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     A Peruvian Insight
                                                     Lucho Espejo, FoC & ACAF Board Member
      The  election  of  Pope  Leo  XIV  initially
      caused  surprise,  but  this  was  quickly
      followed  by  feelings  of  hope  for  what
      his leadership might bring to the Church
      and  the  world.  As  a  Peruvian  and  a
      Christian  Catholic,  I  shared  that  same
      surprise and hope—but also a profound
      joy  in  knowing  that  the  successor  of     Native  Peruvian,  Lucho  Espejo  meets  Native  Chicagoan,  Bishop
      Peter had walked paths similar to mine,        Robert Prevost in 2015 in Peru.  Who knew he was shaking hands
      and in a sense, the reverse of mine.           with the future Pope?  Both have a heart for mission work in Peru.
      I  was  born,  raised,  and  formed  as  a  pandemics, floods—he stood beside his  Father  Prevost  left  his  family,  his  city,
      Christian  during  the  ecclesial  changes  community,  offering  encouragement  and his country to become a missionary.
      that emerged after the Second Vatican  and  guiding  his  flock  alongside  other  In  a  way,  he  lived  the  experience  of
      Council,   particularly   through   its  religious and lay leaders.         being  an  immigrant,  just  as  many  of
      adaptations  for  Latin  America  done
      at  the  Latin  American  Conference  of
      Bishops  at  Medellín-Colombia  and
      PueblaMexico.  In  Peru,  this  meant
      receiving  and  sharing  the  Gospel’s
      message—a  message  of  life—amid  a
      reality  that  stands  against  God’s  will:
      a  reality  of  early  death  and  unjust
      suffering endured by most people in our
      countries, including Peru.
      Pope  Leo  XIV  chose  to  live  and  serve
      among  these  very  communities—the
      ones I come from.  He answered the
      Lord’s call  to  be light and  hope  in  the
      midst of  the darkness and despair
      experienced  by  the  poor  in  northern
      Peru. There are countless testimonies of
      his closeness to the people. During the
      many  crises  that  struck  his  diocese—
      PAGE 16                                                                                       friendsofchimbote.org





