BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Pope Francis may be the head of the Vatican state, but he's not giving up the right to travel as just another Argentine citizen.
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church has renewed his Argentine passport and national identity card, and Argentina's Vatican envoy told The Associated Press on Monday that the pope insisted on paying for the documents himself.
Renewing Argentine passports and identity cards usually cost about $55 at the official exchange rate.
"He wanted it for when he travels. The Argentine passport is valuable for that!" Ambassador Juan Pablo Cafiero said.
The Interior Ministry announced that the pope went through the same speedy process that all Argentines can now enjoy.
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Still, the process was speedier than most for Jorge Mario Bergoglio.
Cafiero said he and a deputy went over to the pope's hotel in the Vatican gardens on Friday to personally take Francis' picture and fingerprints and record his signature using a notebook computer. By Monday, the documents were printed and ready for delivery.
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The ministry distributed official photos of the documents that were manipulated to blot out Bergoglio's identity number and signature.
In contrast to the smiling Francis whose welcoming gestures have thrilled Roman Catholics around the world, that photo shows him posing in his white papal outfit in classic Argentine style, with a serious and even annoyed expression.
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Since popes automatically pick up Vatican citizenship, Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo said the passport renewal "fills us with pride."
Meanwhile, Francis and his cardinals will deal this week with some of the thorniest issues facing the church, including the rejection by most Catholics of its core teaching on premarital sex, contraception, gay unions and divorce.
German Cardinal Walter Kasper, who has called for “changes and openings” in the church’s treatment of divorced and remarried Catholics, will give the keynote speech Thursday to the Pope and cardinals attending a preparatory meeting for an October summit on family issues.
The cardinals are in town for Saturday’s ceremony to formally install 19 new “princes of the church,” the first batch of cardinals named by Francis.
The Holy Father scheduled the summit last year, taking the unusual step of sending bishops around the world a questionnaire for Catholics to fill out about how they understand and practice church teaching on marriage, sex and other family related issues.
The results reported by bishops in Europe and the United States have been eye-opening. Bishops reported that the church’s core teachings on sexual morals, birth control, homosexuality, marriage and divorce are rejected as unrealistic and outdated by the vast majority of Catholics, who nevertheless said they were active in parish life and considered their faith vitally important.