Rome: The highest-ranking American cardinal at the Vatican on Friday deplored the unjust killing of George Floyd, saying it laid bare that the Christian principles of the US Constitution aren’t being applied to black people.
Cardinal Kevin Farrell, who heads the Vatican’s laity office, said that the brutality of what happened to Floyd after his arrest in Minneapolis was so unreal it seemed like a movie. Floyd, who was handcuffed, died after a police officer pressed his knee into his neck even after he said he couldn't breathe.
“We would never think that that could possibly happen,” Farrell said. “They are trained individuals who knew that in that position, that person was not going to survive.”
“Now, what brings a person to that point?” he said. “We all have to ask ourselves: What has brought us to that point?”
Farrell on Friday presided over a prayer service in honour of Floyd and other victims of racism organized by the Sant’Egidio Community, a Rome-based Catholic charity that is close to Pope Francis.
Sitting in the front row at the Santa Maria in Trastevere church in downtown Rome was US Ambassador to the Holy See Callista Gingrich and her husband, Newt, the former US House speaker. They both wore protective masks and sat in chairs spaced apart, as called for by Italy’s anti-virus health measures.
In his remarks, Farrell said the protests that have broken out after Floyd’s death make clear that the civil rights movement of the 1960s failed to resolve all of America’s race problems.
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Despite laws, constitutional protections and famous speeches that proclaim equality, “the human heart can always close itself in its egoism and return to being polluted by sin, provoking new injustices, violence and oppression,” he said.