Pope Francis thrills small Gulf Catholic community with big Mass
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[November 05, 2022]
By Philip Pullella
AWALI, Bahrain (Reuters) -Pope Francis said
Mass for thousands of Catholics in Bahrain on Saturday, thrilling
members of the small foreign Catholic community from around the Gulf and
urging them to show kindness to their hosts, even if they feel sometimes
badly treated.
The crowd of about 30,000 people that filled Bahrain's National Stadium
was the second-largest gathering for a papal Mass on the Arabian
Peninsula, following one that drew more than 100,000 in the United Arab
Emirates in 2019.
"This is a miracle," said Mary Grace Fortes, 36, a Filipino who works at
the reception of a hotel in Bahrain. "So important for us."
Like many Filipino women who work outside their country, Fortes is
married and sends money back home to help support her family, including
her husband and 16-year-old son.
Hundreds of Catholic foreign workers were bussed in over the 25-km (16
mile) King Fahd Causeway that links Bahrain with Saudi Arabia, where
there are no churches and where Catholics cannot worship openly.
"The Bahrainis arranged everything perfectly for us," said Jos Chazoor,
53, who is from Kerala in India and works as a manager for a medical
equipment company in Saudi Arabia.
Chazoor's 75-year-old mother was too overcome with emotion to respond to
a reporter's questions just before the pope arrived in the packed
stadium to an enthusiastic welcome by faithful waving yellow-and-white
Vatican flags.
"She is too thrilled to talk," said Chazoor, who drives with his mother
over the causeway from Saudi Arabia regularly to attend Mass in one of
Bahrain's two churches, which provide pastoral care for the some 160,000
Catholics in Bahrain.
In his homily, Francis appeared to praise Bahrain's relatively open
policy towards non-Muslims.
"This very land is a living image of coexistence in diversity, and
indeed an image of our world, increasingly marked by the constant
migration of peoples and by a pluralism of ideas, customs and
traditions," he said.
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Pope Francis greets people as he attends
a holy mass at Bahrain National Stadium during his apostolic
journey, in Riffa, Bahrain, November 5, 2022. REUTERS/Hamad I
Mohammed
Foreign workers, many of them from Asia, provide the backbone of
Gulf economies, working in sectors such as construction,
hospitality, transport and the oil and gas sector.
The International Labour Organisation says the Gulf's migrant
workers have long faced problems including exploitation by
recruitment agencies and employers, poor work conditions, limited
access to justice and limited or no freedom of association.
Francis urged his listeners to be kind even to those native people
in the Gulf area who do not treat them well, saying this was key to
the Gospel message of loving your enemies.
He said they should always be "persevering in good even when evil is
done to us, breaking the spiral of vengeance, disarming violence,
demilitarizing the heart".
As Francis was driven on a open popemobile through the crowd on the
stadium's pitch just before the start of the Mass, a speaker on the
altar platform shouted "God bless the pope, God bless the royal
family."
A Bahrain government spokesperson said 111 nationalities attended
the Mass in the island state, where foreigners comprise about half
of Bahrain's population of roughly 1.5 million.
The prayers of the faithful during the Mass were read in languages
spoken by foreign workers including Tagalog, Swahili, Malayalam,
Tamil and Konkani.
The Mass was attended by one of the sons of King Hamad bin Isa Al
Khalifa and several government ministers.
(Additional reporting by Ghaida Ghantous in Dubai; Editing by
Michael Perry and Mark Potter)
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