VATICAN CITY -- It's a political campaign like no other, with no declared candidates or front-runners and a well-adhered to taboo against openly gunning for the job. But the maneuvering to select the next pope is already under way a day after Pope Benedict XVI stunned the world and announced he would retire Feb. 28.
One African contender declared Tuesday it was time for a Third World pope -- and said he was free if God wanted him.
Berlin's archbishop urged mercy for the victor, given the terrible weight of the office, while Mexico City Cardinal Norberto Rivera asked for prayers so the best man might win.
It's all part of the ritual of picking a pope, the mysterious process that takes place behind closed doors at the Sistine Chapel, where the "princes" of the church, the 117 or so cardinals under age 80, vote in next month's conclave.
Once sequestered, they cast secret ballots until they reach a two-thirds majority and elect a leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics, sending up smoke signals from the chapel's chimney to tell the world if they have failed [black] or succeeded [white].
In the run-up to the conclave, cardinals engage in a delicate dance, speaking in general terms about qualities of a future pope and the particular issues facing the church. It's rare for anyone to name names, much less tout himself.
If asked, most cardinals routinely invoke the refrain: "He who goes into a conclave a pope comes out a cardinal."
Such genteel public platitudes, however, belie very real factions within the College of Cardinals that determines the outcome of the vote.
Just because the cardinals wear the same red cassock and recite the same prayers doesn't mean they think alike. They have different visions about what the church needs, different views on critical issues and different allegiances: geographical, sentimental and theological.
This time around, it seems geography is very much front and center, at least in the public debate in full swing Tuesday, the first day of the conclave campaign.
One of Africa's brightest hopes to be the next pope, Ghanaian Cardinal Peter Turkson, said the time was right for a pontiff from the developing world, and that he's available for the job "if it's the will of God."
Turkson said the "young churches" of Africa and Asia have now become solid enough that they have produced "mature clergymen and prelates that are capable of exercising leadership also of this world institution."
Catholics in the developing world don't need a pope from their region to thrive, he said. They have done just fine, growing exponentially with European pontiffs. But Turkson, who heads the Vatican's justice and peace office, said a pope from the global south would "go a long way to strengthen them in their resolve."
Whether Turkson would have a shot at the papacy, though, is an open question. Last year he screened an alarmist video at a meeting of the world's bishops, warning of the inroads Islam is making in Europe and the world.
He apologized, but the gaffe may have cost him a chance at the papacy. Even Vatican Radio called the film a "4-year-old, fear-mongering presentation of statistics" that have been widely debunked.
For his part, Venezuelan Cardinal Jorge Urosa said he hopes the next pope comes from Latin America, home to 40 percent of the world's Catholics.
Berlin's archbishop, Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki, said he doesn't care "whether he is African or Asian or Latin American or European."
More importantly, Woelki said, "We should treat mercifully the person who has to take over such an office, in order not to expect of him ... possibly 20, 25 or even more years."
"Such an office wears people out," he said, praising Benedict for setting the modern precedent of retiring as pope.
That assessment was certainly on the mind of Cardinal Francisco Javier Errazuriz of Chile, who took himself out of the running entirely. He told Chile's Radio Cooperativa that at age 79, he's not the papal contender he was back in 2005.
"Back then, I was president of the Latin American Conference of Bishops. It was normal that among the Latin American names they included the president of that institution," he said. "But I'm now a cardinal emeritus, and I have a different path ahead of me."
Rivera, the Mexican cardinal, struck a similar humble tone, asking for prayers from all the faithful "so that the Holy Spirit helps us choose the best candidate to guide the church."
It should be noted that merely by speaking publicly, the cardinals may have jinxed their chances -- which may have been their intention given that the papacy is a job few actively seek. But in today's media-driven world, where cardinals and even the pope tweet, staying silent isn't an option -- at least until the cardinals enter the frescoed walls of the Sistine Chapel.
After that, what goes on in the Sistine Chapel stays in the Sistine Chapel. Violation of the code of secrecy in a conclave means excommunication.
The Rev. Thomas Reese, who wrote about the conclave process in his 1996 book "Inside the Vatican," said each cardinal looks for three things in a papal candidate.
"Someone who has the same values and vision of the church that he has. ... Someone with whom he has a positive relation. They all want someone as pope who is their friend and will listen to them. ... And someone who will go over well in their own country, or at least not embarrass them."
In an email, Reese said American cardinals, for example, want a pope who understands the church sex abuse crisis. A cardinal from a Muslim country, he added, wouldn't want a pope who has said provocative things about Islam.
Given those requirements, it's only natural that there be debate in the run-up to the conclave, and on the sidelines once it's under way.
"It's not like an American election with nominating speeches," said Christopher Bellitto, a church historian at Kean University in New Jersey. Once the conclave has started, "all they do is vote, so all the politicking takes place over dinner and espresso and cigarettes."
Bellitto said this conclave will be unique because cardinals won't feel the need to refrain from discussing their picks in advance of the gathering. In the past, such discussions were considered unseemly with a pope nearing death, as during Pope John Paul II's long, debilitating illness.
But with Benedict's announced resignation, there's little reason not to start the negotiations right away, he said.
"Now they've got two weeks' notice, more time for cardinals to start talking," he said. "Maybe they'll talk more openly among themselves."
Lest anyone forget, theologically speaking, the Holy Spirit has a role to play in the process. Picking a pope isn't just a human process, but a divine one.
Benedict addressed that point in a 1997 interview with Bavarian television, when he was still Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and the Vatican's chief theologian.
The Holy Spirit, he said, doesn't actually choose the pope since "there are too many contrary instances of popes the Holy Spirit would obviously not have picked."
"I would say that the spirit does not exactly take control of the affair, but rather like a good educator, as it were, leaves us much space, much freedom, without entirely abandoning us."
In the remarks, which were reprinted in the book "Conclave" by veteran Vatican analyst John Allen Jr., the future pope continued: "Thus the spirit's role should be understood in a much more elastic sense, not that he dictates the candidate for whom one must vote. Probably the only assurance he offers is that the thing cannot be totally ruined."
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Associated Press writers Geir Moulson in Berlin, Eduardo Castillo in Mexico City, Fabiola Sanchez in Caracas and Luis Henao in Santiago, Chile, contributed to this report.
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