Pope sends official to Lampedusa where migrants’ boat sank

09 Oct 2013

By The Record

Stuffed animals are seen on top of coffins of children sitting alongside coffins of other African migrants Oct. 5 who drowned two days earlier trying to reach Italian shores in Lampedusa, Italy. Refugees and migrants pay the highest price in conflicts around the world and it is in the Catholic Church’s DNA to provide them humanitarian aid and prayerful support, according to speakers on Oct. 4 at a U.N. event. PHOTO: CNS/Antonio Parrinello, Reuters

By Cindy Wooden

As efforts to recover the bodies of migrants who drowned off Italy’s southern coast continued, Pope Francis again asked people to pray for the victims and he sent his almoner to Lampedusa to pray over the 194 corpses recovered as of Oct. 6 and to visit the survivors.

During his midday Angelus address Oct. 6, Pope Francis asked the thousands who joined him in St. Peter’s Square for the Marian prayer to join him for a moment of silence.

“We remember those who lost their lives in Lampedusa,” the pope said. “Let us all pray silently for these brothers and sisters of ours — men, women and children. Let our hearts cry for them.”

The boat, reportedly carrying more than 500 migrants from northern Africa, capsized Oct. 3 and sank near Lampedusa, Italy’s southernmost island. After interviewing the 155 survivors in a migrant reception center on the island, Italian officials said someone set a fire on the boat to signal a problem; when too many of the passengers moved away from the fire to one side of the boat, it capsized.

Rough seas caused some delays in the effort to recovery bodies. The bodies of more than 100 men, women and children were believed to be still trapped in the wreckage as of Oct. 7.

Archbishop Konrad Krajewski, the official Pope Francis appointed in August to be his almoner and distribute charity, traveled to Lampedusa as a sign of the pope’s personal concern for the dead, the survivors and the coast guard and humanitarian workers at the scene.

Pope Francis had visited the island in early July after seeing newspaper headlines in June describing the drowning of immigrants at sea. Lampedusa is only about 70 miles from Tunisia and often is the first port of entry for migrants trying to reach Europe from Africa. The United Nations estimates that more than 20,000 migrants trying to reach Europe have drowned in the Mediterranean in the past 25 years. – CNS