Pope to ITA Airways staff: You give wings to the Pope!
By Linda Bordoni
“Thank you for ‘landing” here in the Vatican,” Pope Francis said to the delegation of ITA Airways representatives whom he received in audience on Friday morning.
“In a way,” he said, “you represent ‘the Pope's wings,’ for you enable the Successor of Peter to fly to the ends of the earth carrying the Gospel of hope and peace.”
And indeed, the Pope continued, it was a Pope who bore the saint’s name who boarded an Alitalia DC8 on 4 January 1964 and became the first Pontiff in history to board an aeroplane for an apostolic pilgrimage.
Pope St Paul VI the first Pontiff to fly
He recalled that Pope St. Paul VI harboured a fierce desire to travel to the Holy Land, and at the end of the second session of the Second Vatican Council, he enthusiastically announced his decision to undertake the “short but intense” journey to the Council Fathers.
“That flight, that departed from Rome-Fiumicino and arrived in Amman, inaugurated papal travels across the world”:
After that first journey, Pope Francis continued, St. Paul VI made eight more, touching on every continent.
He then recalled the fact that St. Pope John Paul II made 104 international journeys in his 27 years of pontificate. “This form of mission became an integral part of the pontificate,” he said.
And, he added, it is how his successor, Benedict XVI travelled, and how he too continues to do so.
Upcoming journeys
"In a fortnight, God willing, I will depart for my 41st apostolic pilgrimage to visit Hungary. And then there will be Marseilles, and Mongolia... and other places that are on the waiting list," he said.
The Holy Father noted that ITA – which has recently replaced Alitalia – provides a service that requires competence, care and attention to many details, including “the not-easy logistics!”
He highlighted the fact that it is very important for him “to meet people, to meet communities, the faithful, believers of other religions, women and men of goodwill...”
“Meeting in person, speaking in person, is different from being present with a message, perhaps with a video. It is not the same,” he said.
The Pope concluded by explaining that he travels “to confirm his brothers and sisters in the faith, to be close to those who suffer, to help those who work for peace.”
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