Pope Francis to pay tribute to modern day martyrs
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis will celebrate a Liturgy
of the Word in memory of the martyrs of the 20th and 21st
centuries on Easter Saturday.
The commemoration is to take place in the Rome Basilica
of St. Bartholomew together with members of the Community of
Sant’Egidio who look after the Basilica’s Shrine to the memory of
modern martyrs.
In a statement Sant’Egidio remarked that the event takes on
a very special significance in times marked by the suffering of so many
Christians in the world, and in the light of Easter.
St. Bartholomew is not a parish Church but, as per the
request of Saint Pope John Paul II in 1999, it serves as a shrine to men and
women who died in defense of their faith during totalitarian regimes and Latin
American dictatorships as well as more recent martyrs of terrorism.
During the course of the liturgy friends and relatives of
some modern martyrs will give testimonies. They include Karl Schneider, son of
Paul, the Reformed Church Pastor killed in the nazi concentration camp
Buchenwald in 1939 for having described the objectives of nazi Germany as
“irreconcilable with the words of the Bible”; Roselyne, sister of Father
Jacques Hamel, assassinated in Rouen, France, on 26 July last year while
celebrating Holy Mass, and Francisco Hernandez Guevara, friend of William
Quijano, a young member of the Sant’Egidio Community in Salvador who was killed
in 2009 while working to keep young people away from criminal rings.
After the homily, Pope Francis will pay tribute to the six
chapels in the Basilica where the relics of the martyrs are kept. During the
liturgy a candle will be lit for every prayer recited in their memory. These
include Armenians and other Christians who were victims of massacres
perpetrated during World War I, martyrs of peace and dialogue like the Trappist
monks of Notre Dame de l’Atlas in Algeria, Don Andrea Santoro who was gunned
down in Turkey, Don Pino Puglisi who was killed by the Mafia and many many
missionaries who lost their lives in defense of their faith.
Well-known names like that of San Salvador bishop Oscar
Romero will resonate together with many less famous ones and a special prayer
will be said for Mar Gregorios Ibrahim, Paul Yazigi and father Paolo
Dall’Oglio, all of them abducted in Syria and of whom all traces have been
lost.
After the liturgy Pope Francis will meet with a group of refugees who have found welcome in Rome thanks to the “humanitarian corridors” project promoted by Sant’Egidio, with women victims of human trafficking and with young migrants who have travelled to Italy unaccompanied.
After the liturgy Pope Francis will meet with a group of refugees who have found welcome in Rome thanks to the “humanitarian corridors” project promoted by Sant’Egidio, with women victims of human trafficking and with young migrants who have travelled to Italy unaccompanied.
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