Pope to hold mass for Morocco’s Catholic minority

Update Pope to hold mass for Morocco’s Catholic minority
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Students greet Pope Francis upon his arrival at the Apostolic Nunciature of the Holy See in Rabat on Saturday, March 30. (Vatican Media/AFP)
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Pope Francis (C-L) is received by Morocco's King Mohammed VI (C-R) upon disembarking from his plane at Rabat-Sale International Airport near the capital Rabat on March 30, 2019. (AFP)
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Pope Francis greets children after arriving at Rabat-Sale Airport in Rabat, Morocco, March 30, 2019. (Vatican Media/ Reuters)
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Pope Francis (C) waves from the popemobile as he leaves Rabat-Sale International airport near the Moroccan capital Rabat on March 30, 2019, as he begins his visit to the country. (AFP)
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Pope Francis (2nd-L) is received by Morocco's King Mohammed VI (2nd-R), his son Crown Prince Moulay Hassan (R), and brother Moulay Rachid (L), upon his arrival in the capital Rabat on March 30, 2019. (AFP)
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Pope Francis waves as he boards a plane before departure for his visit to Morocco, at Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport in Rome, Italy, March 30, 2019. (Reuters)
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Pope Francis, on the popemobile, and Moroccan King Mohammed VI, right, waving, make their way through the crowd in Rabat, Morocco, Saturday, March 30, 2019. (AP)
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The honor guard waits for Pope Francis to arrive in Rabat, Morocco, Saturday, March 30, 2019. (AP)
Updated 31 March 2019
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Pope to hold mass for Morocco’s Catholic minority

Pope to hold mass for Morocco’s Catholic minority
  • Pope Francis was welcomed to Morocco by King Mohammed VI
  • Christians are a tiny minority in Morocco where 99 percent of the population is Muslim

RABAT: Pope Francis will hold mass Sunday for nearly 10,000 members of Morocco’s Catholic minority, on the second day of a visit during which he has already met migrants and trainee imams.

The Argentine pontiff will begin the day at a social center near Rabat, before meeting religious leaders at the cathedral in the Moroccan capital.

The highlight for the Catholic community will be the mass held at a city stadium that marks the conclusion of the pope’s two-day visit.

Francis is the first pontiff to visit the North African country since John Paul II in 1985, and his arrival drew thousands to the streets on Saturday.

Christians are a tiny minority in Morocco where 99 percent of the population is Muslim, with sub-Saharan Africans making up a large part of the country’s 30,000-strong Catholic community.




Pope Francis, on the popemobile, and Moroccan King Mohammed VI, right, waving, make their way through the crowd in Rabat, Morocco, Saturday, March 30, 2019.  (AP)

There are a few thousand Christian converts in Morocco, who since 2017 have called openly for the right to live “without persecution” and “without discrimination.”

Speaking at Saturday’s welcome ceremony, the pope defended “freedom of conscience” and “religious freedom.”

The pontiff also highlighted the suffering of migrants, denouncing “indifference and silence” while calling on people to consider them “as people, not numbers.”

The fate of migrants has been a focal point of Francis’s papacy and he concluded his Saturday schedule at a Caritas charity center which offers them support.

While at the center, where children donned colorful hats to greet the pope, Francis criticized “collective expulsions” and said ways for migrants to regularize their status should be encouraged.

Morocco says it has a “humanistic” approach to migration and rejects allegations by rights groups of “brutal arrest campaigns” and “forced displacement” to the country’s southern border.

Francis was welcomed to Morocco by King Mohammed VI — who describes himself as “commander of the faithful” — and the two on Saturday addressed the “sacred character of Jerusalem.”

The city should be a “symbol of peaceful coexistence” for Christians, Jews and Muslims, they said in a joint statement released by the Vatican.

“The specific multi-religious character, the spiritual dimension and the particular cultural identity of Jerusalem... must be protected and promoted,” said the text, which was jointly signed at Rabat’s royal palace.

The Moroccan king chairs a committee created by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to safeguard and restore Jerusalem’s religious, cultural and architectural heritage.




The honor guard waits for Pope Francis to arrive in Rabat, Morocco, Saturday, March 30, 2019. (AP)

Jerusalem’s status is perhaps the most sensitive issue in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Israel sees the entire city as its capital, while the Palestinians want the eastern sector as the capital of their future state.

US President Donald Trump sparked anger across the Muslim world when he recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in 2017.

Francis’s palace meeting with the king was followed by a visit to an institute which hosts around 1,300 trainee imams and preachers.

There they heard from a French and a Nigerian student of the institute, which teaches “moderate Islam” and is backed by the king.