Pope Francis called for harmony “among all people” Friday after arriving at Portugal’s holy site of Fatima where he was greeted by thousands of pilgrims gathered to mark 100 years since child shepherds had visions of the Virgin Mary.
The Argentine pontiff flew into the central Portuguese town on board a helicopter, circling twice over a giant, 400,000-capacity, esplanade that faces the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Fatima to enthusiastic cheering.
Disembarking in a nearby stadium, he set off in his “Popemobile” for a journey through town followed closely by hovering helicopters, ending up at the sanctuary where pilgrims from all over the world had been waiting eagerly for hours.
The giant esplanade fell silent while he prayed privately in the Chapel of the Apparitions, built on the very spot where the Virgin Mary reportedly appeared six times between May and October 1917 to three impoverished, barely-literate children.
“I implore for concord among all people,” he then said in Portuguese, in comments broadcast across the holy site.
Pilgrims from countries as varied as China, Venezuela and East Timor listened intently, some crying, the flags they had been waving enthusiastically just moments before standing motionless.
“In the joy of the Gospel, we will be the Church robed in white, the whiteness washed in the blood of the Lamb, blood that today too is shed in the wars tearing our world apart,” he added.
Candle-lit blessing
“The pope is incredible — the way he talks and brings so many people together. It’s really moving,” said Mariana Teixeira, a 20-year-old student from Lisbon as the pontiff stepped into the Popemobile again.
As night fell, the esplanade and neighbouring streets lit up with candles held by the faithful as the pope blessed the crowd.
Unity and peace were the day’s themes in Fatima, where some Catholic faithful sought solace from the stress or violence of their daily lives.
“We are going to pray to Fatima and Pope Francis so that they can intervene for a peaceful solution for Venezuela,” said Jose Ornelas, a 59-year-old librarian who came all the way from Caracas, which along with other cities has been wracked by deadly anti-regime protests.
“We are living in a violent spiral with so much hate and so much helplessness.”
‘Miracle’ boy
Fatima has become a major holy site since the Virgin is said to have appeared in 1917 to Jacinta, seven, Francisco, nine, and their cousin Lucia, 10.
She apparently shared three major prophecies with them at a time marked by the ravages of World War I and persecution of the Church in a relatively new Portuguese republic.
These reportedly included a warning of a second war.
On Saturday — the 100th anniversary of the first reported apparition — Pope Francis will canonize Jacinta and Francisco, who have officially been credited with two miracles.
Tears and joy
Many pilgrims trekked to Fatima for days on foot — some finishing the last few meters on their knees.
And while the atmosphere was one of joy, emotions ran high and difficult memories bubbled to the surface.
Dung Lu, a refugee from Vietnam living in Denmark, said she and her mother fled their country in the late 1980s, partly because they were unable to practice their religion under the communist regime.
With tears in her eyes, she remembered praying to the Virgin Mary when she was still in Vietnam and her father was jailed after the war and then fled the country, leaving them behind. They were later reunited.
Standing nearby, her young daughter interrupted her, asking why she was crying.
“It’s difficult to tell them how hard it was. They (were) born in freedom,” she said.
Pope Francis is the fourth pontiff to make a pilgrimage to Fatima in half a century.
Arguably the most devoted was the late Pope John Paul II, who attributed his narrow escape from an assassination attempt at St. Peter’s Square on May 13, 1981 — the anniversary of the first reported apparition — to the intervention of the Virgin Mary.