U Sudhakar Reddy
Five cardinals from India will be taking part in electing the next
Pope, head of the Roman Catholic Church. One of them is Cardinal Ivan Dias Archbishop
Emeritus of Mumbai who was in the running for the top job after Pope John
Paul died.He is now not a front runner to succeed Pope Benedict, who, most unusually resigned on
Monday, but church sources say that if a cardinal from Asia is considered for the
papacy, and depending on his health, Cardinal Dias could still be a possible candidate.Cardinal Dias is Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples.
Of the 120 cardinals from across the world who will vote for the next Pope, there are
five from India: Cardinal Dias; Cardinal Baselios Cleemis Thottunkal, 53, Major
Archbishop of Thiruvananthapuram of the Syro-Malankars; Cardinal George Alencherry,
67, Major Archbishop of Ernakulam, Angamaly of the Syro-Malabars; Cardinal Oswald
Gracias, 68, Metropolitan Archbishop of Bombay and Cardinal Telesphore Placidus Toppo,
73, Metropolitan Archbishop of Ranchi.
India has two other Cardinals who will not be voting because they have crossed the age
limit of 80 years: Cardinal Simon Ignatius Pimenta, 92, Metropolitan Archbishop
Emeritus of Bombay; and Cardinal Duraisamy Simon Lourdusamy, 89, Metropolitan
Archbishop Emeritus of Bengaluru.Under the system followed in the church for selecting the Pope, all those in the
electoral college are candidates and voters at the same time.Vicar-General of the Hyderabad Archdiocese, Monsignor Swarna Bernard, told this
newspaper: "Though we are stunned at the resignation of Pope Benedict, we hope this
move will help the Catholic Church."On Cardinal Dias's candidature, Father Swarna Bernard said, "Ivan Dias is an honest and
sincere cardinal. He was born in 1936. He is very able and traditional. If an Asian,
that too an Indian, is considered for the papacy, it will be a matter of great pride
for the Catholic Church. He is close to Pope Benedict."The Cardinals will begin the process in Rome in March to elect the new Pope. The conclave
may take days or weeks and there will be several rounds of voting, said a church source."If black smoke appears, it means that they haven't elected anyone yet. If white smoke
appears, the Pope is elected. Then the announcement "Habemus Papam (We have a Pope) is
made," said a church official.The most viable candidates are considered to be Cardinal Timothy Dolan from New York,
Cardinal Peter Appiah Turkson from Ghana, Cardinal Marc Ouellet from Canada, Cardinal
Joao Braz de Aviz Odilo Pedro Scherer from Brazil, Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi and
Cardinal Angelo Scola of Italy, Leonardo Sandri of Argentina, Christoph Schoenborn of
Austria and Luis Tagle of the Philippines."Cardinal Turkson from Ghana has a fair chance if they choose to elect an African. Luis
Tagle of the Philippines is an Asian. Cardinal Ivan Dias's name is not making the
rounds now like it did after John Paul," said a Church source.
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