Pope Francis: General Audience focused on trip to
Poland
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
renewed his condemnation of the holocaust on Wednesday, and decried once again
the persistent violence in the world as a “piecemeal” world war. The Holy
Father’s remarks came during the course of the General Audience on Wednesday –
the first since suspending the weekly appointment with pilgrims and tourists
for the month of July, and the first since his return from Poland and the 2016
edition of World Youth Day.
While in Poland, Pope Francis
visited the extermination camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau, where German National
Socialists murdered a million European Jews (one in every six victims of Shoah
perished at Auschwitz) as part of their programme of Jewish extermination.
“The great silence of the
visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau,” said Pope Francis, “was more eloquent than any
word spoken could have been. In that silence I listened: I felt the presence of
all the souls who passed through that place; I felt the compassion, the mercy
of God, which a few holy souls were been able to bring even into that abyss. In
that great silence, I prayed for all the victims of violence and war: and
there, in that place, I realized more than ever how precious is memory; not
only as a record of past events, but as a warning, and a responsibility for
today and tomorrow, that the seed of hatred and violence not be allowed to take
root in the furrows of history.”
Departing from his prepared
text, Pope Francis went on to recall the countless people – men and women,
young and old – who still today suffer as a result of war. “Looking upon that
cruelty, in that concentration camp,” he said, “I thought immediately of the
cruelties of today, which are similar: not as concentrated as in that place,
but everywhere in the world; this world that is sick with cruelty, pain, war,
hatred, sadness; and this is why I always ask you for the prayer: that the Lord
give us peace.”
Pope Francis’ visit to Poland
also coincided with the twenty-fifth anniversary of the historic visit of Pope
Saint John Paul II following the fall of the Iron Curtain.
“Poland, Europe and the world
have changed greatly since then, but the young continue to be a prophetic sign
of hope for the future.” Describing the scene of hundreds of thousands of young
people from every corner of the globe waving the flags of their respective
countries, Pope Francis said that the young people formed a mosaic of
fraternity and a joyful response to the challenge of the Gospel. “Poland, with
its rich cultural and spiritual heritage,” he continued, “today reminds us that
Europe has no future apart from its founding values, centred on the Christian
vision of man and including the message of mercy expressed so eloquently in the
last century by Saints John Paul and Faustina Kowalska.”
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