Report: Pope Francis to Visit Mexico in 2016
Vatican
Spokesman Confirms Visit for Beginning of Next Year
Rome, October
06, 2015 (ZENIT.org) Junno Arocho
Esteves
Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi confirmed that Pope
Francis will be visiting Mexico early next year.
In an interview with Mexican journalist Valentina Alazraki ofNoticieros Televisa, the
director of the Holy See Press Office said that the Pope is expected to make
the journey in the early months of 2016. Fr. Lombardi also said that more details
on the official dates and schedule will be released some time in November.
While no details of the Pope’s visit has been released, it is
almost certain that he will visit the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in
Mexico City.
During an in-flight press conference from Santiago de Cuba to
Washington, D.C. on September 22nd, Pope Francis said that his original plan
for his Apostolic Visit to the United States was to enter by Mexico. However,
due to the re-establishment of relations between the U.S. and Cuba and time
constraints, the plans were changed.
“Initially the idea was to enter from Ciudad Juárez, on the
border with Mexico,” the Pope said. “But to go to Mexico without going to Our
Lady of Guadalupe would have been an insult! So that didn’t happen.”
Pope Francis could visit Mexico in first half of 2016
By Elise
Harris
Vatican City, Oct 6, 2015 / 11:40 am (CNA/EWTN News).-
Pope Francis is seriously considering a trip to Mexico in 2016, the vice
director of the Holy See Press Office told CNA today.
Italian priest Fr. Ciro Benedettini said that the trip could
take place in the first half of next year, and that if it does, we can expect
the agenda to be released in November.
Mexico would be Pope Francis’ fourth trip to the Americas,
the first being to Brazil for World Youth Day in August 2013. His second visit
took place this summer when he traveled to Ecuador, Bolivia and Paraguay July
5-13, while the third was his recent Sept. 19-27 visit to the United States and
Cuba.
Pope Francis has spoken of his desire to go to Mexico
before, indicating that he would like to spend a full week there.
In a lengthy interview he gave to Mexican multimedia group
Televisa in March, Pope Francis spoke of his visit to the U.S., where he
symbolically wanted to enter from the country’s border with Mexico.
When asked by journalist Valentina Alazraki why he
ultimately chose not to go to Mexico as part of his trip to the U.S. in
September, Francis said, “I thought about doing it, because I wanted to enter
the United States from the Mexican border. But…how can one go from there and
not come to see the Señora, the Mother!” – a reference to Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Francis said that if he went to Mexico he would have to
visit the image, and explained that he cannot visit Mexico “just for a bit.
Mexico requires a week.”
“So I promise a trip to Mexico as it deserves, and not to
hurry and pass through. It's because of this I decided not to go to Mexico.”
Our Lady of Guadalupe is a title given to Mary after she
appeared to St. Juan Diego in 1531 on the Hill of Tepeyac, later to become a
part of the Villa de Guadalupe in Mexico City, telling him to have the city’s
bishop build a church in the place of her appearance.
When the bishop asked for a sign, Mary told Juan Diego to
pick roses that were found growing on the hillside, even though it was the
middle of winter.
She arranged the roses in his tilma – a poncho-like cape
made of cactus fiber – and when Juan Diego dropped them in front of the bishop,
an image of Mary exactly as Juan had described appeared on the tilma. The image
is still housed in the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City.
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