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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE CATHOLIC MEDIA CONFERENCE SPONSORED BY THE CATHOLIC PRESS ASSOCIATION

[…] Dear friends, I cordially invoke upon you and the work of your Conference
an outpouring of the Holy Spirit’s gifts of wisdom, understanding and good
counsel. Only the gaze of the Spirit allows us not to close our eyes to those who
suffer and to seek the true good of all. Only with that gaze can we effectively
work to overcome the diseases of racism, injustice and indifference that disfigure
the face of our common family. Through your dedication and daily work, may
you help others to contemplate situations and people with the eyes of the Spirit.
Where our world all too readily speaks with adjectives and adverbs, may
Christian communicators speak with nouns that acknowledge and advance the
quiet claims of truth and promote human dignity. Where the world sees conflicts
and divisions, may you look to the suffering and the poor, and give voice to the
plea of our brothers and sisters in need of mercy and understanding. […]

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POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

After the Angelus, the Holy Father continued:
Dear brothers and sisters,
yesterday the United Nations celebrated World Refugee Day. The crisis caused by
the coronavirus has shed light on the need to ensure necessary protection to
refugees too, in order to guarantee their dignity and safety. I invite you to join in
my prayer for a renewed and active commitment by all in favour of the effective
protection of every human being, in particular of those who are forced to flee
due to situations of grave danger to them or to their families. […]

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POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

After praying the Angelus the Holy Father turned his thoughts and
prayers to the dramatic situation in Libya:
Dear brothers and sisters,
I am following the dramatic situation in Libya with great apprehension and
sorrow. It has been present in my prayer in recent days. Please, I urge
international organizations and those who have political and military
responsibilities to recommence with conviction and determination the search for
a path towards an end to the violence, leading to peace, stability and the unity
of the country. I also pray for the thousands of migrants, refugees, asylum
seekers and internally displaced persons in Libya. The health situation has
aggravated their already precarious conditions, making them more vulnerable to
forms of exploitation and violence. There is cruelty. I call on the international
community to please take their plight to heart, identifying pathways and
providing means to assure them the protection they need, a dignified condition
and a hopeful future. Brothers and sisters, we all have responsibility for this; no
one should feel exempt. Let us all pray for Libya in silence.

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LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF COLOMBIA TO MARK THE WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY

[…] I encourage you in this task that lies before you. I trust that your
deliberations and conclusions will always foster the building of an increasingly
habitable world and a more humane society, where all of us have a place and no
one is ever left behind. […]

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MEETING WITH A DELEGATION OF PARTICIPANTS IN THE INTERNATIONAL ATHLETICS MEETING “WE RUN TOGETHER – SIMUL CURREBANT”

[…] Dear friends and dear lovers of sports,
an international athletics meet called “We Run Together – Simul Currebant” was
to have taken place in Castel Porziano last May 21. For the first time, Olympic
champions would have raced with Paralympic athletes, athletes with mental
disabilities, and with refugees, migrants and prisoners, who would also have
served as competition judges. All together and with equal dignity. A concrete
sign of how sport should be a “bridge” that unites women and men of different
religions and cultures, promoting inclusion, friendship, solidarity, education. That
is, a “bridge” of peace. […]

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POPE FRANCIS GENERAL AUDIENCE

[…] Yet, precisely in starting from the great narrative of Creation, someone
began to find reasons for thanksgiving, to praise God for his or her existence.
Prayer is the first strength of hope. You pray and hope grows, it moves forward.
I would say that prayer opens the door to hope. There is hope but I open the
door with my prayer. Because people of prayer safeguard basic truths; they are
the ones who repeat, first and foremost to themselves and then to all the others,
that this life, despite all its toils and trials, despite its difficult days, is full of a
grace that is awe inspiring. And as such it must always be defended and
protected. […]

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MORNING MASS IN THE CHAPEL OF THE DOMUS SANCTAE MARTHAE HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS

[…] Throughout history we have read about the brutality inflicted on slaves:
they were brought from Africa to America – I think of that history that touches
my own land – and we say, “What barbarism!” But there are many slaves today
too, many men and women who are not free to work; they are forced to work in
order to survive, nothing more. They are slaves: it is forced labour. It is forced
labour, unjust, ill-paid, and which leads men and women to live with their dignity
trampled underfoot. There are many, many throughout the world. Many. In the
newspapers a few months ago we read, in a country in Asia, of how a man had
beaten to death an employee who earned less than half a dollar a day, because
he had done something badly. Today’s slavery is our “indignity”, because it takes
away the dignity of men, of women, all of us. “No, I work, I have my dignity”.
Yes, but your brothers and sisters do not. “Yes, Father, it is true, but this, since it
is very far away from me, I struggle to understand it. But they are among us;
yes, here among us. Think of the day workers, who are made to work for
minimum pay, and not for eight, but for twelve or fourteen hours a day: this
happens today, here. Throughout the world, and also here. I think of the
domestic worker who does not receive a fair wage, who has no social security
assistance, insurance, no pension provision: this does not only happen in Asia.
[…]

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LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE POPULAR MOVEMENTS

Dear Friends,
I often recall our previous meetings: two at the Vatican and one in Santa Cruz
de la Sierra, and I must tell you that this “souvenir” warms my heart. It brings
me closer to you, and helps me re-live so many dialogues we had during those
times. I think of all the beautiful projects that emerged from those conversations
and took shape and have become reality. Now, in the midst of this pandemic, I
think of you in a special way and wish to express my closeness to you.
In these days of great anxiety and hardship, many have used war-like
metaphors to refer to the pandemic we are experiencing. If the struggle against
COVID-19 is a war, then you are truly an invisible army, fighting in the most
dangerous trenches; an army whose only weapons are solidarity, hope, and
community spirit, all revitalizing at a time when no one can save themselves
alone. As I told you in our meetings, to me you are social poets because, from
the forgotten peripheries where you live, you create admirable solutions for the
most pressing problems afflicting the marginalized.
I know that you nearly never receive the recognition that you deserve, because
you are truly invisible to the system. Market solutions do not reach the
peripheries, and State protection is hardly visible there. Nor do you have the
resources to substitute for its functioning. You are looked upon with suspicion
when through community organization you try to move beyond philanthropy or
when, instead of resigning and hoping to catch some crumbs that fall from the
table of economic power, you claim your rights. You often feel rage and
powerlessness at the sight of persistent inequalities and when any excuse at all
is sufficient for maintaining those privileges. Nevertheless, you do not resign
yourselves to complaining: you roll up your sleeves and keep working for your
families, your communities, and the common good. Your resilience helps me,
challenges me, and teaches me a great deal.
I think of all the people, especially women, who multiply loaves of bread in soup
kitchens: two onions and a package of rice make up a delicious stew for
hundreds of children. I think of the sick, I think of the elderly. They never appear
in the news, nor do small farmers and their families who work hard to produce
healthy food without destroying nature, without hoarding, without exploiting
people’s needs. I want you to know that our Heavenly Father watches over you,
values you, appreciates you, and supports you in your commitment.
How difficult it is to stay at home for those who live in tiny, ramshackle
dwellings, or for the homeless! How difficult it is for migrants, those who are
deprived of freedom, and those in rehabilitation from an addiction. You are there
shoulder to shoulder with them, helping them to make things less difficult, less
painful. I congratulate and thank you with all my heart. My hope is that
governments understand that technocratic paradigms (whether state-centred or
market-driven) are not enough to address this crisis or the other great problems
affecting humankind. Now more than ever, persons, communities and peoples
must be put at the centre, united to heal, to care and to share.
I know that you have been excluded from the benefits of globalization. You do
not enjoy the superficial pleasures that anesthetize so many consciences, yet
you always suffer from the harm they produce. The ills that afflict everyone hit
you twice as hard. Many of you live from day to day, without any type of legal
guarantee to protect you. Street vendors, recyclers, carnies, small farmers,
construction workers, dressmakers, the different kinds of caregivers: you who
are informal, working on your own or in the grassroots economy, you have no
steady income to get you through this hard time … and the lockdowns are
becoming unbearable. This may be the time to consider a universal basic wage
which would acknowledge and dignify the noble, essential tasks you carry out. It
would ensure and concretely achieve the ideal, at once so human and so
Christian, of no worker without rights.
Moreover, I urge you to reflect on “life after the pandemic,” for while this storm
shall pass, its grave consequences are already being felt. You are not helpless.
You have the culture, the method, and most of all, the wisdom that are kneaded
with the leaven of feeling the suffering of others as your own. I want all of us to
think about the project of integral human development that we long for and that
is based on the central role and initiative of the people in all their diversity, as
well as on universal access to those three Ts that you defend: Trabajo (work),
Techo (housing), and Tierra (land and food). I hope that this time of danger will
free us from operating on automatic pilot, shake our sleepy consciences and
allow a humanist and ecological conversion that puts an end to the idolatry of
money and places human life and dignity at the centre. Our civilization — so
competitive, so individualistic, with its frenetic rhythms of production and
consumption, its extravagant luxuries, its disproportionate profits for just a few
— needs to downshift, take stock, and renew itself. You are the indispensable
builders of this change that can no longer be put off. Moreover, when you testify
that to change is possible, your voice is authoritative. You have known crises and
hardships … that you manage to transform — with modesty, dignity,
commitment, hard work and solidarity — into a promise of life for your families
and your communities.
Stand firm in your struggle and care for each other as brothers and sisters. I
pray for you, I pray with you. I want to ask God our Father to bless you, to fill
you with his love, and to defend you on this path, giving you the strength that
keeps us standing tall and that never disappoints: hope. Please pray for me,
because I need it too.

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POPE FRANCIS GENERAL AUDIENCE

[…] At this time, I would like to address all the sick who have contracted the
virus and the many who suffer from the uncertainty of their respective illnesses.
I offer a heartfelt thanks to the hospital staff, the physicians, male and female
nurses and volunteers who are close to the people who are suffering at this very
difficult time. I thank all Christians, all the men and women of good will who
pray at this moment, in unison, whichever religious tradition they belong to. I
warmly thank you for this effort. However, I would not want this suffering, this
epidemic that is so strong, to cause us to forget the poor Syrians who are
suffering on the border between Greece and Turkey: a people who have been
suffering for years. They have to flee war, hunger and illness. Let us not forget
our brothers and sisters and the many children who are suffering there. […]

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POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

After the Angelus, the Holy Father continued:
[…] I greet the Associations and groups engaged in solidarity with the Syrian
people, and especially with the inhabitants of the city of Idlib and of the
north-west of Syria — I can see you here — compelled to flee from the recent
escalation in the war. Dear brothers and sisters, I express my great
apprehension, my sorrow at the inhuman situation of these helpless people,
including many children whose lives are at risk. One cannot turn away from this
humanitarian crisis, but instead must give it priority over every other interest.
Let us pray for these people, these brothers and sisters of ours, who suffer
greatly in the north-west of Syria, in the city of Idlib. […]