Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pope visits Asti, Italy, birthplace of his father

- NICOLE WINFIELD AND GIANFRANCO STARA

ASTI, Italy — Pope Francis honored his northern Italian roots on Sunday by celebratin­g a special Mass in his father’s hometown and encouragin­g younger generation­s to not be indifferen­t to the poverty and misery all around them.

Thousands of people turned out to greet Francis during his rare personal weekend getaway to the province of Asti, near Turin, and he returned the favor by taking a long popemobile ride around town.

On Saturday, he made a private visit to relatives who still live in the area and celebrated the 90th birthday of his second cousin. On Sunday, he was given the honorary citizenshi­p of Asti and celebrated Mass in the city’s cathedral, where he assumed the role of a local parish priest ministerin­g to his flock.

“From these lands, my father set out as an immigrant to Argentina, and to these lands, rendered precious by the rich fruits of the soil and above all by the native industriou­sness of their people, I have now returned to rediscover and savor my roots,” he said at the start of his homily.

Asti Bishop Marco Prastaro told Francis he is always welcome back home and recalled that when he was elected pontiff in 2013, Francis quipped that his fellow cardinals had gone to the “ends of the Earth” to find a new pope.

“Today we’d like to think that Asti, the land of your family roots, is the beginning of the world,” Prastaro said as the pope chuckled.

Francis hasn’t returned home to his own birthplace in Buenos Aires since assuming the papacy nearly 10 years ago, and he rarely speaks about his family, siblings or childhood. The exception is his frequent reference to the important role his paternal grandmothe­r, Rosa, had in his upbringing and in passing along her Catholic faith.

Francis’ grandmothe­r, Rosa Vassallo, and the pope’s grandfathe­r ran a cafe in Turin and left Italy to join family members who had settled in Argentina, part of the mass migration of Italians to the Americas at the start of the last century. They and their only son, the pope’s father, Mario Jose Francisco Bergoglio, arrived in Buenos Aires in early 1929.

Once there, Mario Bergoglio met another descendant of Italian immigrant stock, Regina Maria Sivori, whom he married in 1935. A year later, the first of their five children was born: Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the future pope.

 ?? (AP/Gregorio Borgia) ?? Pope Francis waves from his helicopter Sunday as he leaves Asti in northern Italy following a visit and special Mass in his father’s hometown. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1121asti/.
(AP/Gregorio Borgia) Pope Francis waves from his helicopter Sunday as he leaves Asti in northern Italy following a visit and special Mass in his father’s hometown. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1121asti/.

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