Pope’s prayer at Ardeatine Caves
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis visited the Ardeatine
Caves Memorial on the Feast of All Souls to commemorate those who lost
their lives in the horror of war.
Rome’s Ardeatine Caves are the site of a 1944 massacre of
335 Italian civilian men and boys in revenge for an attack by resistance
fighters who killed 33 members of a Nazi military police unit.
The Pope spent some time in prayer at the Memorial and then
gave a brief reflection.
This is Vatican Radio’s unofficial translation of his
words:
God of Abraham, of Isaac, God of Jacob: with this name, You
presented Yourself to Moses when You revealed to him Your desire to free your
people from the slavery of Egypt. God of Abraham, God of Isaac, and God of
Jacob, God who binds Himself in a pact with humanity, God who binds Himself
with a covenant of faithful love forever, merciful and compassionate to every
man and every people suffering oppression. “I have observed the misery of my
people, I have heard their cry, I know their sufferings.” God of the faces and
names, God of each of the 335 men murdered here, on March 24, 1944, whose
remains lie in these tombs. You, Lord, know their faces and their names: all,
even those of the 12, who remain unknown to us. To You, no one is unknown. God
of Jesus, our Father in Heaven: thanks to Him, the Risen Christ, we know that
your name – God of Abraham, God of Isaac and God of Jacob – means You are not
the God of the dead but of the living , that Your faithful covenant of love is
stronger than death and is a guarantee of resurrection. O Lord, that in this
place devoted to the memory of the fallen for freedom and justice we might put
off the shackles of selfishness and indifference, and through the burning bush
of this mausoleum, listen silently to Your name: God of Abraham, God of Isaac,
God of Jacob, God of Jesus, God of the living. Amen.
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