“The Filipino people take
their devotion seriously”
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| Members of the Filipino community attend Mass in St Peter's Basilica (Vatican Media) |
As the Filipino community in Rome gathers in St Peter’s
Basilica for Mass celebrated by Pope Francis, a nun from the Philippines speaks
about the faith of the community living in the city.
By Lydia O'Kane
Pope Francis on Sunday afternoon is presiding over Mass in
St Peter’s Basilica for the Filipino community living in Rome.
It's the Simbang-Gabi or Dawn Mass, which is celebrated for
nine consecutive days before Christmas and is traditional in the Philppines.
The Philippine ambassador to the Holy See Grace
Relucio-Princesa and the country’s Ambassador to Italy Domingo Nolasco will
also be attending.
Filipino Sr Victoria Victorino is a member of the Sister
Disciples of the Divine Master and is attending Sunday's Mass. She describes
the Pope’s participation as very significant, because she says, it gives a
sense of hope for the community, “especially for those who are suffering; those
who are looking for some comfort.”
Pope Francis is no stranger to the Philippines, having made
an Apostolic Visit there in 2015. Sr Victorino notes that the Filipino people
were very grateful to Pope Francis for coming to their country following a
devastating Typhoon that hit the country. “That’s how dear to him are the
Filippino people, so we are very grateful for that”, she says.
Speaking about the devotional nine day series of Masses that
precede Christmas, she says “you just get carried away”. “It’s the
devotion of the people, you feel it; you see parents bringing their kids, the babies
even for that special blessing.” The Filipino people, she stresses, take
devotion seriously.
Asked how she would describe the faith of the Filipino
community in Rome, Sr Victorino comments that the Christian faith in Italy is
one of the reasons why people from her country chose to come here. “It’s really
because it’s still a Christian country, where the faith, even if you don’t see
it, you feel it; it’s still alive”.
The remaining Masses in the lead up to Christmas will be
celebrated at Rome’s Santa Pudenziana Basilica, home to the Filipino community
in Rome.

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