From the US border to the indigenous south, Pope Francis is to visit some of the poorest and most violent corners of Mexico on his five-day trip and was yesterday to celebrate Mass before an image of the country’s patroness, the Virgin of Guadalupe.
Chronic violence and corruption are to be themes of his visit to the world’s second-most populous Roman Catholic country, and he is to address the plight of migrants trying to reach the US with a service at the northern border next week.
Hundreds of thousands of people were yesterday expected to join the pope at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, to which pilgrims flock from all over Latin America.
Photo: AP
“‘Don’t be afraid,’ that is what she tells me,” Pope Francis said ahead of his visit, adding that he wanted to reflect silently in front of her image.
The pope earlier this month urged Mexicans to fight against corruption and grisly drug gang violence. Some Mexicans are looking to him to take that message even further while he is there.
“We want him to demand that the president kick out all the corrupt people,” said Marbella Vargas, whose son Edgar was one of 43 students abducted and apparently massacred in 2014, a grisly case that hammered the government’s reputation.
Mexico has been ravaged by drug violence over the past decade, and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has been unable to fulfill his promises to put an end to it.
Francis flew into Mexico City on Friday evening for his first visit as leader of the Catholic Church, greeted by cheering crowds, a mariachi band and Pena Nieto.
During his visit, the pope is to say Mass with indigenous communities in Mexico’s poorest state Chiapas, and speak with young people in Morelia, the capital of Michoacan state, which has been plagued by violence between drug gangs and armed vigilante groups.
More than 100,000 people have been killed in Mexico’s drug violence over the past decade and about 26,000 are missing.
The pope’s trip is to end with a prison visit and Mass in the notorious northern border city of Ciudad Juarez, where he is to meet relatives of victims of violence.
In a reminder of Mexico’s corruption and violence, 49 people were killed in a fight between rival gangs in a prison just days before the pope’s arrival.
There has been speculation that the pope might also meet with relatives of the 43 missing students.
Francis has won plaudits for his leadership of the Catholic Church over the past three years, but in Mexico he might struggle to match the lasting appeal of Pope John Paul II, who made multiple visits to the country.
More than half of those polled by newspaper Reforma last month said they identified most with John Paul II, versus 14 percent for Francis.
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