What is the “doctrine of discovery” and why did Pope Francis ultimately reject it?

A Vatican statement released on Thursday said some papal bulls or decrees “did not adequately reflect the equal dignity and rights of indigenous peoplesand have never been considered expressions of the Catholic faith.

The declaration was the Vatican’s response to decades of native demands for a formal repudiation of the “Doctrine of Discovery”, the legal theory upheld by the 15th century “papal bulls” that legitimizes the taking of indigenous lands in the colonial erawhich served as the basis for certain laws which govern property today.

Historical recognition of the atrocities of colonialism

The statement, made by the Vatican’s development and education departments, represents a historic acknowledgment of the Catholic Church’s own complicity in colonial-era abuses committed by European powers.

Although they continue to keep a distance from genuine Vatican advocacy, indigenous leaders welcomed the statement.

The statement said papal decrees were “manipulated” for political purposes by colonial powers “to justify immoral acts against indigenous peoples that were committed, at times, without opposition from church authorities.”

He said it was right to “acknowledge those mistakes”, to recognize the terrible effects of colonial-era assimilation policies on Indigenous peoples and ask for your forgiveness.

The declaration was a response to decades of native demands for the Vatican to officially rescind papal bulls that provided the kingdoms of Portugal and Spain with religious support to expand their territories in Africa and the Americas for the spread of Christianity.

The Doctrine of Discovery

These executive orders support the “Doctrine of Discovery,” a legal concept coined in an 1823 U.S. Supreme Court decision that means the ownership and sovereignty over the land of indigenous peoples passed to Europeans because they were the ones who “discovered” it.

The “Doctrine of Discovery” was recently cited in a 2005 Supreme Court decision involving the Oneida Indian Nation, authored by the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

“Under the Doctrine of Discovery…the title to the lands occupied by the Indians on the arrival of the settlers passed to the sovereign, first to the discovering European nation, then to the States of origin and to the States United,” Ginsburg wrote in City of Sherrill v. Oneida Indian Nation of New York.

During Pope Francis’ visit to Canada in 2022, where he apologized to Indigenous peoples for the residential school system forcibly removes Indigenous children from their homesmet with demands for formal repudiation of papal bulls.

Two Indigenous women unfurled a banner at the altar of the Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré National Shrine on July 29 that read: “Abrogate the Doctrine” in bright red and black letters. The demonstrators were led out of the church and the mass passed without incident, although the women then unfurled the banner outside the basilica.

In the statement, the Vatican said: “In clear terms, the magisterium of the Church upholds the respect due to all human beings. Therefore, the Catholic Church rejects concepts that do not recognize the inherent human rights of Indigenous peoplesincluding the so-called “legal and political doctrine of discovery”.

Phil Fontaine, a former National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations in Canada who was part of the delegation that met Francis in the Vatican before the trip and then accompanied him throughout the trip, said the statement was ” wonderful,” he said. outstanding issue and now puts the matter in the hands of the civil authorities to review the property laws that cite the doctrine.

“The Holy Father promised that upon his return to Rome, they would begin work on a statement intended to allay the fears and concerns of many survivors and others concerned about the relationship between the Catholic Church and our people. , and he did what he promised to do,” Fontaine told The Associated Press.

“The Church did what the Holy Father said she would do. Now the ball is in the court of the governments of the United States and Canada. Especially that of the United States where doctrine is part of the law,” he said.

Vatican statement does not imply repeal of Doctrine of Discovery

The Vatican has provided no evidence that the three papal bulls (Dum Diversas in 1452, Romanus Pontifex in 1455, and Inter Caetera in 1493) had been formally abrogated, revoked, or dismissed, as Vatican officials have often said. But he cites a later bull, Sublimis Deus of 1537, which reaffirms that Indigenous peoples should not be deprived of their freedom or possession of their property, and they should not be enslaved.

Cardinal Michael Czerny, the Canadian Jesuit whose office co-wrote the statement, said the original bulls had long since been repealed and that the use of the term “doctrine”, which in this case is a legal term and not religious, it had led to centuries of confusion about the role of the church.

The original bulls, he said, “are treated as didactic, magisterial or doctrinal documents, and they constitute an ad hoc political movement. And I think that solemnly repudiating an ad hoc political move would generate more confusion than clarity.

Czerny pointed out that the statement was not only intended to clarify the historical record, but to “to discover, identify, analyze and try to overcome what today can only be called the lasting effects of colonialism”.

The cardinal said it was significant that the repudiation of the “Doctrine of Discovery” occurred during the pontificate of the first Latin American pope in history. Even before the trip to Canada. The Argentine pope had apologized to the indigenous peoples of Bolivia in 2015 for the crimes of the conquest of the Americas during the colonial era.

Cardinal José Tolentino de Mendonça, prefect of the Vatican’s office for culture, said the statement reflected the Vatican’s dialogue with indigenous peoples.

“This statement is part of what one might call the architecture of reconciliation and also the product of the art of reconciliation, the process by which people engage in listening to each other, talking to each other and growing in mutual understanding,” he said in a statement.

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With his health weakened and using a cane and a wheelchair, Francisco anticipates from this Sunday the 37th trip of his papacy, which he described as penitential. The pontiff should apologize to the Canadian indigenous people for the events in the schools run by the Catholic Church. More Univision news

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Pope Francis began a tense visit to Canada on Sunday to apologize to Indigenous peoples for abuses committed by missionaries in Catholic boarding schools, a key step in the Church’s efforts to reconcile with and help Indigenous communities. to heal from generations of trauma. .

Credit: Gregorio Borgia/AP

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Francis first arrived in Edmonton, Alberta, where he met Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mary May Simon, an Inuk who is Canada’s first Indigenous Governor General.

Credit: Gregorio Borgia/AP

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The wheelchair-bound Pope was lowered from the back of the plane using an elevator before being driven in a compact white Fiat to an airport hangar where he was met by Trudeau, Simon and other dignitaries.

Credit: Eric Gay/AP

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Pope Francis kisses the hand of an Indigenous Canadian on his arrival at Edmonton International Airport, Canada.

Credit: Gregorio Borgia/AP

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Drums and indigenous songs broke the silence as the welcoming ceremony began. A succession of native chiefs and elders greeted the pope and exchanged gifts.

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The welcoming ceremony was brief, as all the events of this trip are expected so that Pope Francis, 85, does not get too tired. It will be a trip that will test Francis’ mobility issues, although during the flight the pontiff wanted to walk through the plane’s narrow aisles to greet journalists with a cane.

Credit: Gregorio Borgia/AP

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However, Indigenous groups are looking for more than just words and want access to Church records to learn the fate of residential school children who never returned home. They also want punishment for the abusers, financial reparations for the victims, and the return of indigenous artifacts held by the Vatican Museums. Pictured is Grand Chief George Arcand of the Six First Nations Treaty Confederacy.

Credit: Eric Gay/AP

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“This apology validates our experiences and creates an opportunity for the Church to repair relationships with Indigenous peoples around the world,” said Grand Chief George Arcand Jr. of the Treaty Six Confederacy. But he stressed: “It doesn’t stop there, there is a lot to do. It’s a beginning”.

Credit: Eric Gay/AP

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Pope Francis, center, shakes hands with other clergy along with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, and Mary Simon, Governor General of Canada, right, during a welcoming ceremony. The week-long trip will take the pope to Edmonton, Quebec and finally to Iqaluit, Nunavut, in the Far North. The visit follows meetings Francis held at the Vatican in the spring with First Nations, Métis and Inuit delegations. These meetings resulted in a historic apology on April 1 for “deplorable” abuses committed by some Catholic missionaries in residential schools.

Credit: Eric Gay/AP

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The Canadian government has admitted physical and sexual abuse was rampant in state-funded Christian schools that operated from the 19th century to the 1970s. Some 150,000 Indigenous children were taken from their families and forced to attend in the purpose of isolating them from the influence of their original homes, languages ​​and cultures and assimilating them into the Christian society of Canada.

Credit: Gregorio Borgia/AP

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Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission sought a papal apology on Canadian soil in 2015, but it wasn’t until the remains of some 200 children were discovered in BC’s Kamloops Internment Center in 2021 that the Vatican sought to comply with the request.

Credit: Gregorio Borgia/AP

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See also: Pope Francis had a long conversation with our journalist María Antonieta Collins in which he assured that he and God were talking “face to face”. The head of the Catholic Church has revealed he doesn’t watch TV after a promise he made on June 16, 1990 ‘not knowing it was perpetual’, an oath he doesn’t even break to see the Argentine national team in the World Cup. . Watch more of the exclusive interview with Pope Francis here.

Alvin Nguyen

"Amateur introvert. Pop culture trailblazer. Incurable bacon aficionado."

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