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词条 Antonio Quarracino
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Views

     Inter-religious dialogue with Jews  Social communications  Dirty War  Argentine politics  Homosexuality  Boca Juniors 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{ref improve|date=March 2013}}{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2013}}{{Infobox Christian leader
| type = cardinal
| honorific-prefix = His Eminence
| name = Antonio Quarracino
| honorific-suffix =
| title = Cardinal, Archbishop of Buenos Aires
| image =
| imagesize = 200px
| alt =
| caption = Cardinal Quarracino with yerba mate.
| church =
| archdiocese = Buenos Aires
| appointed = 10 July 1990
| enthroned = 22 November 1990
| ended = 28 February 1998
| predecessor = Juan Carlos Aramburu
| successor = Jorge Bergoglio
| ordination = 22 December 1945
| consecration = 8 April 1962
| consecrated_by = Anunciado Serafini
| cardinal = 28 June 1991
| created_cardinal_by = Pope John Paul II
| rank = Cardinal-Priest
| other_post = {{unbulleted list|Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria della Salute a Primavalle|Ordinary of the Ordinariate for the Faithful of the Eastern Rites in Argentina}}
| birth_name = Antonio Quarracino
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1923|8|8}}
| birth_place = Pollica, Province of Salerno, Kingdom of Italy
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1998|2|28|1923|8|8}}
| death_place = Buenos Aires
| buried = Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral
| nationality = Argentine
| religion = Roman Catholic
| previous_post = {{unbulleted list|Bishop of Nueve de Julio (1962-1968)|Bishop of Avellaneda (1968-1985)|Archbishop of La Plata (1985-1990)}}
| residence =
| parents =
| alma_mater = San José Seminary, La Plata
| signature =
| coat_of_arms = Coat of arms of Antonio Quarracino.svg
| motto = ipsi gloria
}}{{Infobox cardinal styles
|cardinal name=Antonio Quarracino
|image=Coat of arms of Antonio Quarracino.svg
|image_size=150px
|See=Buenos Aires
}}{{Ordination
| ordained deacon by =
| date of diaconal ordination =
| place of diaconal ordination =
| ordained priest by =
| date of priestly ordination = 22 December 1945
| place of priestly ordination =
| consecrated by = Anunciado Serafini
| co-consecrators =Adolfo Servando Tortolo,
Raúl Francisco Primatesta
| date of consecration = 8 April 1962
| place of consecration =
| elevated by =
| date of elevation = 28 June 1991
| sources =
| bishop 1 = Alejo Benedicto Gilligan
| consecration date 1 = 4 October 1969
| bishop 2 = Rubén Héctor di Monte
| consecration date 2 = 16 August 1980
| bishop 3 = Norberto Eugenio Conrado Martina
| consecration date 3 = 9 December 1990
| bishop 4 = Héctor Rubén Aguer
| consecration date 4 = 4 April 1992
| bishop 5 = Rubén Oscar Frassia
| consecration date 5 = 4 April 1992
| bishop 6 = Jorge Mario Bergoglio
| consecration date 6 = 27 June 1992
| bishop 7 = Raúl Omar Rossi
| consecration date 7 = 27 June 1992
| bishop 8 = Pedro Luis Ronchino
| consecration date 8 = 19 March 1993
| bishop 9 = José Luis Mollaghan
| consecration date 9 = 2 October 1993
| bishop 10 = Francisco Polti Santillán
| consecration date 10 = 22 August 1994
| bishop 11 = Guillermo Rodríguez Melgarejo
| consecration date 11 = 27 September 1994
}}

Antonio Quarracino (8 August 1923 – 28 February 1998) was a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church of Argentina and the Archbishop of Buenos Aires between 1990 and 1998.

Biography

Quarracino was born in Pollica, Province of Salerno, Italy. His family emigrated to Argentina when he was 4 years old, settling in the town of San Andrés de Giles in the province of Buenos Aires.

Quarracino was ordained priest on 22 December 1945, and became a professor at the Diocesan Seminar of Mercedes. He also taught theology at the Universidad Católica Argentina.

He was appointed Bishop of Nueve de Julio, Buenos Aires, by Pope John XXIII, on 3 February 1962, and received the episcopal see on 8 April of the same year. On 3 August 1968 Paul VI moved him to the diocese of Avellaneda (whose new cathedral was built during his rule).

John Paul II promoted him to the Archdiocese of La Plata on 18 December 1985, and then on 10 July 1990 to the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires, a see to which is attached the title of Primate of Argentina. He was elected to preside the Argentine Episcopal Conference in the following November, and then reelected, until 1996. He was elevated to Cardinal-Priest of S. Maria della Salute a Primavalle in consistory on 28 June 1991.

On 27 June 1992 he was the principal consecrator of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, S.J., later Pope Francis, as bishop.[1]

Quarracino died in 1998 at the age of 74, due to a cardiac arrest. He was succeeded automatically by his coadjutor bishop, the Jesuit Jorge Mario Bergoglio.

Views

Inter-religious dialogue with Jews

Quarracino was a major figure of inter-religious discussion with Jews. During a visit to Israel in 1992 he was decorated by Jewish institutions for this cause, and in 1997 he had a mural painting set up in the Cathedral of Buenos Aires commemorating the victims of the Holocaust and the bombings of the Israeli Embassy and the AMIA.

Social communications

Quarracino was inclined to journalism and, while in La Plata, he renewed the informative magazine of the archdiocese, transforming it into a full-fledged cultural publication. As Bishop of Buenos Aires, he appeared on TV often and regularly; he was in charge of a segment in a religious program (Claves para un mundo mejor) in the state-owned channel ATC.

Dirty War

Quarracino was outspoken about controversial topics. One of his first notable public statements was his support, in 1982, of a project of law that would end all investigation of the crimes of the Dirty War, in order to "contribute to national reconciliation". This can be seen as a precedent of the Ley de Punto Final, sanctioned in 1986.

Argentine politics

Quarracino was opposed to the policies of president Raúl Alfonsín (1983–1989), and accused politicians of corruption, as the cause of "national poverty". However, he acknowledged being a friend of president Carlos Menem (1989–1999), who was himself heavily criticized by other Church leaders (such as Cardinal Primatesta).

Homosexuality

In 1994, during his TV segment in ATC, Quarracino spoke against homosexuality saying that lesbians and gay men should be "locked up in a ghetto". This caused an accusation of discrimination, which was not considered by justice because anti-discrimination Law 23592 did not cover sexual orientation. Three years before he had termed homosexuality "a deviation of human nature, like bestiality".[2]

Boca Juniors

The Cardinal was an avowed fan of the Boca Juniors football team. When he celebrated his 50 years of priesthood he received a Boca Juniors shirt signed by all the team members.

References

1. ^{{cite web|title=Bergoglio, Jorge Mario|url=http://www.aica.org/guia-s-T2Jpc3Bvcw==-91 |work=Breve biografía de obispos|publisher=La Agencia Informativa Católica Argentina|accessdate=15 March 2013|language=es}}
2. ^Página/12 El páis Happy together Domingo, 28 de agosto de 2005

External links

  • Catholic-Hierarchy.org
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20051223024621/http://www.zenit.org/spanish/archivo/9803/980301.htm#A2 Zenit Catholic News Agency]
  • Hoy magazine, La Plata, 1 March 1998.
{{start box}}{{s-rel|ca}}{{succession box | before=Juan Carlos Aramburu | title=Archbishop of Buenos Aires | years=10 July 1990 – 28 February 1998| after=Jorge Mario Bergoglio }}{{end box}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Quarracino, Antonio}}

13 : 1923 births|1998 deaths|People from the Province of Salerno|Argentine cardinals|Participants in the Second Vatican Council|Argentine people of Italian descent|Archbishops of Buenos Aires|20th-century Roman Catholic archbishops|Catholic Church in Argentina|Cardinals created by Pope John Paul II|Italian emigrants to Argentina|Burials at Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral|People from Buenos Aires Province

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