KRAKOW: Pope Francis arrives for a welcoming ceremony accompanied by Polish President Andrzej Duda (right) and his wife Agata Kornhauser-Duda at Wawel Royal Castle on Wednesday.—Reuters
KRAKW: Pope Francis said on Wednesday the world was at war but argued that religion was not the cause, as he arrived in Poland a day after jihadists murdered a Catholic priest in France.
In his first speech after touching down in the city of Krakow, the pontiff said the way to “overcome fear” was to welcome people fleeing conflict and hardship.
Opening doors to migrants demands “great wisdom and compassion” he said, chastising a right-wing government that has refused to share the burden during Europe’s worst refugee crisis since World War II.
“We must not be afraid to say the truth, the world is at war because it has lost peace,” the pontiff told journalists on the flight out from Rome. “When I speak of war I speak of wars over interests, money, resources, not religion. All religions want peace, it’s the others who want war.”
The brutal killing of the elderly priest during mass in France on Tuesday, in an attack claimed by the militant Islamic State group, has cast a shadow over Francis’s trip to headline World Youth Day, a gathering of young Catholics from across the globe.
“This holy priest who died in the moment of offering prayers for the church is one [victim]. But how many Christians, innocents, children?” Francis said.
‘Insecurity, war’
“The word we hear a lot is insecurity, but the real word is war. The world has been in a fragmented war for some time. There was the one in 14, one in 39-45 and now this,” he said referring to World War I and II.
A string of terror attacks targeting civilians in Europe appears to have dampened turnout for the World Youth Day festival, a week-long faith extravaganza dubbed “the Catholic Woodstock”.
Flag-waving crowds of youngsters nonetheless turned out in force to cheer on the pope as he sped to the Wawel Royal Castle in his open-top popemobile, defying security fears.
“It’s an incredible experience,” said one Krakow resident who gave her name as Danuta. “I greeted pope John Paul II on all his trips here and pope Benedict too,” she said.
Around 200,000 pilgrims attended the opening mass on Tuesday, according to Krakow police, while organisers had expected around half a million.