Pope sends video message of peace ahead of Fatima visit

VATICAN CITY (RNS) Speaking in Portuguese, the pope defined his two-day official visit to the Catholic shrine May 12-13 as a 'pilgrimage of hope and peace.'

On the day before the arrival of Pope Francis, pilgrims walk on their knees to fulfil their vows at the Catholic shrine of Fatima, Portugal, on May 11, 2017. Photo courtesy of Reuters/Rafael Marchante

VATICAN CITY (RNS) Pope Francis has sent a video message to the people of Portugal ahead of his visit to Fatima to mark the 100th anniversary of the Virgin Mary’s reported apparitions to three young shepherds.

Speaking in Portuguese, the pope defined his two-day official visit to the Catholic shrine May 12-13 as a “pilgrimage of hope and peace” and apologized for not seeing more of the country.


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“I know that you wanted me to come to your homes and communities, your towns and cities,” he said. “I received all your invitations! Needless to say, I would have liked to accept every one of them, but I cannot.”

Francis will commemorate the anniversary of the apparitions, which began May 13, 1917. On Saturday, during a Mass, he will canonize two of the child shepherds, Francisco and Jacinta Marto.

The children were ostracized at first when they reported seeing the apparition of Mary, who identified herself as “Our Lady of the Rosary,” while they tended sheep at Cova da Iria near Fatima.

The siblings will be among the youngest saints ever declared by the Catholic Church.

Francis thanked the Portuguese people and authorities for understanding his “decision to restrict the usual events associated with a pilgrimage to the Shrine of Fatima,” which attracts around 6 million pilgrims a year.

The pontiff said he was grateful to know that the Portuguese people were preparing to join him on his pilgrimage through prayer, which “makes our hearts grow and prepares us to receive God’s gifts.”

Jacinta was 7 years old and Francisco was only 9 when they first reported witnessing the apparitions with their 10-year-old cousin, Lucia dos Santos.


While the Marto siblings died in the global flu epidemic that broke out in 1918, Lucia became a Carmelite nun and died in 2005. The two siblings are buried at the Catholic sanctuary in Fatima.

The two children were beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2000 and Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI went to Fatima in 2010 to celebrate the 10th anniversary of their beatification.

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