Children's Train to arrive in Vatican Saturday to see
Pope
(Vatican Radio) “Brought by waves:,” that’s the slogan
of the fourth edition of the Children’s Train, an initiative of the Pontifical
Council for Culture. In collaboration with Italian State Railways, four
hundred children from schools in Italy’s southern region of Calabria, will make
the long trip north to the Vatican Saturday 28 May to meet Pope Francis.
The slogan recalls the
many migrants who’ve arrived on the shores of Calabria in recent years.
The Pope will receive the children in an audience in the Vatican at noon.
Last year, the train
brought sons and daughters of inmates of southern Italian prisons to the
Vatican.
Fr. Laurent Mazas, the
director of the Council for Culture’s “Courtyard of the Gentiles” which is
sponsoring the initiative, says this year, the focus of the journey is on
children who are forced to flee their homes, “migrants who are asking to be
welcomed , and are welcomed by Italian children.”
In an interview with
Vatican Radio’s Fabio Colagrande, he stresses there will be a mix of foreign
and Italian kids who’ve become friends at school, through sports and music – and
for this, Fr. Mazas says, they will also be coming with an orchestra.
He notes that Pope
Francis was very enthusiastic about last year’s encounter with the
children: “I believe it’s always a moment of great tenderness!”
In preparation for
Saturday’s journey, participating schools have engaged the children in study
groups on migrant themes and have composed the songs “Brought by waves” and “We
are all brothers.”
The children will arrive
by train in the Vatican Station within the Vatican gardens and will be welcomed
by the children’s choir “Quattro canti” from Palermo and by youths of the
association “Sports without Borders,” an organization which gives sports
opportunities to children from disadvantaged families. The children will
return to Calabria later Saturday.
The Principal of the
Amerigo Vespucci school in Vibo Marina, Maria Salvia, says she and the children
are very grateful and happy for the opportunity to visit the Vatican, “this
place which welcomes all the other religions.”
She points out that among
the children on Saturday’s journey “will be many children from different
religions…They are coming because this Pope is a truly welcoming Pope, so they
feel at home.”
Many boats carrying
hundreds of migrants have arrived in Vibo Marina, she explains. Many of
the children who’ve stayed are “fully part of the school world.
Integration is real; it’s not just words.” Faculty try to teach the
students that “being together has a very important significance. It has
to be built, and we try to build it together with them.”
(Tracey McClure)
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