On Wednesday, Pope Francis said that Canada is in the process of “writing a new page” in the relationship between the Catholic Church and indigenous peoples.
Newsroom (05/08/2022 7:00 AM Gaudium Press) Speaking during his general audience in Vatican City on Aug. 3, the pope said that his pastoral visit to Canada last week was “a different journey” from the other 36 international trips of his pontificate.
“There were many joyful moments, but the sense and tone, on the whole, was one of reflection, repentance, and reconciliation,” he reflected.
The pope told the crowd that his main motivation for the July 24-29 trip to Edmonton, Québec, and Iqaluit was to be close to the indigenous peoples and “to ask for forgiveness (…) for the harm done to them by those Christians, including many Catholics, who in the past collaborated in the forced assimilation and enfranchisement policies of the governments of the time.”
“In this sense, Canada has embarked on the process of writing a new page, an important page, in the journey that the Church has been making together with the indigenous peoples for some time,” Francis added.
“From this journey of memory, reconciliation, and healing springs hope for the Church, in Canada and everywhere,” he said.
Pope Francis said that he saw a sign of hope, particularly in his last meeting with the young and the elderly “in the land of the Inuit.“
“Also in Canada, this is a key combination, it is a sign of the times: young and old in dialogue to walk together in history between memory and prophecy,” he said.
“May the fortitude and pacific action of the indigenous peoples of Canada be an example for all indigenous peoples not to close themselves up, but to offer their indispensable contribution for a more fraternal humanity, that knows how to love creation and the Creator, in harmony with creation, in harmony between you all.”
– Raju Hasmukh
(With files from CNA)