Pope in UAE Day 2: A Catholic
celebration
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| Pope Francis greets a family of St.Joseph's Cathedral in Abu Dhabi. |
Pope Francis wraps up his Apostolic Visit to the United Arab
Emirates celebrating Mass for Catholic faithful from across the Arabian
Peninsula.
By Linda Bordoni
Tuesday, 5 February 2019, is D-Day for Catholics who live
and work in the seven sheikhdoms that make up the United Arab Emirates, and
beyond.
It’s the day Pope Francis has chosen to celebrate Holy Mass
in Abu Dhabi’s Zayed Sports City for some 135,000 faithful who have managed to
obtain a ticket.
Most of them belong to the nine Catholic Churches of the
Apostolic Vicariate of Southern Arabia that ministers to the faithful in the
UAE, Yemen, and Oman. A quota has also been reserved for the Apostolic
Vicariate of Northern Arabia, which includes Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and Saudi
Arabia.
An overwhelming number of them have something in common:
they are all migrants.
Migrant workers
That’s because in the United Arab Emirates about 80% of the
population is made up of workers who come from abroad, and many of them are
Catholic.
Of the over 9 million people living in the UAE, only around
1 million are Emirati; all the others are drawn to the country in rapid
economic expansion to find employment in all sectors, from white-collar office
jobs to construction work and domestic labour.
A large portion of these workers of course are Muslims, but
the number of Christians is growing – thanks also to the UAE’s policy of
religious tolerance and to its support for the Catholic community, to whom it
has donated land for its Churches.
All in all, it is estimated there are about 1 million
Catholics in the UAE today, most of them from the Philippines and from India,
but also from African countries, the Middle East, and Europe. As Bishop Paul
Hinder, the Vicar Apostolic of Southern Arabia, told me: “It’s a multi lingual,
multi-racial, multi-coloured Church!”
Church is home
Something else they have in common is that many have left
their families and loved ones in far-away lands and the Church is the place
they can really call home.
A home that is receiving the visit of the most important
guest of all: the migrant Pope who reaches out to every single periphery.
Joy and gratitude for the Pope’s visit
This unique flock has welcomed Pope Francis’ presence with
immense gratitude and emotion. The impression I have is of a deeply devoted and
prayerful community. They are grateful to the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi for
having invited him, and they are grateful to Pope Francis for having come all
this way, affirming them and loving them for who they are.
And already he has begun to sow new seeds of hope in this
country, where “sand and skyscrapers meet” -he said
in his first speech on Arabian soil - “a place of development, where once
inhospitable spaces supply jobs for people of various nations,” calling gently for
more rights for his people and reminding everyone to look after each other in
the one human family, according to the will of God.

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