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5 Facts you Should Know about Mongolia, ‘the Heart of Asia’

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Pope Francis has asked for prayers as he prepares to visit “the heart of Asia,” the sparsely-populated country of Mongolia.

Newsroom (28/08/2023 10:00Gaudium Press) The pope will travel approximately 5,600 miles to Ulaanbaatar, the Mongolian capital, from Aug. 31 to Sept. 4.

“It is a much-desired visit,” he said on Aug. 27 after his weekly Angelus address at the Vatican.

The trip, he said, “will be an opportunity to embrace a Church that is small in number but vibrant in faith and great in charity, and also to meet at close quarters a noble, wise people with a strong religious tradition that I will have the honor of getting to know, especially in the context of an interreligious event.”

During the four-day visit, Pope Francis is scheduled to meet with government leaders, engage in interreligious dialogue, and offer Mass for the small Catholic population, which numbers just 1,450 in a country of about 3 million people.

Francis will become the first pope in the history of the Catholic Church to visit Mongolia, a democracy sandwiched between the authoritarian powers of Russia and China.

“I would now like to address you, brothers and sisters of Mongolia, to tell you that I am happy to travel to be among you as a brother of all,” Francis said from a window overlooking St. Peter’s Square.

“I thank your authorities for their kind invitation and those who, with great commitment, are preparing for my arrival,” he added. “I ask all of you to accompany this visit with your prayers.”

Ahead of the pope’s historic trip, here are a few key facts to know about Mongolia.

1) Mongolia has only a few thousand Christians.

Officially, Mongolia is home to just 1,300 Catholics, significantly less than 1% of the country’s 3.3 million people. That’s small, but in the early 1990s, the country had virtually zero native Catholics. This is mainly because of the nation’s communist regime, which lasted from the 1920s until 1990 and repressed all forms of religion, especially the dominant Tibetan Buddhism.

Missionaries reentered the country to begin rebuilding the Catholic community from the ground up after the regime ended, and the Vatican reestablished diplomatic relations with the country in 1992. In 2003, the Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Paul was built; in 2016, the first native-born priest of the modern era was ordained.

Despite the small population, Christianity in Mongolia dates back to the seventh or eighth century when Nestorians (Persian Christians with a great missionary zeal) first visited the area. Catholic Franciscan missionaries preached to Mongolians as early as the 13th century.

More than half of the population identifies as Buddhist, with Muslims making up 3.2%, Shamanist 2.5%, Christian 1.3%, and about 40% claiming no religion, according to the CIA World Factbook.

The Apostolic Prefecture of Ulaanbaatar, a missionary area that does not have enough Catholics to warrant a diocese, has jurisdiction over the entirety of Mongolia. It is led by 49-year-old Cardinal Giorgio Marengo, who is the apostolic prefect and the world’s youngest cardinal. He was given his red hat by Pope Francis in August 2022.

2) There aren’t many people in general: Mongolia is the least densely populated country in the world.

Three million people may sound like a lot, but not for a vast country like Mongolia. Its population density of just two people per square kilometer makes it the emptiest in the world overall. Vast portions of Mongolia consist of an arid and empty steppe environment where cattle graze and the mostly nomadic people are few and far between. Despite this, Ulaanbaatar, the capital, is home to about half of the country’s population and is a relatively large and dense city of 1.6 million.

3) The weather in September in Ulaanbaatar is generally pleasant, but Mongolia is known for its extreme climate.

Situated on a high plateau, the average high temperature in Ulaanbaatar in September is 66 degrees Fahrenheit (19 degrees Celsius), while the low is 36 F (2 C). Overall, though, Ulaanbaatar is the coldest capital city on earth. The country as a whole has a windy, cold, dry, and changeable climate, which is steadily becoming more inhospitable and unpredictable as the global climate changes, forcing more and more people to migrate to the increasingly overcrowded capital city in search of livelihoods.

4) Mongolia isn’t doing great, by most measures.

A majority of the country’s residents live as nomadic livestock herders, a profession that, as previously mentioned, is becoming increasingly difficult. In part this is because of a changing climate but also because of damage to grazing lands due to the proliferation of cashmere goat herding in areas previously dedicated to cattle.

Overcrowding in the capital city, as well as other hardships such as high levels of pollution, has led to a rise in poverty, alcoholism, and domestic abuse among many of the former herders. Christians are sometimes regarded with suspicion, and Mongolia has had to deal with a rise in xenophobic ideologies among its citizens against people coming from its larger neighbor, China.

5) The pope’s full visit schedule has already been released.

Among other activities, Pope Francis will make a courtesy visit to President Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh, briefly meet the chairman of the State Great Khural, which is the Mongolian Parliament, and visit Prime Minister Oyun-Erdene Luvsannamsrai. He will also meet with bishops, priests, missionaries, consecrated persons, and pastoral workers at Sts. Peter and Paul Cathedral, the apostolic see of the prefecture of Ulaanbaatar.

  • Raju Hasmukh with files from CNA
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