Flowers
for Our Lady: Pope Francis in Santiago
(Vatican Radio) The head of Vatican Radio's English
Programme, Sean Patrick Lovett, is travelling with Pope Francis in Cuba
and describes the scene of Pope Francis' arrival at National Shrine of Our Lady
of Charity of El Cobre on Monday afternoon.
The road up to the Sanctuary has been freshly tarred, the
vegetation scrupulously trimmed on either side. All the way up the hill, every
house and wall sports a conspicuously new coat of paint, only on the side that
faces the road, of course.
The Papal motorcade moves quickly. This is hurricane
season in Cuba and it’s raining so heavily the Sierra Maestra mountains are a
black silhouette in the background.
People huddle in doorways and under leaky umbrellas and they
wave timidly as they strain identify a man in white in every car that splashes
past.
And when he does drive past waving back to them encouragingly,
there are none of the wild chants and cheers that usually accompany a Papal
arrival. That’s because this is sacred soil.
This is the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Charity of El Cobre.
It’s here that one of the most revered Marian icons in the world is preserved:
a tiny, wooden statue of Mary and the Christ child that’s over 400 years
old.
More than a statue, it’s a symbol of Cuba itself. It’s an
image so sacred that even Earnest Hemingway felt its charisma and donated his
gold Nobel Prize medal to the Shrine in 1953.
Both John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI came here, both of them
bearing gifts – a gold crown and a golden rose – in 1998 and in 2012, respectively.
Because that’s what you do when you visit a Marian sanctuary.
And it’s here, far from the cheering, chanting crowds that Pope
Francis chose to meet and pray with the bishops of Cuba – a private,
closed-door meeting with no official speeches, no cameras, and no microphones –
a chance to speak freely and frankly with his brother bishops about what really
concerns him and them.
After they talked, they prayed. And after they prayed, Pope
Francis left his own gift: a silver vase filled with a dozen yellow and white
ceramic roses. Because that’s what you do when you visit a Marian
Sanctuary, especially this one.
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