Pope to 'go beyond fear' in Romania

Pope Francis (C) blesses faithful as he leaves his weekly general audience on 29 May 2019 at St. Peter`s Square in the Vatican. Photo: AFP
Pope Francis (C) blesses faithful as he leaves his weekly general audience on 29 May 2019 at St. Peter`s Square in the Vatican. Photo: AFP

Pope Francis heads to Romania on Friday with a message of integration not just for its faith communities but for a post-election European Union, following nationalist gains.

During the three-day trip to the mainly Orthodox country, which sits at the crossroads of Western and Eastern Europe, the pontiff is expected to touch on issues fuelling nationalism, such as poverty, as well as inter-religious relations.

"I come to you to walk together," Francis said in a message to the people of Romania ahead of the visit.

"We walk together when we learn to keep the roots of the family, when we cater to the future of our children and of our brothers next to us, when we go beyond fear and suspicion, when we let the walls that divide us from others fall," he said.

Relations between the Orthodox Church and Romania's Greek Catholics -- who number just 150,000 -- have been strained ever since the country was under post-war Communist rule.

The tiny community had its property confiscated while its religious leaders were jailed.

But the Greek Catholics resisted, holding secret masses until the dictatorship fell in 1989.

The pope will beatify seven bishops who were tortured and died in prison, setting them on the path to sainthood.

Golden rose
Francis's visit follows 20 years after John Paul II received a hearty welcome for his perceived role in the fall of Communism.

The Argentine pontiff will travel across the country, from Bucharest to Iasi and Blaj, to meet people of diverse faiths and languages among Romania's 20 million inhabitants -- which include 18 officially recognised minorities.

The highlight of the trip is set to be Saturday's mass at the Sumuleu Ciuc shrine in a predominantly ethnic-Hungarian part of the picturesque Transylvania region.

Tens of thousands are expected to attend the ceremony, which will see Francis present a golden rose to the large wooden replica of the Madonna -- a tradition for popes visiting major Marian shrines.

On arriving Friday in Bucharest -- once nicknamed "Little Paris of the East" -- Francis will meet the country's president Klaus Iohannis, as well as Romania's first-ever female prime minister, Viorica Dancila, before addressing the nation in a televised speech.

This is the moment the 82-year-old may touch on unemployment and poverty -- factors that have driven some 16 percent of the population, mostly youngsters, to emigrate to other EU countries since Romania joined the bloc in 2007.

He will likely reference the conservative and anti-immigrant narratives that propelled many nationalist parties -- including in neighbouring Hungary -- to significant wins in last week's European parliament elections.

Hearts and minds open
It will be an opportunity "to send a message to the many Catholic Hungarians there to keep their hearts, minds and gates open to others," religious expert Claire Giangrave wrote in the religious news website Cruxnow.

Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti told journalists that the pope's trip "will take into account" the EU populist gains.

Francis will take a turn in his popemobile through the crowded streets of Bucharest to Saint Joseph's Cathedral, where 30,000 people are expected to gather for a mass.

He will have a private meeting with Orthodox Patriarch Daniel, but while they will pray alongside each other -- one in Latin and the other in Romanian -- the pair will not appear together in public, a sign of their frosty relations.

"The challenge for the pope is to stress to the Orthodox community that the Church of Rome does not want to 'Latinize' it," said Bishop Pascal Gollnisch, director of the Oeuvre d'Orient French charity, which supports Eastern Churches.

"The unity sought is not institutional: the aim is not to bring all Christians together under the Catholic label, but to have everyone recognise each other as Christians," he told AFP.