All About The Pope’s Black, Creole Roots - Black Therapy Today
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All About The Pope’s Black, Creole Roots

All About The Pope’s Black, Creole Roots

Pope Leo XIV has been in the headlines this week as the latest target of President Donald Trump’s online criticism. According to CBS News, the president was triggered by a recent “60 Minutes” episode, which included a segment on the Pope’s disapproval of some of Trump’s foreign policy positions, including the war in Iran. The segment prompted Trump to post a long rant on his Truth Social platform on April 12, criticizing the leader of the Catholic church, calling him “WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy.”

But Trump’s words didn’t seem to faze the pope, who told reporters he’s not afraid of a few words on social media.

“I have no fear of the Trump administration, nor speaking out loudly about the message of the Gospel,” he said. “That’s what I believe in. I am called to do what the church is called to do.”

To understand the pope’s strong stance against Trump’s words, it’s important to understand his background, which is why we’re giving you all the tea on Pope Leo XIV’s Black roots.

On May 8, 2025, Pope Leo XIV was named as the new leader of the Catholic Church. The news left Catholics in the United States with an extreme sense of pride as Leo became the first American-born pope in history. But many were surprised to learn that his lineage has deeper ties to the intricate fabric of the Black American South.

Born Robert Francis Prevost, Pope Leo XIV represents a new wave of leadership. The pope not only made history as a Chicago-born leader, but according to genealogists, he comes from a family reflective of the racial complexities in the country. Of course, he identifies as white, but his family history shockingly ties him directly to Black and Creole communities in Louisiana.

Check out one of his family photos here:

Screenshot: TikTok

A genealogist with the Historic New Orleans Collection, Jari C. Honora, made the discovery the same day Leo XIV was named pope. And the pope’s older brother, John Prevost, who still lives in Chicago, confirmed the bombshell findings to the New York Times shortly afterwards.

VATICAN CITY, VATICAN – MAY 18: (EDITOR NOTE: STRICTLY EDITORIAL USE ONLY – NO MERCHANDISING). Pope Leo XIV holds Inauguration Mass In St. Peter’s Square on May 18, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. Pope Leo XIV (formerly Robert Francis Prevost) presided over his inauguration mass in St Peter’s Square after his election on May 8th. (Photo by Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images)

“This discovery is just an additional reminder of how interwoven we are as Americans,” Honora said. “I hope that it will highlight the long history of Black Catholics, both free and enslaved, in this country, which includes the Holy Father’s family.”

According to his findings, the pope’s maternal side can be traced back to the 1840s’ “free people of color” in New Orleans— a city with a significant Catholic population— Honora told Forbes. Pope Leo XIV’s maternal grandparents and his mother’s older siblings, were “identified in records as Black or mulatto” in historic documents, although they “passed … into a white racial identity” after moving to Chicago.

That’s where Leo’s mother, Mildred Martinez, was born in 1912, according to her birth certificate obtained by the New York Times. But before the family migrated north, the pope’s grandparents lived in New Orleans’ Seventh Ward, an historically Black neighborhood which has a 74 percent Black population, according to bestneighborhood.org. 

Honora said on Facebook, “His grandparents were married in 1887 at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart on Annette Street. In 1900, his grandparents owned and lived at 1933 North Prieur Street, a site taken by the Claiborne overpass.”

Is Pope Leo XIV the First Black Pope?

Pope Leo XIV hasn’t publicly spoken about his heritage. And as far as we know, he identifies as white and Peruvian, as he is a naturalized citizen of the country, according to NorthJersey.com.

Honora weighed in on the complex question to Black Catholic Messenger. “It’s more complicated than that,” he began. “I think that a person can be of Black ancestry or have Black roots, but to identify as Black, I think, is all about the lived experience.”