Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Pope mingles with masses on whirlwind visit to Milan

- By COLLEEN BARRY

MILAN — Pope Francis focused his one-day visit Saturday to the wealthy northern Italian city of Milan on those marginaliz­ed by society, visiting families in a housing project and exhorting clergy and nuns to minister to the peripherie­s.

The papal itinerary underscore­d Francis’ view that the neglected outskirts of cities offer a better view of reality than their well-tended and prosperous centers.

The pope told thousands of faithful assembled at the housing project that it was important for the Roman Catholic Church “not to remain in the center to wait but to go toward everyone, in the peripherie­s, to go toward also non-Christians and nonbelieve­rs.”

And later in the heart of Milan at the grand, Gothic-era Duomo Cathedral, he urged priests, nuns and deacons to take their mission to the peripherie­s “to rekindle hope that has been put out and sapped by a society that has become insensitiv­e to the pain of others.”

The visit to the world’s largest Roman Catholic diocese, with more than 5 million faithful, and the home of his main competitio­n in 2013 for the papacy, Cardinal Angelo Scola, marked a resumption of the pope’s regular pastoral visits after a yearlong hiatus because of the Jubilee Year of Mercy commitment­s in Rome.

Scola greeted the pope at the Duomo, presenting him with a golden chalice and another gift more in line with Francis’ example: He announced that the diocese had bought 50 apartments to serve the homeless.

During an intense day, the pope traversed the city multiple times, traveling to say Mass in a park north of Milan attended by one million faithful.

Francis maintained his familiar, down-to-earth presence throughout the visit.

Speaking to deacons at the Duomo, he acknowledg­ed that their unique role as men in ordained ministry who can be married gave them “an authoritat­ive voice … of tensions that reside in families,” noting with a wry glance, “You have mothers-inlaw.” And addressing a priest’s question, he emphasized the importance of teaching children how to discern what is important amid a world in which they “are exposed to a continuous zapping” from computer or phone screens.

During the visit to the housing project, the pope made private visits to three families, one couple in their 50s struggling with the husband’s infirmity, another couple in their 80s dealing with illness and a third family of five originally from Morocco who are teaching Arabic in a program hosted at a local church.

Milhoual Abdel Karim welcomed the pope to the family’s apartment as his eldest daughter held a tray offering traditiona­l treats of dates and milk.

“It is as if we always knew him,” said Karim, who arrived in Italy in 1989 and works at a pharmaceut­ical company. “We are very happy. It changed my life.”

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