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Pope shares his most beautiful memory of the last 10 years

Pope Audience
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I.Media - published on 03/13/23
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His election "seems like yesterday," comments the Pope, who notes, "Time is in a hurry."

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"Peace, we need peace," Pope Francis pleas as an anniversary wish in a podcast published by Vatican News on March 13, 2023, the 10th anniversary of his election. In this 10-minute meditative recording, which completes the list of media to which the Pope has given an interview in recent days, he also returns to the "most beautiful" memory of his pontificate.

The anniversary is a Vatican holiday; only one event was scheduled on Pope Francis' official agenda: Mass with the cardinals in the chapel of the Casa Santa Marta, where he lives. The homily was not made public. Instead, the Vatican media published this podcast, recorded with journalist Salvatore Cernuzio.

His election on March 13, 2013 -- "It seems like yesterday," reflects the Argentine Pontiff, who comments philosophically on time. "Time is pressing, it's in a hurry, and when you want to grasp today, it's already yesterday. And if you want to grasp tomorrow, it is not yet here."

The Pope situates his pontificate "in this tension between yesterday and tomorrow."

He recounts his "most beautiful" memory of the decade: The meeting in St. Peter's Square with the elderly on September 28, 2014, which was also attended by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

"The elderly are wisdom and they help me so much," he assures, paying tribute to the elderly who "are like good wine, who have a matured history." And, he quips: "The meetings with the elderly make me younger."

As for the "bad moments" of his pontificate, the Pope links them to war. He recalls with sadness his visit to the cemetery of Redipuglia on September 13, 2014, and then to the American cemetery of Nettuno, where he celebrated Mass on November 2, 2017. He also says he is marked by the 75th anniversary of the Normandy landings celebrated on June 6, 2019.

"I think of the mothers, who received a letter: Madam I have the honor to tell you that you are the mother of a hero … The letter, the medal -- but the son is no more," he denounces.

The 266th pope, who has never ceased to deplore what he calls our "Third World War, in piecemeal," confesses that he did not expect to find a world so torn apart. "I thought Syria was an isolated case, and then there was Yemen, and then I saw the tragedy of the Rohingyas, Burma…" he notes.

He also mentions the Russian-Ukrainian war: "It makes me suffer to see the dead, the young people - both Russians and Ukrainians, it doesn't matter, both of them - who don't come back."

And, he asserts, "Behind the wars there is the arms industry."

"It is diabolical."

The head of the Catholic Church expresses three wishes for the world: "fraternity, tears, and smiles."

He encourages us "not to be afraid to cry and to smile."

"A person who knows how to cry and smile is someone who has his feet on the ground and his eyes on the horizon of the future. If a person forgets to cry, it's no good … and it's even worse when you forget to smile," he concludes.

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