Pope Francis surprise visit in Rome: "transform
deserts"
(Vatican Radio) “We
must not be afraid to go into the desert and to transform it into a forest:”
that’s what Pope Francis told hundreds of people on a surprise visit to an
Earth Day Italy and Focolari Movement event in a Rome park Sunday.
In the more than hour-long
visit, the Pope listened to testimonials from members of the many volunteer
social and environmental organizations participating in "Village for
Earth" and “Mariapolis,” a four day event in Rome’s Villa Borghese park.
The idea behind these
gatherings, which take place in many countries throughout the world, is the
invitation "to do to others what we would like to be done to us."
Many of the 3,500 people participating in the Rome event are involved in
networks of social solidarity, interreligious dialogue, and organizations which
care for the environment.
Turn deserts of our
cities, the lives of others, into forests
Pope Francis arrived just before 5:00 pm, but set aside his
prepared remarks, preferring to speak off the cuff. He told those
present “you transform deserts into forests!” “There are many deserts in
the cities,” the Pope continued, “deserts in people’s lives who don’t have a
future, because there’s always – I’ll underline a word here – always there are
prejudices, fears. These people live and die in the desert of the
cities. You perform a miracle with your work of changing the desert into
a forest: go forward that way.”
“The desert is ugly, both the
desert in the heart of all of us, as well as the desert in the city, in the
peripheries, which is also an ugly thing. There’s also a desert that’s in
the gated neighborhoods…it’s ugly, but the desert is there too. We must
not be afraid to go to the desert to transform it into a forest, where there’s
exuberant life, and to go dry the many tears so that everyone can smile.”
Pope Francis urged them to
not be discouraged by failures and challenges: “You must not be afraid of life
or afraid of conflicts.”
Conflict is a risk but
also an opportunity
Conflict, he said, “is a
risk, but it’s also an opportunity.” Citing the parable of the Levite and the
priest who walked past the man who had stumbled along the path, the Pope said,
they took the “path of not seeing and not getting involved.”
“We can react to conflict as
something from which we distance ourselves,” he observed. But, “whoever
doesn’t take risks, can never get close to reality. To know reality, to
know it in one’s heart, it’s necessary to get close.” Taking the
example of prison ministry, the Pope added that getting close
is “a risk, but it’s also an opportunity: for me, and for the person whom I
approach. For me, and for the community I approach.”
“Never, never, never, turn
away in order not to see conflict,” stressed the Pope. “Conflict has to
be faced, evils have to be faced, in order to resolve them.”
Pope Francis then challenged
those present to do some homework: “look at the faces of people when you go
into the street – they are worried, everyone is closed in on themselves; they
lack a smile. In other words, they lack tenderness, social friendship…
they lack social friendship.”
A lack of “social
friendship” brings hatred and war
“Where there isn’t social
friendship,” he said, “there’s always hatred and war. We are living a piecemeal
Third World War, everywhere. Look at the geographic map of the world, and
you’ll see.”
“Social friendship has to do
with forgiveness,” he added. “Many times, that’s done by getting
close: I approach this problem, this conflict, this difficulty, as we
heard is done by these great young people in the places where there’s gambling,
and so many people there lose everything, everything, everything…”
He mentioned the work of
those who minister to people affected by gamblingand remembered his
own pastoral work in Buenos Aires where he “saw elderly people who went
to the bank to get their pensions and then headed immediately for the casino.”
Social friendship, he added,
“has to do with gratuity [giving freely of oneself], and one has to learn the
wisdom of gratuity, learn it with play…with sport, with art, with the joy of
being together, with getting close.”
Counter the god of money
with gratuity, forgiveness
Today, “it seems that if you
don’t pay you can’t live,” the Pope noted. “The man and woman that God created
to be the center of the world…at the center of the economy,” “are thrown out
and instead, we have at the center at the center a god, the god of money”
Gratuity, giving freely of
oneself, and forgiveness are the antidotes to such a negative world – as is a
constructive, rather than destructive, mindset. And, “with
forgiveness,” he said, “regret and resentment fall away.”
But how to achieve such a
forest in the desert? “Simply [by possessing] the awareness that we all
have something in common, we’re all human,” concluded Pope Francis. “And
in this humanity, we can get close to each other to work together” regardless
of our background or religion the Pope affirmed.
“Let’s all go forward to work
together, respecting each other, respecting!” he added. “I see this
miracle: the miracle of a desert that becomes a forest. Thanks for
everything you do!”
(Tracey McClure)
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