Pope
Francis travels to New York
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis has wrapped up the first leg of his Apostolic Visit to the
United States.
Aboard
an American Airlines Flight from Washington on Thursday afternoon, the Pope
travelled to New York City where he is scheduled to celebrate Vespers at St.
Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan, address the United Nations General Assembly,
pray at the Ground Zero Memorial, pay a visit to Our Lady Queen of Angels
School in East Harlem, and celebrate Mass at Madison Square Garden.
He
will leave New York on Saturday morning and journey to Philadelphia where,
amongst other events, he will visit Independence Mall and meet with the
Hispanic Community and participate in the World Meeting of Families where he
will celebrate the closing Mass on Sunday.
Waiting
to greet him on Thursday evening at the J.F Kennedy Airport in New York weree
Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Archbishop of New York; Archbishop Bernadito Auza,
the Holy See Permanent Observer to the UN; Bishop Nicholas Di Marzio, Bishop of
Brooklyn, as well as the Governor and the Mayor of New York City.
A
helicopter immediately transfered Pope Francis to Downtown Manhattan where he
is due to celebrate Vespers with the clergy and men and women religious in St.
Patrick’s Cathedral, a landmark of Downtown Manhattan.
Every
year, more than five million people of every different nationality and faith
enter St Patrick’s Cathedral. As Cardinal Dolan points out on his Cathedral's
webpage: “To many, St. Patrick's Cathedral is a spiritual haven. Parishioners,
community members and travelers from around the globe find their way to this
sacred home, which may truly be called the center of Catholic life in the
United States. To countless others, St. Patrick's is an iconic New York City
and national landmark”.
The
Cathedral website also tells us that it “mirrors the story of the city itself.
Created to affirm the ascendance of religious freedom and tolerance, St.
Patrick’s Cathedral was built in the democratic spirit, paid for not only by
the contributions of thousands of poor immigrants but also by the largesse of
103 prominent citizens who pledged $1,000 each. St. Patrick’s Cathedral proves
the maxim that no generation builds a cathedral. It is rather, a kind of
ongoing conversation linking generations past, present and future”.
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