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Pope Francis leaves Cuba to begin US tour

September 22, 2015

Pope Francis has left Cuba to begin his tour of the US, urging Cubans to build bridges and break down walls. In the US, the pontiff is expected to deliver messages that may be unwelcome for some.

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Kuba Havanna Papst Franziskus
Image: Reuters/A. Ernesto

Pope Francis flew out of Cuba's second city Santiago on Tuesday morning on the same Alitalia plane that brought him from Rome.

Cuban President Raul Castro saw the pope off at the airport, after a three-day stay in the Communist country. His visit took in three cities - Havana, Holguin and Santiago - with a papal mass being held in each.

Before leaving, Francis told the congregation in Santiago - the birthplace of Fidel Castro's uprising against dictator Fulgencio Batista - that a new kind of revolution was needed now, a "revolution of tenderness."

He urged Cubans to "build bridges, to break down walls, to sow seeds of reconciliation," as Cuba and the US seek rapprochement after decades of animosity.

While in the air, the pope tweeted his thanks to Cubans.

The 78-year-old pontiff was set to touch down at the Andrews Air Force base near the capital Washington.

Francis was expected to deliver some provocative messages on his US tour, which will include visits to Washington, New York and Philadelphia. He is expected to criticize the global dominance of finance and condemn world powers over their failure to end conflict.

The pope has pleased many liberal-leaning US Catholics with a shift in emphasis towards caring for the environment and concern for the poor. Some conservatives, however, have been dismayed by his statements on the danger posed by climate change, and his more liberal views on homosexuality and remarriage.

Republican Congressman Paul Gosar, who is Catholic, has said he will not attend a historic address to Congress by the pope, to protest his "leftist" views.

One of the planned highlights of the trip is an inter-faith ceremony at New York's Ground Zero, and a procession through Central Park.

rc/msh (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)