Yahoo – AFP, Jean-Louis De La Vaissiere, Claire Cozens, 14
Jan 2015
![]() |
Pope
Francis waves to people as he arrives to lead a canonisation mass for
Joseph
Vaz in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo, on January 14, 2015 (AFP Photo/
Munir Uz
Zaman)
|
Colombo
(AFP) - A million worshippers packed the Colombo seafront to greet Pope Francis
as he canonised Sri Lanka's first saint on Wednesday in the biggest public
celebration the city has ever witnessed.
Many had
waited through the night to see the first pope to visit the island in two
decades canonise Joseph Vaz, a 17th century missionary who disguised himself as
a beggar to evade persecution.
![]() |
A child,
holding a flag bearing the image of
Pope Francis, attends the canonisation
mass
for Joseph Vaz in the Sri Lankan
capital Colombo on January 14, 2015
(AFP
Photo/Munir Uz Zaman)
|
Francis,
whose visit has focused on post-war reconciliation, said the missionary had
shown "the importance of transcending religious divisions in the service
of peace", ministering to those in need regardless of their creed.
"I
pray that... the Christians of this country may be confirmed in faith and make
an ever greater contribution to peace, justice and reconciliation in Sri Lankan
society," he said.
"This
is what Christ asks of you. This is what Saint Joseph teaches you. This is what
the Church needs of you."
Wednesday's
mass on the shores of the Indian Ocean was a colourful mix of the country's
diverse cultures, with hymns sung in both the Sinhala and Tamil languages as
well as traditional dancers and drummers from around the island.
'Great
joy'
Crowds
leaned in to touch the pope as he arrived in a customised open-topped car,
before kissing the altar to mark the start of the service.
As a choir
sang welcoming hymns, the pontiff greeted people in wheelchairs who had been
pushed forward to the front of the vast crowd to receive his blessing.
Many held
up mobile phones to film the 78-year-old, who smiled but appeared tired as he
made his way to the specially-constructed stage.
Police
estimate a million people attended the mass, making it the city's biggest ever
public celebration.
Many
worshippers clutched photographs of loved ones who could not attend, among them
54-year-old Srimathi Fernando, whose husband is recovering from a heart attack.
![]() |
Pope
Francis blesses a sick child ahead
of a canonisation mass for Joseph Vaz,
in
Sri Lankan capital Colombo, on January
14, 2015 (AFP Photo/Giuseppe Cacace)
|
"I
came early to grab a spot in front so that I can show this picture to the Holy
Father and get a blessing for him (her husband)," she told AFP.
Archbishop
Malcolm Ranjith said the pope had brought "great joy" to the island
as it struggled to recover from the war and asked him to help Sri Lankans find
"the strength to ask pardon from each other".
Warzone
church
Later on
Wednesday, the pope flew to a small church in the jungle that was on the front
lines of the conflict between government troops and guerrillas seeking a
separate homeland for the country's Tamil minority.
Hundreds of
people from across the ethnic and religious divide watched him say a prayer at
the Our Lady of Madhu shrine in the mainly Tamil north of the island.
"There
are families here today which suffered greatly in the long conflict which tore
open the heart of Sri Lanka," the pope said in a prayer to the Virgin
Mary, whose 450-year-old statue graces the church.
He called
on Sri Lankans to ask "for the grace to make reparation for our sins and
for all the evil which this land has known".
The pope's
visit comes just days after an election that exposed bitter divisions on the
island and saw the surprise exit of strongman president Mahinda Rajapakse.
![]() |
Pope
Francis waves to people as he
arrives to lead a mass in Sri Lankan
capital
Colombo, on January 14,
2015 (AFP Photo/Munir Uz Zaman)
|
New
president Maithripala Sirisena ordered the release of nearly 700 prisoners to
mark the pope's visit, after earlier declaring Wednesday a national holiday.
Only around
six percent of mainly Buddhist Sri Lanka's 20-million-strong population is
Catholic, but the religion is seen as a unifying force because it includes
people from both the Tamil and majority Sinhalese ethnic groups.
Vaz is
credited with reviving the Catholic church on the island at a time of
persecution by Dutch colonisers.
He
travelled from village to village ministering to both Tamil and Sinhalese,
disguised as a beggar because the Dutch had banned Catholic priests from the
island.
The pope's
trip comes just five months after he visited South Korea, signalling the huge
importance the Vatican places on Asia and its potential for more followers.





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