Los Angeles Times

‘I am here as a pastor, but above all as a brother’

Pope, visiting prison, says inmates need help rejoining society.

- By Joseph Tanfani joseph.tanfani@latimes.com Twitter: @JTanfani

PHILADELPH­IA — Jennifer Millar sat thinking about the strangenes­s of it all.

After a hard-knock life that included abuse and 22 years of cocaine addiction, she landed in jail on a drug charge and, when a paperwork snafu delayed her release, found herself a few feet from Pope Francis.

Millar, 37, of Philadelph­ia squeezed the pope’s hand and handed him a letter asking him to pray for her children. “It’s the perfect ending to all of it,” she said, saying she expects to be released in a week. “That was just awesome — meeting God’s right-hand man.”

On the final day of his visit to the U.S., Pope Francis came to a gym in the Curran-Fromhold Correction­al Facility to speak to prisoners about pain, hope and the possibilit­y of redemption.

“I am here as a pastor, but above all as a brother, to share your situation and to make it my own,” he said.

The pope has made it a point to regularly visit prisoners on his trips, has called for an end to capital punishment and has spoken against solitary confinemen­t, which he says is a form of torture. On Sunday, he said prison systems needed to restore a goal of rehabilita­ting inmates and helping them rejoin society.

“It is painful when we see prison systems which are not concerned to care for wounds, to soothe pain, to offer new possibilit­ies,” he said.

The pope sat on a walnut chair that was made by city prisoners. He praised it as “very beautiful,” and thanked inmates for their hard work. The inmates sat in blue plastic chairs, in their blue uniforms and slip-on sneakers, under the eye of a crowd of correction­s officers. There were lots of neck tattoos. Two inmates were in wheelchair­s, including Edwin Lopez, who said he was shot and paralyzed on one side; he is awaiting trial on drug charges. His son, Edwin Jr., in jail on an aggravated assault charge, was also in the audience.

Dolores Porrett, 55, came wearing 10 rosaries around her neck, all given to her by other inmates in the unit; she got the pope to bless them. “My sister asked, ‘Do you feel holier now?’ ” said Porrett, charged with dealing 15 pounds of cocaine. The bust, she said, had a silver lining: “I would never have gotten to be here. It’s the best thing in the world that I get to meet him.”

After the speech, the pope moved slowly along the rows, greeting each inmate with a smile and a warm handshake. Some leaned in and asked for his prayers. At the end, a few stood and hugged him, and requested his blessing; with a smile, he put his hand on their foreheads.

Luis Colon, 45, awaiting trial on a weapons charge, said one statement by Francis hit home: Jesus “comes to save us from the lie that no one can change.”

“That’s very truthful,” he said. “Anybody can change. It takes some people longer than others.”

 ?? David Maialetti
Pool Photo ?? POPE FRANCIS regularly visits prisoners on his trips. In the past, he has called for an end to capital punishment and spoken against solitary confinemen­t.
David Maialetti Pool Photo POPE FRANCIS regularly visits prisoners on his trips. In the past, he has called for an end to capital punishment and spoken against solitary confinemen­t.
 ?? Todd Heisler
Pool Photo ?? AN INMATE at Curran-Fromhold Correction­al Facility in Philadelph­ia is blessed by Pope Francis.
Todd Heisler Pool Photo AN INMATE at Curran-Fromhold Correction­al Facility in Philadelph­ia is blessed by Pope Francis.

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