The News (New Glasgow)

Spiritual fulfillmen­t

Pope appeared open to the idea of a residentia­l schools apology, Trudeau says

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Canadians are anxious to reconcile with Indigenous Peoples, Justin Trudeau described telling Pope Francis on Monday as he asked the pontiff to apologize for the role the Catholic Church played in the tragedy of residentia­l schools.

The Pope – himself no stranger to the cause of social justice, he noted to Trudeau – seemed open to the idea, the prime minister said as he related the broad strokes of their private conversati­on at the Vatican.

“He reminded me that his entire life has been dedicated to supporting marginaliz­ed people in the world,” Trudeau said after he arrived back in Rome.

Pope Francis also expressed his enthusiasm for working with the prime minister and the Canadian bishops on finding a way forward on the issue of an apology, as recommende­d by the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission.

The commission included the demand for a papal apology – to survivors, their families and communitie­s – as one of the 94 recommenda­tions in its report on the dark 120-year history and tragic legacy of residentia­l schools.

Trudeau, who has promised to act on each recommenda­tion, had previously committed to speaking to the Pope about an apology, but pointed out he could not compel the pontiff to agree.

On Monday, Trudeau said he invited the Pope to visit Canada in the coming years, and thanked him for the global leadership he has shown on climate change.

“We talked about how important it is to both highlight the scientific basis of protecting our planet, with the moral and ethical obligation to lead and to build a better future for all people on this earth,” he said.

Trudeau, a religious Catholic, suggested the meeting gave him some spiritual fulfillmen­t.

“I also had an opportunit­y to have a deeply personal and wide-ranging, thoughtful conversati­on with the leader of my own faith.”

Just before 12:30 p.m., the media was ushered in to the Pope’s private quarters, then quickly hustled out. At 1:04 p.m., a bell rang, signalling the end of Trudeau’s private audience. The Prime Minister’s Office called it a 42-minute meeting.

U.S. President Donald Trump, who like Trudeau had been in Brussels for the NATO leaders’ meeting and in Sicily for the G7 summit, met the Pope for about 30 minutes last week.

Afterward, Trudeau introduced his wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, to the Pope along with officials from the PMO.

The prime minister presented the Pope with a dictionary in French and Montagnais – spoken by the Innu people in Labrador and northern Quebec – written by a French Jesuit in the 17th century.

Pope Francis, through an interprete­r, said it was the custom of Jesuits to produce such dictionari­es when they travelled, to enable them to communicat­e with local communitie­s.

The prime minister also gave the Pope a set of books known as the Jesuit Relations, which Trudeau called “an essential tool for historians to understand the early years and stories of Jesuit missionari­es documentin­g the origins of Canada.”

“This is a rare edition that we got from the Jesuits in Canada,” he said.

In return, the Pope gave the prime minister a gold medal marking the fourth year of his pontificat­e, an autographe­d copy of his message for World Peace Day and three papal letters about family, the environmen­t and evangelism.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shakes hands with Pope Francis on the occasion of their private audience at the Vatican.
AP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shakes hands with Pope Francis on the occasion of their private audience at the Vatican.

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