ROME (AFP) – Pope Francis washed the feet of 12 young offenders
including two girls and two Muslims at a Rome prison on Thursday in an
unprecedented version of an ancient Easter ritual, seen as part of
efforts to bring the Catholic Church closer to those in need.
The pope knelt down, washing and kissing the young prisoners’ feet in
the first Holy Thursday ceremony of its kind performed by a pontiff in
prison, and the first to include women and Muslims.
Pope Francis (R) kissing the feet of a young offender after washing
them during a mass at the church of the Casal del Marmo youth prison on
the outskirts of Rome as part of Holy Thursday.AFP
“Whoever is the most high up must be at the service of others,”
Francis said at the mass in the Casal del Marmo youth prison, a
fortnight after being elected Latin America’s first pope.
“I do this with all my heart because it is my duty as a priest, as a
bishop. I have to be at your service. I love doing it because this is
what the Lord has taught me,” the 76-year-old said.
Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said many of the participants
broke down in tears at the ceremony, which was open only to Vatican
media. One young man had to be replaced at the last moment because he
was too overcome with emotion.
Video footage from the ceremony showed the pope pouring water over
the feet — one of them with tattoos — bending down to kiss them and
looking each of the 12 prisoners in the eye before moving on.
Lombardi said that while this was the first time a pope had washed
women’s feet, Francis had performed this type of ceremony in his native
Argentina many times before becoming pope including in jails, hospitals
and old people’s homes.
The Holy Thursday ceremony is usually held in a basilica in the city
centre and commemorates the gesture of humility believed to have been
performed by Jesus Christ before his death to his 12 disciples at their
last meal.
Popes performing the ritual have usually washed the feet of priests.
Catholic traditionalists are likely to be riled by the inclusion of
women because all of Jesus’ disciples were male — the same justification
used to explain why only men can be Catholic priests.
Francis has already broken with several Vatican traditions with his
informal style, although he is yet to begin tackling the many problems
assailing the Roman Catholic Church including reform of the
scandal-ridden Vatican bureaucracy and bank.
Local prison chaplain Gaetano Greco said he hoped the ritual would be
“a positive sign in the lives” of the young offenders at the prison,
which has around 50 inmates aged between 14 and 21.
Earlier on Thursday, the pontiff told Catholic priests at a mass in
St Peter’s Basilica to stop their “soul-searching” and “introspection”.
“We need to go out… to the outskirts where there is suffering,
bloodshed, blindness that longs for sight and prisoners in thrall to
many evil masters,” he said.
– Via Crucis –
The former archbishop of Buenos Aires, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, was
known in Argentina for his strong social advocacy during his homeland’s
devastating economic crisis, his own humble lifestyle and his outreach
in poor neighbourhoods.
Holy Thursday is the first of four intensive days in the Christian
calendar culminating in Easter Sunday, which commemorates Christ’s
resurrection.
On Friday, Francis will recite the Passion of Christ — the story of
the last hours of Jesus’s life — in St Peter’s Basilica, before
presiding over the Via Crucis — Way of the Cross — ceremony by the
Colosseum, where thousands of Christians were believed killed in Roman
times.
While a frail Benedict, now 85, presided over last year’s
celebrations from under a canopy next to the Colosseum, Francis is
expected to take part in the procession and even carry the wooden cross
on his shoulder for part of the way.
On Saturday, the pontiff will take part in an evening Easter vigil in
St Peter’s Basilica. The Vatican has not yet said whether Francis will
follow the tradition of baptising eight adult converts to the Catholic
Church during the service.
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