty percent of Fortune 500 companies now run some version of this model, proof that flexibility and performance coexist. Hybrid schedules also cut vehicle miles, handing the administration an unwritten climate victory without another regulation, as remote-work research from Hoover Institution scholars confirms. Congress can hard-wire the alignment. Tie the enlarged Child Tax Credit now under debate to employer certification of at least two voluntary home days per week, nudging private firms toward family-friendly norms. House negotiators already weigh credit expansion as part of a broader pronatalist push. Add lease subsidies for offices that include on-site childcare and stroller storage, and the commute becomes a support node, not a hurdle. Stanford's evidence stands clear: caregivers who will deliver tomorrow's taxpayers want 2.66 remote days each week, yet the badge order throttles that desire and drains the very talent the government hopes to retain. Align workplace structure with family aspirations, and the baby bonus transforms from political gimmick to demographic catalyst. Ignore the contradiction, and America exchanges rattles for resignation letters — a trade no nation can afford. Flexibility, not fiat, is the linchpin that lets families, careers and the country thrive together. Gleb Tsipursky, Ph.D., serves as the CEO of the hybrid work consultancy Disaster Avoidance Experts and authored the best-seller Returning to the Office and Leading Hybrid and Remote Teams. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

‘I never dreamed I'd win the lottery': Silver Spring man secures $1 million lottery win
‘I never dreamed I'd win the lottery': Silver Spring man secures $1 million lottery win

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

‘I never dreamed I'd win the lottery': Silver Spring man secures $1 million lottery win

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. () — Patience, curiosity and an impromptu purchase recently made one Silver Spring man $1 million richer. Originally from Ethiopia, the 'self-described proud American citizen' was shocked to discover that he had won $1 million from the Maryland Lottery's scratch-off, which he purchased on a whim during a work break. The winner, who chose to remain anonymous, has been playing the lottery since 2017. He became fascinated by the idea of winning money through the lottery, something he had no experience with before coming to the United States, and had friends teach him how to play. 'It was all new to me,' he told officials, while sharing his story at Maryland Lottery headquarters. 'But thankfully I took the time to learn.' Fairfax man scores more than $2.8 million jackpot playing lottery game After scanning the winning $20 ticket, the dumbfounded man rushed back to work, struggling to concentrate as he anxiously anticipated going home to share the good news with his wife, whom he had just closed on a new home with. 'We just looked at each other and smiled. It was a perfectly timed blessing,' the man shared. 'I never dreamed I'd win the lottery,' he said. 'These things don't happen to me. But I'm so thankful.' The man told Lottery officials that he plans to use the funds to make minor fixes to their new home and will invest the rest. For selling the winning scratch-off, Hillandale Beer & Wine in Silver Spring will receive a $1,000 bonus. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Record number of Russians support peace talks, end of war in Ukraine, poll shows
Record number of Russians support peace talks, end of war in Ukraine, poll shows

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Record number of Russians support peace talks, end of war in Ukraine, poll shows

The number of Russian citizens who support peace talks and an end to the war in Ukraine has reached a record high since the start of the full-scale invasion, according to a poll by the independent Russian pollster Levada Center published on June 2. Some 64% of the respondents favored peace talks, representing a 6% increase since March. Meanwhile, the number of people who supported the war's continuation decreased from 34% in March to 28% in May. Compared to previous survey results, in May 2023, 48% of respondents believed that the war should continue. In May 2024, this figure dropped to 43%. The news comes after the second round of direct peace talks between Ukraine and Russia occurred in Istanbul. The parties agreed on a new prisoner exchange, as well as the repatriation of 6,000 bodies of fallen Ukrainian soldiers. No agreement on a ceasefire was reached. The share of supporters of peaceful negotiations is higher among women (73%), people under 24 (77%), residents of villages and towns with populations under 100,000 (67% each), as well as those who believe that the country is going in the wrong direction (76%) and those who disapprove of Russian President Vladimir Putin's presidential performance (77%). The share of those who support continuing the war is higher among men (39%), respondents aged 55 and older (35%), residents of Moscow (40%), those who believe that things in the country are going in the right direction (32%), and those who approve of the activities of the current president (30%). A majority of respondents (73%) believe that Russia and Ukraine should address the hostilities' root causes and only then agree on a ceasefire. On the contrary, some 18% think that the parties will first reach a truce and ceasefire and then resolve all other issues. Only 3% of Russians believe Russia is an obstacle to peace. At the same time, 14% of respondents believe that the U.S. is to blame, while 36% each see Ukraine and European countries as major obstacles in peace negotiations. The center conducted the survey from May 22 to 28, involving 1,613 people aged 18 and older in 50 regions of Russia. Read also: Growing up under missiles — Ukrainian childhoods shaped by war (Photos) We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store