Thursday, April 12, 2012

Beloved Cuban Auxiliary Bishop Agustín Román dies in Miami at 83

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The Miami Herald

Beloved Cuban Auxiliary Bishop Agustín Román dies in Miami at 83

Miami Herald Staff

Miami Herald Staff Report
 
Agustín Román, the beloved emeritus auxiliary bishop of Miami who was considered the spiritual leader of South Florida’s Cuban exile community, died Wednesday night of a heart attack. He was 83.
 
A humble, gentle man with an iron will and a steadfast moral compass, he was viewed by older Cuban exiles as a champion of freedom and faith. Román, who had retired in 2003, served his God and his people, said those who knew him.
 
He made his final public appearances in Miami during Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to Cuba last month and on Easter Sunday after the pope honored Cuban-born Rev. Felix Varela by bringing him closer to sainthood.
 
Román had suffered from heart disease for several years. He was found slumped over the wheel of his car on the grounds of Our Lady of Charity Shrine, known in Spanish as Ermita de la Caridad del Cobre, where for decades he lovingly served his flock and carried the Cuban exile banner.
 
“The Archdiocese of Miami has lost a great evangelizer who tirelessly preached the Gospel to all,” Archbishop Thomas Wenski said in a statement late Wednesday. “And the Cuban nation has lost a great patriot. Bishop Román was the Felix Varela of our time.”
 
“The Catholic Church has lost a beloved, humble spiritual leader,” said Mary Ross Agosta, spokeswoman for the Archdiocese of Miami.
 
As word of his death spread, parishioners began to gather Wednesday night at La Ermita in Coconut Grove.
 
The Rev. Juan Rumin, the chapel’s rector, joined mourners in prayer and offered words of comfort: “Román in now in front of God,” Rumin said in Spanish. “A man of God has died and also a glorious Cuban.”
 
Funeral arrangements were not complete Wednesday.
 
Román was stricken in his car as he was being driven home after his daily prayers at the shrine, which he had helped build. He had suffered cardiac arrest, was transported to nearby Mercy Hospital and, following extensive resuscitation efforts, was pronounced dead shortly before 8:45 p.m.
 
Román was prepared to die, said the Rev. Juan Sosa, who has known him since 1979.
 
“His legacy is one of total commitment in service to the poor, to the needy, to the church, to the homeless and to the exiles,” Sosa said.
 
Sosa said that while Román’s death is sad, it serves as a source of inspiration for others to follow his example “of selflessness and sacrifice.”
 
Román was honored on March 4, before the papal visit to Cuba, by the Miami Coalition of Christians and Jews.
 
His death also comes as the shrine, home to a replica of Cuba’s patron saint, the Virgin of Charity, celebrates the 400th anniversary of her apparition in Cuba.
 
Román spent more than half his life in exile, first in Spain, then in Chile and the United States, yet he never surrendered to bitterness, never lost hope.
 
“I am a Cuban, and I will always love the country where I was born,” Román once said. “I hope that before I go to heaven, I will see Cuba again. But I love America, too. This is the country that welcomed me.”
 
Román earned national attention as a mediator when Mariel detainees rioted in 1987 and seized portions of federal prisons in Atlanta and Oakdale, La.
 
In April 2003, he retired as auxiliary bishop emeritus. That year, he wrote a column for The Miami Herald that urged South Floridians to support asylum for Haitian refugees.
 
“How can I not want for others in similar circumstances all the benefits I found?” wrote the one-time refugee. “How can I be indifferent to their tragedy, when I see in the eyes of those Haitians the same bewildered look I had in mine when I arrived in Spain, the same desperate look I see in the eyes of my brothers, the Cuban rafters?”
 
Almost to the end, Román lived an ascetic life. His long-time home: a small chamber and tiny kitchen next door to La Ermita.
 
Awake at 5:45 a.m. Breakfast: salt-free, sugar-free bread. Back in bed at 12:30 a.m., the time between filled shepherding his flock.
 
This lifestyle seemed at odds with his local fame. “I remember the words of the Lord,” Román said, quoting from Matthew 23:11,12. “ ‘He who is greatest among you shall be your servant. Whoever exalts himself shall be humbled, and whoever humbles himself shall be exalted.’ ”
 
During his working years, he was not known ever to have indulged in a vacation. He never refused a call or visit. He did not believe in answering machines. He finally scaled back his work at the mandatory retirement age of 75.
 
Román suffered from persistent cardiac disorders, survived several heart attacks and, in 1992, quadruple-bypass surgery. He also battled diabetes.
 
His influence permeated the Cuban exile and Roman Catholic communities, and extended well beyond them.
 
In the early 1960s, Román led the campaign to build La Ermita de la Caridad. He asked each exile for 10 cents. He ended up collecting $240,000.
 
The shrine, on South Miami Avenue along the edge of Biscayne Bay, opened in 1967. It attracts almost 500,000 visitors a year.
 
Román found himself thrust into the national spotlight when he served as a key mediator during the Mariel prisoner uprisings at prisons in Atlanta and Oakdale, La. Refugees at both rioted and seized hostages after learning they might be deported after serving their time.
 
His help sought by the White House, Román spoke with the prisoners at Oakdale. He addressed them as “dear brothers” and assured them that a deal offered by authorities was fair and just. In minutes, they surrendered.
 
A week later, Román and his attorney and close friend, Rafael Peñalver, walked into the besieged prison in Atlanta. Alone. Angry prisoners lurked everywhere.
 
Their lives in jeopardy, Román whispered to Peñalver: “Bless you, and put yourself in the hands of the Virgin.”
 
The armed prisoners all dropped their shivs on a pile. Román kept one of the weapons in his home, framed, a gift from the federal government.
 
USA Today called Román the “crisis hero.” Two Hollywood movie producers sought the rights to his story.
 
Román declared himself baffled by this. “Hero? Me? I don’t think so. Maybe the people are confused.”
 
He sought to draw and share lessons from the experience.
 
“To the American people, on behalf of the Mariel detainees, I ask your forgiveness,” he said when it was over. “I know that it is not the American way to take over a building to make a point, but neither is it the American way to detain prisoners after they have served their sentence.”
 
For the wider South Florida community, Román served as an advocate of reconciliation. He was active in the Haitian and African-American communities, and maintained links with Jewish and Protestant leaders.
 
Agustín Román was born May 5, 1928, in a small house in the countryside of Havana province. His father, Rosendo Román, was a farm worker.
 
Román was a quiet, asthmatic child. Illness kept him out of school until age 8.
 
He studied philosophy at the San Alberto Magno Seminary in Matanzas, and then traveled to Montreal to study theology at the Seminary of Foreign Missionaries.
 
Ordained on July 5, 1959, he worked in backwater Cuban parishes. The next two years were difficult in a country turning Marxist, but Román was never tempted to leave.
 
But then, Román and 132 other priests was rounded up by Castro’s henchmen, loaded at gunpoint aboard a ship and sent to Spain.
 
Months later, he traveled to Chile to work with the poor. In 1966, his sister, Iraida, left her husband and Cuba to move to Miami with her two children. Román joined her in Miami.
 
An outsider within the church hierarchy and one of its few Hispanics, he was made associate pastor of St. Mary’s Cathedral. As the exile community grew roots, he moved steadily up through the ranks, becoming auxiliary bishop in 1979.
 
“I would like to see Cuba before I die,” Agustín Román said several years ago. “But I know that when I am in heaven, I will see Cuba even better.”


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Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Pope brings Cuban-born priest Felix Varela closer to sainthood

The Miami Herald

Pope Benedict XVI, fresh from a visit to Cuba and Mexico, has given his approval for Father Felix Varela to be given the status of “venerable” — bringing the Havana-born priest who died 159 years ago a step closer to sainthood.
Becoming venerable means that Varela could be beatified with the recognition of one miracle granted and canonized with the recognition of a second miracle.
The pope’s approval was announced on Easter Sunday by New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan. The pope was following the unanimous recommendation of the Vatican’s Congregation for Saints’ Causes.
Miami Archbishop Thomas Wenski praised the announcement: “In his homily in Havana, Pope Benedict called Father Felix Varela a shining example of the contributions a person of faith can make in building a more just society... In recognizing this holy priest’s heroic virtue by conferring on him the title of venerable,’ the pope offers to the world a role model who in was ‘the first to teach his people how to think’ and also show us a path to a true transformation of society.”
Already in Miami-Dade, there is a high school named in Varela’s honor.
Born in Havana on Nov. 20, 1788, Varela was ordained a priest at age 23. By then, Varela already had distinguished himself as “a man of culture and profound learning,” the archdioces said, and had even written a philosophy text that had been adopted by other schools.
In 1821, he was elected to represent Cuba in the Spanish Parliament. Among the laws he proposed were one calling for the abolition of slavery and another calling for self-rule for Spain’s colonies in the Americas.
After his exile from Cuba in 1823, Varela worked for 30 years in the Archdiocese of New York, as vicar general and advocate for Irish immigrants.
Varela died in 1853 in St. Augustine, Fl. His remains were later moved to the Aula Magna of the University of Havana, where they can be viewed today.
The declaration by the Congregation for Saints’ Causes can be seen at www.miamiarch.org.