Pope’s Albania visit to showcase peace between religions
VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis will head to Albania on Sunday on his
first trip to a European country, to pay tribute to those who suffered
under Communism and praise a political system under which religions
unite.
A recent warning from Iraq's ambassador to the Holy See that the 77-year-old could be targeted by IS jihadists during his visit to the mostly-Muslim country has been shrugged off by the Vatican, which said security measures would remain unchanged.
A recent warning from Iraq's ambassador to the Holy See that the 77-year-old could be targeted by IS jihadists during his visit to the mostly-Muslim country has been shrugged off by the Vatican, which said security measures would remain unchanged.
The Argentine pontiff, who habitually throws caution to the winds to
mingle with the crowds, will use the same open-topped vehicle he uses in
Saint Peter's Square at a mass in Tirana, the capital of one of
Europe's poorest countries.
Some Vatican
watchers fear the pope has made himself a target by speaking out against
the Islamic State organisation and having the Holy See voice support
for US air strikes in Iraq – a rare exception to its policy of peaceful
conflict resolution.
Francis will likely be
hoping to counter this with a message of hope for the Middle East, with
Albania held up as an example of a land where religions often in strife
elsewhere cohabit successfully.
In August, he
said he had chosen Albania because it had managed to create a
"government of national unity among Muslims, Orthodox and Catholics,
with an interreligious council that has helped a lot and is balanced."
"The pope's presence will be a way of saying to everyone, 'See, we can all work together!'," he said.
The trip will be an 11-hour marathon during which the pontiff will meet
Albanian president Bujar Nishani, celebrate mass in Tirana's Mother
Teresa square, lunch with bishops, chat with religious leaders and visit
orphans.
Martyrs of the faith
The leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics also wants to honour
those who suffered under former dictator Enver Hoxha, who declared
Albania the world's first atheist state in 1967, and during whose reign
priests and imams were persecuted and holy places razed.
"1,820 churches, Orthodox and Catholic, were destroyed in that period.
Destroyed! And other churches were transformed into cinemas, theatres,
dance halls. I felt like I should go," Francis said.
Between 1945 and 1985, 111 priests, 10 seminarians and seven bishops died in detention or were executed.
It will be the second papal visit to Albania. Pope John Paul II
travelled there the year after Communism collapsed in the country in
1992.
The current Pope "is not beginning his
trips to Europe in Berlin, Paris or London. His focus is on those who
are not the most rich or powerful," Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi
told journalists.
Albania is not a country which
usually ranks very high on the papal travel list: before John Paul II,
the last pope to set their sights on Albania, Pius II, reportedly died
on the way there in 1464.
But it is very in
keeping with the Argentine pope's trademark rejection of the rich in
favour of the poor, marginalised or vulnerable.
Francis joked that "there are those who say the pope tends to start
everything from the periphery", but insisted on Albania's importance,
describing it as a nation of "noble people."
About two-thirds of the population are Muslim, followed by Catholics --
accounting for 15 percent of the population, and the Orthodox church at
11 percent.
In a country with one of the
youngest populations in Europe, the Vatican will be hoping to exploit
the potential to recruit new faithful and boost the number of Catholic
believers in a continent gripped by secularism.
Francis will almost certainly echo John Paul II's message to the freshly
post-Communist country given in an emotional mass during which he cried
out "dear Albanians, your drama must interest the whole European
continent. Europe must not forget." — Agence France-Presse
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