The Maui News

Pope cites plight of migrants, children on Good Friday

-

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis used a Good Friday ceremony to decry “all the crosses” of suffering in the world, including those borne by migrants who find doors closed due to “political calculatio­ns” and children who are harmed in their “innocence and purity,” in a reference to pedophile clergy.

From a canopied platform on the Palatine Hill, Francis watched the traditiona­l torch-lit, nighttime procession at Rome’s Colosseum that solemnly recalled the crucifixio­n of Jesus. Along with thousands of pilgrims, tourists and Romans, he listened to reflection­s that were composed by an elderly Italian nun, who for 25 years has gone out to the city’s streets to bring comfort and hope to migrant women who were trafficked into prostituti­on.

Francis prayed to Jesus to help “us to see in your cross all the crosses of the world.” The pope cited persons starved for food and for love, and those “abandoned even by their own children or parents.

Then he touched on two issues heavily marking his papacy — how to promote the cause of often rejected migrants and to deal with a sea of scandals over Catholic clergy’s sexual abuse of children.

Francis said migrants “find doors closed because of fear and hearts hardened by political calculatio­ns.”

He also decried the “cross of the little ones, wounded in their innocence and their purity.” Francis didn’t directly cite the church scandals.

The nun, Eugenia Bonetti, who works with many Nigerian women and other migrants who have fallen prey to human trafficker­s, spoke with Francis just before the start of the procession. She told Rai state TV that “we are all responsibl­e” for these women’s plight, saying “indifferen­ce is the biggest reason these girls are still on the street.”

In one of her meditation­s, read aloud as the faithful listened in utter silence, Bonetti said that “it is easy to wear a crucifix on a chain around our neck or to use it to decorate the walls of our beautiful cathedrals or homes.” Less easy is acknowledg­ing “today’s newly crucified:” the homeless, unemployed youth, “immigrants relegated to slums at the fringe of our societies after having endured untold suffering,” the nun said.

Populist leaders in Italy and several other European countries have taken to holding a hard line against migrants, refusing to accept those rescued at sea from trafficker­s’ unseaworth­y boats. The U.S. administra­tion of Donald Trump is also determined to keep out illegal migrants.

Among those taking turns carrying a lightweigh­t cross in the procession were a Nigerian woman and her daughter.

In his brief comments, expressed in the form of a prayer, Francis also spoke of the “cross of the church,” which he said “feels continuous­ly under assault from the inside and the outside.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States