Pope urges Rome to its vocation
of welcome and integration
Pope Francis being welcomed by Rome Major Virginia Raggi at the Capitoline Hill on march 26, 2019 |
Pope Francis visited the headquarters of Rome Municipality
at the Capitoline Hill, where he addressed Rome Mayor Virginia Raggi and her
officials.
By Robin Gomes
Pope Francis on Tuesday urged the city of Rome to use its
energies to welcome and integrate people from Italy and the world over by
fostering brotherhood and creating opportunities for the civic, cultural,
economic and social development of all without fearing goodness and
charity.
The Pope made the exhortation in a speech to the authorities
and officials of Rome administration during a visit to the Capitoline Hill, the
headquarters of Rome Municipality. Pope Francis is the fourth pontiff to
visit the Italian capital’s City Hall.
Integrating peoples, differences
Addressing the officials led by Rome Mayor, Virginia
Raggi, the Pope noted that during its 2,800-year old rich history, the
Eternal City has been able to welcome and integrate different populations and
people from all over the world from a vast variety of social and economic
categories, without annulling their legitimate differences and without
humiliating or crushing their respective characteristics and identities.
By welcoming students, pilgrims, tourists, refugees and
migrants, he said, the city has become a “pole of attraction and a hinge”
between the continental north and the Mediterranean region and between civil
and spiritual powers.
This, he stressed, has been possible because of the power of
the Gospel, in mutual respect and collaboration between civil
and religious authorities for the good of all and in respect for
the dignity of the human person and offering spaces of freedom
and participation.
As an enormous treasure chest of spiritual,
historical, artistic and institutional treasures, Rome, the Pope pointed out,
is home to about three million people who work, study, pray, meet and
carry on their personal and family history, and who together are the honor and
effort of every administrator, of anyone who works for the common good
of the city.
The See of Peter
He noted that Rome’s landmark Capitoline Hill, St. Peter’s
Basilica and the Coliseum point to its universal vocation, mission and ideal
that need to be proclaimed to all regardless of language and colour.
With the See of the Successor of Saint Peter in Rome, he
said, the city is also a spiritual point of reference for the entire Catholic
world. The Pope who is the Bishop of Rome, said that the Church in Rome
wants to help Romans rediscover their sense of belonging to a special
community, which through its network of parishes, schools and charitable
institutions, and commitment of voluntary work, collaborates with the civil
powers and all citizens to maintain the city’s noblest face and its feelings of
Christian love and civic sense.
The peripheries
The Pope encouraged all private citizens, social forces,
public institutions, the Catholic Church and other religious communities to
place themselves at the service of the good of the city and of the people who
live there, especially those on the margins, almost discarded and forgotten or
who suffer illnesses, abandonment or loneliness.
Today, the Pope noted, the city’s peripheries and suburbs
are witnessing the arrival of migrants from many countries
fleeing wars and extreme poverty, who are trying
to rebuild their lives in conditions of security and decent living.
Bridges, not walls
Rome, he said, is called to use its energies to welcome
and integrate, to transform tensions and problems into opportunities for
meeting and growth.
The Pope wished that the city, fertilized by the blood of
the Martyrs, draw from its culture, shaped by faith in Christ, the resources of
creativity and charity necessary to overcome the fears that
risk blocking the initiatives and possible paths. “These,” he said,
“could make the city flourish, foster brotherhood and create
opportunities for civic, cultural, economic and social development.”
“Rome, the city of bridges, never of walls,” he stressed.
In this regard, the Pope said, the Holy See desires
to collaborate ever more and better for the good of the city, in the service of
all, especially the poorest and most disadvantaged, for the culture of
encounter and for an integral ecology.
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