Kuwait City - Arab Today
Six million people turned out to see the pope at Rizal Park and along motorcade routes, surpassing the world record for a papal gathering of five million.
Pope Francis drew a record six million people as he celebrated mass in the rain-swept Philippine capital on Sunday, a triumphant finale to an Asian tour in which he championed the plight of the poor.
Filipinos are famous for practising a passionate brand of Catholicism and they turned out in a celebratory mood that defied the gloomy skies, determined to see the charismatic 78-year-old pontiff
Francis made an exhilarating entrance to a Manila bayside park for the mass aboard a “popemobile” that was styled after the nation’s iconic, flamboyant and much-loved “jeepney” minibus.
Dressed in a plastic yellow poncho, he waved and smiled to wildly cheering crowds, stopping repeatedly so he could lean over barriers and kiss babies, before reaching the sea of believers at Rizal Park.
The Philippines is famed as the Catholic Church’s bastion in Asia, with 80 per cent of the former Spanish colony following the faith. But even the pope was stunned at the size of the crowd which he looked out on from the stage.
“I cannot fathom the faith of the simple people,” Francis said, according to the Archbishop of Manila, Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, who acted as the pontiff’s chaperone.
Six million turned out to see the pope at the park and along motorcade routes, the head of Manila’s planning agency, Francis Tolentino, said, adding this was based on calculations done with the police.
This surpassed the previous world record for a papal gathering of five million during a mass by John Paul II at the same venue in 1995.
Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said Sunday’s crowd could even reach seven million. However he did not have any firm assessments to base this on.
Perla Ponce, 76, a retired nurse who travelled hundreds of kilometres from her home in the southern Philippines, said she felt “euphoric” to have seen the pope and been a part of the mass.
Volunteer rescue worker Kristine Bancure had been on duty as a medic through the day but also got a glimpse of the pope. “It’s an overwhelming feeling. I felt the hair on my skin standing up,” she said.
In his homily, the pope praised Filipinos for their reverence. “The Philippines is the foremost Catholic country in Asia. This is itself a special gift of God, a blessing,” the pontiff told the vast crowd.
He also spoke out against “poverty, ignorance and corruption”, a theme he has focused on repeatedly during his five-day visit to the Philippines.
In his first speech of his tour, at the presidential palace, Francis lectured the nation’s politicians to show integrity and end “scandalous social inequalities”.
About 25 million Filipinos, or one quarter of the population, live on the equivalent of 60 cents a day or less, according to government data.
Before the mass, the pope had an emotional encounter with former street children at an event at a Catholic university.
The pope called on people to show tangible, genuine concern for the poor and marginalised. “(There are) certain realities in life we only see through eyes that are cleansed with our tears,” he said.
The pope said the main reason for visiting the Philippines was to meet survivors of Super Typhoon Haiyan, the strongest storm ever recorded on land which claimed more than 7,350 lives in November 2013.
He flew on Saturday morning from Manila to Leyte island, ground zero for the typhoon, and celebrated a deeply emotional mass with 200,000 survivors.
“Long live the pope!” the crowd chanted before the mass.
Francis had planned to spend a full day in communities where homes were flattened by monster winds and tsunami-like ocean surges, but was forced to return to Manila to avoid another tropical storm.
Still, he was deeply moved by his truncated time in the typhoon areas and felt privileged to have made the trip, Cardinal Tagle told reporters.
The pope’s tour, which also took him to Sri Lanka, was his second trip to Asia in five months, in a nod to the region’s growing importance for the Church as it faces declining support in Europe and the United States
Source: KUNA