Leo XIV visited Bolivia five times | León XIV visitó Bolivia en cinco ocasiones

By Jorge Soruco, Vision 360:

New Papacy

Leo XIV visited Bolivia five times when he was a bishop, and on one of those occasions he wore a chullo and a poncho

During his travels, Prevost visited the departments of Chuquisaca, Cochabamba, La Paz, Santa Cruz, and Potosí. His goal was to get to know and connect with the Augustinian communities.

El sacerdote Saúl Mamani (Izquierda) junto a Prevost, quien llevaba un poncho y chullo (Derecha) en su visita a La Paz en 2007. Foto: Unitel

Father Saúl Mamani (left) with Prevost, who was wearing a poncho and chullo (right) during his visit to La Paz in 2007. Photo: Unitel

Robert Prevost, who was elected Pope Leo XIV this Thursday, visited Bolivia five times. He did so in his role as the highest representative of the Order of Saint Augustine, as recalled by the superior of the Augustinians in La Paz, Marcelo Ramírez. During his stay, the Supreme Pontiff shared moments with young priests and, as a gesture of gratitude, wore the gifts he received: a poncho and a chullo.

During his travels, Prevost visited the departments of Chuquisaca, Cochabamba, La Paz, Santa Cruz, and Potosí. His goal was to get to know and connect with the Augustinian communities.

When Leo XIV arrived in La Paz, he visited and became acquainted with the Santa Rita convent and the Church of the Lord Jesus of Gran Poder, which is administered by the Augustinian Order.

Father Saúl Mamani recalled Pope Leo XIV’s visits to Cochabamba and La Paz. “He is a simple and calm man. He is someone who listens to you,” he said.

He noted that during one of his visits, in 2007, he toured the Formation House in La Paz. At that time, the current Pope was the general of the Augustinian Order.

In some of the photos from Pope Leo XIV’s visits, he appears wearing traditional Bolivian attire. “As Bolivians, we always tried to offer him what is ours—our clothing, from our land. We dressed him in the chullo, the poncho, the hat, and the streamers, which are part of the Carnival celebrations we hold in our homeland,” Mamani recounted, according to Unitel.

The Order of Saint Augustine is a religious community of mendicant tradition. It was officially founded in 1244 and is currently present in more than 40 countries across all continents.

Although it bears the name of Saint Augustine of Hippo, the order was not founded by him. It arose from the convergence of spontaneous hermit movements that emerged in 12th-century Italy and the Church’s desire to unite them under a common rule. Toward the end of that century, various communities of devout laypeople, eager to live in poverty, prayer, and penance, withdrew from the world to devote themselves to contemplation.

Juan Bono of Mantua and William of Maleval, a French penitent who lived in Tuscany, were the key figures in the early years of the order. Both formed informal communities around their example, and although they were not initially organized as religious orders, they shared a life of austerity and fraternity.

On December 6, 1243, Pope Innocent IV issued a papal bull calling on the hermits of Tuscany (with the exception of the followers of Saint William) to unify into a single religious order under the Rule of Saint Augustine. The gathering took place in March 1244 in Rome under the guidance of Cardinal Richard Annibaldi. At that founding chapter, the use of a black habit with a leather belt was agreed upon, the first constitutions were organized, and a prior general was elected.

In 1256, Pope Alexander IV extended the incorporation to hermit communities from other regions, consolidating the order under the name Hermit Brothers of Saint Augustine. It is one of the four mendicant orders recognized by the Church.

It follows the Rule of Saint Augustine, written in the 5th century. It is based on three pillars: life in common, the inward search for God, and fraternal charity.

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