Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Huge crowd at Polish shrine hears pope hail their faith

- By Frances D’Emilio and Monika Scislowska

CZESTOCHOW­A, POLAND » Pope Francis blessed hundreds of thousands of faithful Thursday at a shrine in Poland, paying tribute to a beloved native son, St. John Paul II, honoring the countless “ordinary yet remarkable” Poles who defiantly clung to their faith during Soviet-bloc communism and establishi­ng this pontiff’s drawing power in a country where being Catholic is often equated with being Polish.

Francis, who had never set foot in Eastern Europe before this week’s five-day pilgrimage to Poland, gazed in apparent awe for several minutes as he studied the Jasna Gora monastery shrine’s iconic image of the so-called Black Madonna. The faces of Mary and Baby Jesus in the icon — an object of veneration starting in the 14th century — are blackened by centuries of varnish and candle soot.

Pilgrimage­s to Jasna Gora, often by faithful trekking long distances, are part of many Polish Catholics’ identity and upbringing.

Polish church officials said as many as 600,000 people flocked to the outdoor Mass at the monastery. In the evening, local church organizers in Krakow said another 500,000 faithful, young people from all around the world cheered Francis at a pep rally on a meadow in the southern city.

Vatican officials and police declined to offer any estimates.

During the pep rally, people sang and danced to lively tunes, waving flags from places as different as Tennessee and Turkey. In a gesture to the Argentineb­orn, tango-loving Francis, Poles devised a tango number with Polish lyrics.

“John Paul is no more, but Francis means a continuati­on of this great love for God that our Polish pope has given us,” Marcin Zbik, a student from the northweste­rn town of Police told The Associated Press.

During the morning Mass, a woman went into labor and was taken to a hospital where her daughter was delivered, said the town hall in Czestochow­a, the town hosting the shrine.

At the start of the Jasna Gora Mass, the 79-year-old pope tripped and fell as he walked to the altar, but he rose quickly with help from several priests and showed no ill effects.

“There were no consequenc­es, the pope didn’t suffer, he didn’t hurt himself, there was no need for a medical checkup,” Vatican spokesman the Rev, Federico Lombardi said.

The Mass marked this year’s 1,050th anniversar­y of Poland’s acceptance of the Roman Catholic faith, a move that eventually set it apart culturally from Orthodox nations in the region. Polish President Andrzej Duda and other political leaders sat in front rows at the Mass.

“Our minds turn to so many sons and daughters of your own people, like the martyrs who made the defenseles­s power of the Gospel shine forth, like those ordinary yet remarkable people who bore witness to the Lord’s love amid great trials,” Francis said in his homily, speaking in Italian and pausing for a priest to translate his words into Polish.

“Your own history, shaped by the Gospel, the cross and fidelity to the church, has seen the contagious power of a genuine faith, passed down from family to family, from fathers to sons and above all from mothers and grandmothe­rs, whom we need so much to thank,” he said.

Francis urged Poles to stay united even as their nation is divided over the issue of refugees and migrants, especially those who aren’t Christians. At his evening pep rally, he told the young people he was confident they would “join the adventure of building bridges and knocking down walls, fences.”

Walls and barbed-wire fences have sprung up in eastern and central Europe to keep those fleeing wars and hunger in the Middle East, Asia and Africa from penetratin­g into the heart of the European continent.

 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Faithful cheer Pope Francis in front of the Jasna Gora shrine in Czestochow­a, Poland, Thursday.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Faithful cheer Pope Francis in front of the Jasna Gora shrine in Czestochow­a, Poland, Thursday.
 ?? DANIEL DAL ZENNARO — POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Pope Francis prays in the Wawel Cathedral in Krakow, Poland, Wednesday. Pope Francis has prayed by the relics of the late pope from Poland, St. John Paul II, at the and has met with Poland’s bishops who vowed to “listen carefully” to his teaching.
DANIEL DAL ZENNARO — POOL PHOTO VIA AP Pope Francis prays in the Wawel Cathedral in Krakow, Poland, Wednesday. Pope Francis has prayed by the relics of the late pope from Poland, St. John Paul II, at the and has met with Poland’s bishops who vowed to “listen carefully” to his teaching.
 ?? STEFANO RELLANDINI — POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Pilgrims and faithful wait for Pope Francis before a mass in Czestochow­a, Poland,Thursday.
STEFANO RELLANDINI — POOL PHOTO VIA AP Pilgrims and faithful wait for Pope Francis before a mass in Czestochow­a, Poland,Thursday.
 ?? ALIK KEPLICZ — AP ?? Pope Francis talks from the Archbishop­s’ Palace in Krakow, Poland, Wednesday. Francis came on a fiveday visit to Poland to join hundreds of thousands of young people from around the globe for celebratio­ns of the World Youth Day.
ALIK KEPLICZ — AP Pope Francis talks from the Archbishop­s’ Palace in Krakow, Poland, Wednesday. Francis came on a fiveday visit to Poland to join hundreds of thousands of young people from around the globe for celebratio­ns of the World Youth Day.

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