NATION | WORLD | BUSINESS | ARTS | PHOTOS | CURRENT ISSUE


The Berlin Wall had come down a few weeks before, and no one doubted any longer that the great Soviet enterprise was headed for collapse. But for a while, Secretary Gorbachev would be treated as you and I would be treated if we had disposed of 40,000 nuclear missiles. And anyway, Gorbachev was a polemical swinger right to the end. The ideological imagination was hardly dead. The following Sunday, no doubt expressing the new Soviet line, chief press spokesman for the Kremlin Gennadi Gerasimov appeared with Mike Wallace on 60 Minutes. It's true, he said, that communism is evolving, but so is Christianity. Christian values and communist values — "especially early Christian values" — are the same.

That was a subtle and learned line, and it is used in many contexts to fondle the difficulties John Paul II has frequently expressed about capitalism. In his long travails, Karol Wojtyla has spoken critically about Western economic arrangements, and it was this theme that caught the opportunistic eye of Gerasimov. Didn't communism, like early Christianity, seek to eliminate poverty? Was not the communist ideal an expression of Christian concern for the communal ownership of property?

In Mexico, five months later, the Pope was speaking in Pancho Villa country and sounding very much like Pancho Villa. He wanted it made clear, he said, that in celebrating the collapse of communism, he had not meant to say capitalism had triumphed. The Pope told the great crowd that he had criticized communism not for its economic shortcomings but rather because it "violated or jeopardized the dignity of the person." That was the same papal language used in Canada in 1984, and one hears traces of it today, most recently in Havana when the Pope met with Fidel Castro.

< < Previous  1 | 2 | 3 | 4   Next > >



June 18, 1979 May 25, 1981 Dec. 26, 1994
Larger Cover
Larger Cover
Larger Cover




The Appeal
By: John Grisham
A Thousand Splendid Suns
By: Khaled Hosseini
7th Heaven (Women's Murder Club)
By: James Patterson




Albert Einstein
He was unfathomably profound — the genius among geniuses who discovered, merely by thinking about it, that the universe was not
as it seemed. More >>

Runner-Up: F.D.R.
Runner-Up: Gandhi
Try 4 issues of TIME magazine Risk-Free!

ADVERTISEMENT


QUICK LINKS: Leaders & Revolutionaries | Artists & Entertainers | Builders & Titans | Scientists & Thinkers | Heroes & Icons | Person of the Century
Copyright © 2003 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe | Customer Service | Help | Site Map | Search | Contact Us
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Reprints & Permissions | Press Releases | Media Kit