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Pope Benedict decries Czech communist-era persecution

PRAGUE -- Pope Benedict XVI criticized the communist era's fierce religious persecution Saturday as he began a three-day pilgrimage to the Czech Republic, and urged the heavily secular nation to rediscover its Christian roots.

At a welcome ceremony at Prague's Ruzyne International Airport, the 82-year-old pope spoke of how the communist regime, which was overthrown in 1989, ruthlessly persecuted the Roman Catholic Church.

“I join you and your neighbors in giving thanks for your liberation from these oppressive regimes,” Benedict said, hailing the collapse of the Berlin Wall two decades ago this autumn as “a watershed in world history.”

“Nevertheless, the cost of 40 years of political repression is not to be underestimated,” the pope said. “A particular tragedy for this land was the ruthless attempt by the government of that time to silence the voice of the church.”

“Now that religious freedom has been restored, I call upon all the citizens of this republic to rediscover the Christian traditions which have shaped their culture,” he added.

Scores of pilgrims poured into Prague for the nation's first papal visit in a dozen years. But most Czechs seemed to shrug the trip off as irrelevant — and some were openly hostile.

“It's just a waste of money,” said Kveta Tomasovicova, 56, who works at Prague's National Library. “At a time of economic crisis, when our salaries are going down, the visit is a useless investment.”

Even the Vatican acknowledges the 13th foreign trip of Benedict's papacy casts the pope as an apostle among the apostate.

Secularism is so ingrained in the modern Czech Republic that “the practice of religion is reduced to a minority,” said the pope's spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi.

Even so, Czech organizers of the pope's visit expect 100,000 faithful to pack an airfield for Sunday's outdoor Mass in Brno — the highlight of the visit. Some were expected to make the trek from neighboring Austria and Poland.

Under communism, which ended with the 1989 Velvet Revolution that drew hundreds of thousands of Czechs to mostly nonviolent street protests, the church was brutally repressed.

The regime, which seized power in 1948 in what was then Czechoslovakia, confiscated all church-owned property and persecuted many priests. Churches were then allowed to function only under the state's control and supervision.

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