``We continue to see positive results'' from the papal visit, Foreign
Ministry spokesman Alejandro Gonzalez said at a weekly news conference.
``A good level of relations and communication with the church has been
maintained.''
Hopes had been high among average Cubans and government officials alike
that John Paul would stop by Cuba this week on his way to or from his
visit to Mexico and the United States. The pope's visit to Mexico begins
Friday; he arrives Tuesday in St. Louis.
The Vatican has said the pope's health and schedule would not permit a
stop in Cuba.
Gonzalez said the government continues to study the Roman Catholic
church's demands to operate more freely in Cuban society. Cuba was once
atheist, but is now a secular state.
Some requests, including authorization of processions and of entry into
the country by foreign priests, have been resolved, he said.
The church also has asked for greater access to the
government-controlled media and the right to open church schools, which
were banned in the early years of the 40-year-old Cuban revolution.
As a concession to the church, the government last month declared
Christmas a permanent official holiday and allowed Cardinal Jaime Ortega
to read a religious Christmas message on government radio.
Meanwhile, Mexico City's archbishop, Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera,
said Thursday that Latin American church leaders will meet in Cuba next
month to follow up John Paul's call for a more unified church. Exact dates
have still not been set for the meeting of the Latin American Episcopal
Conference, he said.
Cuba's relations with church remain good a year after Pope's
visit
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald