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When the Great Schism occurred between Eastern and Western churches in 1054, knowledge
of the mutual religious identities declined. The Fourth Crusade worsened relationships further.
Negotiations at the Council of Florence and talks of a union of the Churches shortly before the fall
of Constantinople both caused dissense among Byzantines. The first Patriarch under Ottoman rule,
Gennadius II and others saw the West as a threat to the Byzantine existence.
Immigrants from the East could thrive in the New World. The
Chedraui and Slim families
for example. They are successful entrepreneurs, politicians or religious leaders in Mexican society.
Antonio Chedraui and Atenagoras as leaders of the Mexican and Central American Eastern
Churches received the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I in Mexico in 2006. Together with the
Catholic Archbisshop Norberto Rivera they sang the Akathistos hymn to the Theotokos (connecting
her to the Virgen of Guadalupe) and exchanged gifts. This harmoneous act
did help to show that the
position of one time immigrants in Mexico seemed to be one of cultural integration, but it was still
no official statement of lifting the Schism. Subsequent events were of small impact. In 2002 John
Paul II had met the Ecumenical Patriarch on the occasion of a Common Declaration on ecological
awareness. Benedict XVI and Bartholomew I met in Istanbul in 2006,
where the Pope returned
relics that had been in Rome since the Fourth Crusade, and both men used words of brotherly love.
Forgotten seemed that Paul VI and Athneagoras already formulated a joint declaration in 1965, and
that the mutual excommunications of the Eastern and Western religious leaders had been removed.
The meeting between the first Pope from the Americas, Francis and the Ecumenical Patriarch
occurred in November 2014, and both presented speeches wishing an end to the Schism. The
language and behavior the religious leaders used were characterized by humility and mutual respect.
This, however, seemed to be a repetition of the step already made by the former Pope. It seemed
another Patriarch would be needed to make a difference. Kirill, the religious
leader of the Russian
Orthodox Church spoke to the Pope and the world that reuniting the Churches was necessary for
protection of the Christians in the Middle-East. In the winter of 2015-2016 it was obvious that
Christian communities were under fire and that Russian troops were operating in the region. Kirill
seemed to have a more resounding vote in addressing the differences
between Eastern and Western
churches than his Ecumenical colleague in Istanbul. The Pope invited him to come to Cuba, a place
that is still boycotted by the Western powers, but an ally of Russia as well
as a socialist bulwark in
the heart of the American Catholic world. Why of all places there? Was the Schism actually lifted
in Cuba? Was not actually the protection of old Byzantine religious identities in the Middle-East on
the agenda? Why was not Bartholomew I invited?