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Text at Pope’s Good Friday service scrapped after Ukrainian protest

Rome, Italy
Reuters

A Ukrainian and a Russian woman took part in Pope Francis’ Good Friday “Way of the Cross” service, but the meditation they wrote was scrapped after Ukrainians protested, saying the war made it inopportune.

The traditional Via Crucis procession at Rome’s Colosseum had become embroiled in controversy earlier this week when the programme showed that the two friends, a nurse and a student nurse at a Rome hospital, would take part.

Italy Rome Way of the Cross

Ukrainian and Russian women carry a cross as they attend the Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) procession during Good Friday celebrations, at Colosseum, in Rome, Italy, on 15th April. PICTURE: Reuters/Guglielmo Mangiapane

The candlelight service consists of the 14 Stations of the Cross, stages between the condemnation of Jesus to death and his burial. It is often customised so that those who carry the cross from one station to the next reflect world events.

Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, head of Ukraine’s Byzantine-rite Catholic Church, called their inclusion inopportune and ambiguous because it did not “take into account the context of Russia’s military aggression against Ukraine”.



The original text of the meditation the two women had written spoke of death, loss of values, rage, resignation, and reconciliation despite bombings.

Shevchuk said the text, which had been approved by the Vatican, was “incoherent and even offensive, especially in the context of the expected second, even bloodier attack of Russian troops on our cities and villages”.

Ukraine’s ambassador to the Vatican, Andrii Yurash, also expressed his unease.

On Friday night, the original text of some 200 words was replaced with two sentences: “Faced with death, silence is the most eloquent of words. Let us all paused in silent prayer and each one pray in their hearts for peace in the world”.

The crowd of several thousands people then fell silent for about as long as it would have taken to read the original, longer meditation.

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Pope Francis presides over the Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) torchlight procession on Good Friday in front of Rome’s Colosseum, in Rome, on Friday, 15th April. PICTURE: AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia.

Francis sat and watched the procession sitting on white chair.

In his own final prayer, he asked God to allow “adversaries to shake hands so they can taste mutual forgiveness, to disarm the hand raised by a brother against a brother, so that concord can spring from where there is now hate.”


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Since the war began, Francis has only mentioned Russia explicitly in prayers, such as during a special global event for peace on 25th March. But he has made clear his opposition to Russia’s actions, using the words invasion, aggression and atrocities.

Moscow calls it actions in Ukraine a “special military operation” designed not to occupy territory but to demilitarise and “denazify” the country. Francis has implicitly rejected this definition.

Italy Rome Pope Francis Way of the Cross2

A view of the Colosseum where Pope Francis presided over the Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) torchlight procession on Good Friday in front of Rome’s Colosseum, in Rome, on Friday,15th April. PICTURE: AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia.

The War in Ukraine is expected to continue to cast a shadow over the pope’s remaining Holy Week activities.

On Saturday evening Francis will lead an Easter Vigil Mass in the basilica.

On Easter Sunday, the most important day in the Christian liturgical calendar, he will say Mass in St Peter’s Square and then deliver his twice-yearly Urbi et Orbi (To the city and the world) message and blessing.

 

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