Pope greets Rainbow Choir: the elderly are humanity’s memory
A group of elderly people with Alzheimer’s disease, on a pilgrimage to Rome, was welcomed by Pope Francis Wednesday morning in the Vatican’s Paul VI audience hall before he held his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square.
The group from a home in Bonheiden, Belgium, were accompanied by the Rainbow Choir that was born there. The Pope was moved to see the elderly and the choir sing together for him.
A rainbow of imperfection pleasing to God
Alzheimer’s that affects the elderly is marked by dementia. With its singing, the Rainbow Chorus of Bonheiden helps the elderly in the home to come together daily to pray and attend Mass. Singing with the choir members, the elderly find a link that connects their past and present, a memory that their disease often erases. Hence, their singing is a cure. The Pope was moved to hear them sing together.
Speaking to them off the cuff, the Pope said that their singing together was a “consolation,
Tenderness makes us human
Addressing the choirmaster as the “baton of tenderness” the Pope explained how with gestures every conductor on the podium holds the voices or instruments together. In this case, the Pope said, it is a very special gesture, "a gesture of tenderness that makes us all more human":
The Pope pointed out that with all their tenderness, they have fulfilled the fourth commandment – of honouring the elderly who are our memory. Perhaps some of them have lost their memory, but they are the symbol of the memory of a people, they are the roots of their homeland, of our humanity. “They are the roots, and young people must come to them to have the sap from their roots to carry forward the civilization,” the Pope said.
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