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Following Jesus Footsteps By CWR Staff Even before Pope John Paul II left Rome to begin his historic March pilgrimage to the Holy Land, there was a palpable sense of excitement among the people of Jordan, Israel, and Palestine, who would soon be his hosts. In Jerusalem, the Latin-rite Patriarch Michel Sabbah encouraged the Catholic faithful to pray for the success of the pilgrimage. At the same time, he cautioned reporters against placing too much emphasis on the political implications of the papal visit. This would be a spiritual pilgrimage, the prelate insisted, not a political mission. And the patriarch did his best to discourage the politicians and journalists who were suggesting the sort of language that they thought would be appropriate for the Pontiffs public statements. What the Pope will say, when he visits the Holocaust museum or the Dheisheh refugee camp, will be decided by the Pope himself, Patriarch Sabbah said. Meanwhile, in Amman, Jordans King Abdullah was telling an Italian Catholic magazine that he was anxiously looking forward to the Popes visit. Thenquickly injecting a political note the king added that Jerusalem should one day be the capital of both Israel and a Palestinian state. The Jordanian ruler told Famiglia Cristiana, The city must remain the symbol of peace and hope for the whole region and must not be the exclusive capital of one people at the expense of the other. He added, We believe that in Jerusalem, there is room for two capitals of two independent states. Yasser Arafat, too, was making last-minute plans for the papal visit. During an earlier visit at the Vatican, the Palestinian leader had invited Pope John Paul to visit the ancient city of Jericho. The Holy See did not provide an immediate response to that invitation, and as the final details for the Popes visit were being planned, rumors circulated in Rome about a possible last-minute addition to the schedule: presumably a trip to Jericho. Any such trip would involve serious security concerns, and raise unavoidable political overtones; the area surrounding Jericho has been troubled by tensions since the killing of Muslim worshipers by a Jewish fanatic there. On March 15 Italian reporters broke the story that the Pope would not visit Jericho itself, but he would make a short, quiet trip to nearby al-Maghtas, on the Jordan River. Al-Maghtas is one of two sites which pose rival claims to represent the spot where Jesus was baptized by St. John the Baptist. (Christians in Jordan lay claim to a different site on the opposite bank of the river, Wadi al-Kharrar, as the spot of the baptism.) The final days of preparation for the papal visit also saw a flurry of activity on restoration projects, especially in Jerusalem. In a rare display of ecumenical harmony, the joint custodians of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre had worked together to make that ancient church ready for the Popes visit. And on March 16 restoration officials announced the completion of a $1 million project to refurbish the Via Dolorosa. Chief architect Peter Bugod said the projects designers had been careful to preserve it as a road you have to make an effort to walk on. Workers installed lighted numbers pointing out nine of the 14 stations marking the spots along the Way of the Cross; the last five stations are located inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Jerusalem was ready to receive its distinguished guest. Police patrols had been reinforced to provide extra security for the papal delegation. Sidewalk shops near the Church of the Holy Sepulchre had been ordered to close during the Popes visit, to relieve the crush of traffic. A special Popemobile had been designed: a slim vehicle, custom-made to carry the Pontiff through the narrow cobbled streets of the Old City, many of which are not wide enough to accommodate ordinary vehicles. Arrival in Jordan Finally the time arrived, and the historic trip began. Pope John Paul arrived in Amman, Jordan, early in the afternoon of March 20, beginning his long-awaited pilgrimage. The Popes plane arrived at the Amman airport after a four-hour flight from Rome; it was accompanied on the last leg of that flight by an escort of Mirage jets from the Jordanian air force. At an airport welcoming ceremony, the Holy Father was greeted by King Abdullah II as he stepped off the plane, and the two walked together down a long red carpet to meet other waiting dignitaries under a large colored tent. In his formal remarks, the Pope noted that since the beginning of my ministry as Bishop of Rome, I have had a great desire to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. For months the Holy Father had pointed toward the Jubilee year as the time for that pilgrimage, but in fact at the very beginning of his papacy, in 1978, he expressed the wish that he might sometime be able to celebrate Christmas in Bethlehem. Addressing himself directly to King Abdullah, and saluting both the current king and his father, King Hussein, for their efforts on behalf of peace in the Middle East, the Pope said that all believersChristian, Muslim, and Jewish should recognize themselves as one people and one single family. He added that in the Middle East, there are serious and urgent questions regarding justice, the rights of peoples and of nations, which must be resolved for the welfare of everyone involved. The resolution to these problems, he said, is a condition for a durable peace. King Abdullah, in his own remarks, welcomed the Pontiff as a man of peace as well as a believer in God and a symbol of all that is pure and noble in this life. Speaking more explicitly about the peace process, he said that he hoped for a solution that would give hope to the Palestinian people in their desire for justice, while guaranteeing the security of Israel and the stability and integrity of Lebanon. He also mentioned the suffering of the people of Iraq under an American-led embargo. On March 20, John Paul made his pilgrimage to Mount Nebowhere, like Moses, he looked out over the Promised Land. Situated about 15 miles southwest of Amman, in the middle of the Jordan River valley, Mount Nebo is about 2500 feet high, and from the peak one can see far into the hills of Judea and Samaria. Although the Popes visit came on a sunny day, a bit of haze in the distance obscured the view of Bethlehem, Jericho, the Dead Sea, and the skyline of Jerusalem. But the Pope did his best to make out the various sites, aided by a local Franciscan priest who pointed out various landmarks to him. About 20 Franciscan monks welcomed the Pope to Mount Nebo, where a small metal shelter has been built around the ruins of a 6th-century sanctuarywhich in turn was built on the site traditionally believed to be where Moses stopped to look into the Promised Land before his death. There, inside the ancient walls, the Pope and the bishops of Jordan took part in a short prayer service, and the Pope prayed on the spot marked as the burial place of Moses. A childrens choir sang Latin and Arabic chants for the service. After the ceremony, the Pope greeted each youngster individuallydoing so with obvious enjoyment. The following day, the Holy Father celebrated Mass in a downtown athletic stadium in Amman. During the celebrationwhich honored St. John the Baptist, the patron saint of Jordanthe Pope presided at the First Communion of 2,000 children. In total, about 35,000 people attended the Mass. When the Pope first arrived in the stadium, riding in his Popemobile, there was an enthusiastic welcome, and as he rode in a circuit around the facility, dozens of young people ran after the carwith security officials allowing unusual freedom to the crowd. In his homily, delivered in English, the Holy Father spoke of the biblical importance of the land now known as Jordan. He pointed out that the city of Amman, identified in the Old Testament as Rabba, was the spot where King David lived when he took Bathsheba as his wife, and caused the death of her husband Ur the Hittite. Then the Pontiff went on to point out that God had mercy on King David despite his sin. He went on to recall how many prophets had testified to the faithlessness of Gods peopleup to and including St. John the Baptist, the voice crying out in the wilderness. The Pope closed this line of thought with the observation that Jesus himself preached in Jordan. On March 21 the Pope wrapped up his visit to Jordan with an afternoon trip to Wadi al-Kharrar. In 1997, archeologists reached the conclusion that Wadi al-Kharrarwhich is located well below sea level, not far from the Dead Seacould be the site of Jesus baptism. The archeologists, teaming with Franciscans from the Studium Biblicum on Mount Nebo, discovered the remains of churches on the site, including a 4th-century Byzantine monastery and some caves of the sort that were occupied by hermits. An ambitious restoration project was quickly undertaken to open the site for visitors in time for the Jubilee. The Popes visit did not settle a dispute between proponents of two different sites which lay claim to being the spot of Christs baptism. Pope John Paul showed no interest in injecting himself into that archeological dispute. Instead, he remarked that while the two banks of the rivers are visited by groups of pilgrims, nevertheless they all give honor to the baptism of our Lord. On to Jerusalem As he arrived in Tel Aviv to continue his historic pilgrimage into Israel, Pope John Paul said to his hosts: We must struggle always and everywhere to present the true face of Jews and Judaism, of Christians and Christianity, at every level of understanding, teaching, and communication. The Holy Father arrived at the Tel Aviv airport in the afternoon on March 21, after a half-hour flight from Jordan. In an airport ceremony held in a light rain, the Pontiff was welcomed by Israels President Ezer Weizman and Prime Minister Ehud Barak. In his remarks, the Pope summarized the purposes of his visit to the Holy Land. My dear Israeli brothers, he said, it is with profound emotion that I touch the soil of the land were God chose to place his tent, thus allowing man to meet him in the most direct manner. Emphasizing his strong desire to visit the Holy Land during the 2000th anniversary of the birth of Christ, the Pope stressed that this visit was a personal pilgrimage that would take the Bishop of Rome to the origins of our faith in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Pontiff added that his own personal pilgrimage could be seen as homage to the three religious traditions that coexist on this land. He prayed that my visit will contribute to the growth of inter-religious dialogue which in turn could help to furnish the motivation and perseverance to work for that peace and that justice that all the peoples of the Holy Land do not yet have, but to which they all fervently aspire. Speaking in Hebrew, Israeli President Weizman welcomed Pope John Paul II to his country, as darkness gathered and a soft rain fell on the airport. The Israeli head of state observed that Israel is the spiritual center of the Jewish people, and said that in the Jewish state there is peace and serenity among the believers of all faiths. He added: It is important that the sons and daughters of the Church understand the reality of modern Israel. He praised Pope John Paul for your contribution to the condemnation of anti-Semitism as a sin against heaven and against humanity. And he added his praise for your plea for pardon for the past actions committed against the Jews by members of the Church. After the airport greeting ceremony at which he met personally with leaders of the Israeli government, the local Catholic hierarchy, the rabbis of Jerusalem, and the Muslim leaders of the regionPope John Paul boarded a helicopter for the trip to Jerusalem, where he would spend the next several nights at the residence of the apostolic nuncio. Just after the Popes arrival, Patriarch Michel Sabbah said that the Pope has a prophetic voice, and political leaders should listen to him. The patriarch, who is an Arab himself, made a particularly forceful statement on the status of Jerusalema bone of contention between Israel and the Holy See. He remarked that religious freedom is not adequate in the city. The patriarch argued that everyone, Israeli or Palestinian, should have the same rights; no one should have the impression that he is not welcome in Jerusalem. The patriarch continued by observing that while Pope John Paul does not often speak in political terms, he carries a message of truth and of justice that should guide politicians. The Palestinian cause Few people were as anxious to hear that message of truth and justice as the residents of the Dheisheh refugee camp. I cant even begin to describe the atmosphere in Dheisheh, one resident told reporters on the eve of a papal visit on March 22. It is so exciting to be here so exciting. Pope John Paul arrived on Palestinian soil on March 22, and immediately expressed his sympathy for the plight of the Palestinian people. Peace for the Palestinian people! Peace for all peoples of the region! the Holy Father said as he arrived in Bethlehem. No one can ignore how much the Palestinian people have had to suffer in recent decades. Your torment is before the eyes of the world, and it has gone on too long. The Pontiff was warmly greeted by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at his presidential palace. After the short helicopter ride from Jerusalem, where he was staying during his trip to the Holy Land, the Pope kissed the Palestinian soil offered to him by a pair of young children in a bowla custom he has developed since his declining health made it impossible for him to kneel and kiss the ground of each new country he visited. Papal spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls cautioned reporters should not interpret that gesture as a signal of Vatican recognition for the Palestinian state. Rather, he said, It would be strange if the Pope did not embrace the ground of the place where Jesus was born. The Holy See has always recognized that the Palestinian people have the natural right to a homeland, the Pontiff told Arafat and his guests. He added that my predecessors and I have repeatedly claimed that there would be no end to the sad conflict in the Holy Land without stable guarantees for the rights of all the peoples involved, on the basis of international law and the relevant United Nations resolutions and declarations. From Bethlehem the Pontiff traveled to the Dheisheh camp, which was built in 1948 to accommodate Palestinians driven from their villages during the quest for Israeli statehood. After a quick tour through the campwhich now has 8,000 inhabitantsthe Pope stopped in a cinder-block schoolroom to make his remarks about the degrading conditions in which the refugees have now been living for more than half a century. Only a resolute commitment on the part of the leaders of the Middle East, and of the international community in general, can solve the causes of your current situation, the Pope said. He then issued a call for all political leaders to make their contributions to the peace process. The Pope saluted the humanitarian agencies which work with Palestinian refugees, urging them do not be discouraged. In particular he singled out the Catholic services and the UNs Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees, which helps to administer dozens of camps in the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syriaserving a total of over two million Palestinian refugees. I pray that my visit will bring you a bit of consolation in your suffering, the Pope told the residents of the Dheisheh camp. He also said that he hoped his visit would call public attention to the plight of the refugee population. At the conclusion of his remarks, the Pope spoke extemporaneously for several minutes, concentrating his attention on the young people in his audience. You can never allow yourselves to think that your current condition makes you any less important in the eyes of God, he assured them. A trip to Bethlehem Pope John Paul celebrated Mass on March 22 in the basilica built upon the spot in Bethlehem where Jesus was born. The ancient Basilica of the Nativity, in Manger Square, faces a small mosque on the opposite side of the square. The church is jointly maintained by Latin-rite Catholics, Greek Orthodox, and Armenian Orthodox clergy. Bethlehem is at the center of my Jubilee pilgrimage, the Pope commented during his homily. This is the place, he observed, where the eternal entered into history, to remain with us forever. The birth of Jesus was not a manifestation of earthly power, the Holy Father remarked. On the contrary, the Lord was born amidst poverty and neglect; his kingdom was not to be an earthly kingdom but a victory of good over evil, the definitive victory over sin and death. And that victory, he continued, can transform our weak nature and make us capable of living in peace with one another and in communion with God. The papal Mass was briefly interrupted, just as the Holy Father finished his homily, when the muezzin at the Omar Mosque on the opposite side of the square began his noon-time call to prayer. The Pope and the hundreds of Christians who had crowded into the basilica waited for several minutes in prayerful silence until the muezzins call ended. The organizers of the papal trip were not at all disturbed by the interruption. On the contrary, Joaquin Navarro-Valls observed that the muezzins call, and the silent Catholic reaction, were just something that happened, in a very mutual and respectful way. Patriarch Sabbah suggested that the Islamic call to prayer, heard in the midst of a Catholic service, symbolized the unity of the Palestinian people across religious lines. We spoke of love and the muezzin said Allah Akbar, and both are an assertion of Muslim and Christian unity within this city, said the patriarch. Even before reaching Bethlehem, Pope John Paul had made his short, unpublicized visit to al-Maghtas. That visitwhich was deliberately downplayed because of the intense emotions surrounding the ancient town of Jerichoallowed just enough time for the Holy Father to comment on the significance of baptism. Archbishop Pietro Sambi, the apostolic nuncio in the Holy Land and one of the few people to accompany the Pontiff on his visit, described a very simple, but powerfully moving ceremony. Remembering the Holocaust In an emotional appearance on March 23 at Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, Pope John Paul emphasized that the Catholic Church, motivated by the Gospel law of truth and love, is deeply saddened by the hatred, acts of persecution and displays of anti-Semitism directed against the Jews by Christians at any time and in any place. Early in the morning, the Holy Father had enjoyed a friendly meeting with Israeli President Ezer Weizman. But as he arrived at Yad Vashem, the Pontiffs face was grave. He stopped to pray in silence for several moments before laying a floral wreath in front of an eternal flame in the memorials Hall of Remembrance. Accompanied by Israels Prime Minister Ehud Barak, the Pope also met with a number of Holocaust survivors. Among the several hundred people present for the occasion was Jerzy Kluger, a Jewish boyhood friend of the Popes. Many of the spectators wept freely as the Pope completed his tour and made his remarks. In this place of memories, the mind and heart and soul feel an extreme need for silence, the Pope remarked. Silence because there are no words strong enough to deplore the terrible tragedy of the Shoah. Recalling that he had lived with Jewish friends and neighbors as a young boy, and seen many of them disappear, the Pope continued: I have come to Yad Vashem to pay homage to the millions of Jewish people whostripped of everything, especially of human dignitywere murdered in the Holocaust. More than half a century has passed, but the memories remain. The Pope continued: No one can forget or ignore what happened. No one can diminish its scale. We wish to remember. But we wish to remember for a purpose, namely to ensure that never again will evil prevail, as it did for the millions of innocent victims of Nazism. Implicitly rejecting the widespread complaint that the Holocaust was a consequence of
Christian contempt for the Jews, the Pope asked: How could man have such utter
contempt for man? Then he answered his own question: Because he had reached
the point of contempt for God. Only a godless ideology could plan and carry out the
extermination of a whole people. Aharon Lopez, the Israeli ambassador to the Holy See, later told a Roman news agency that he had wept freely during the Popes visit to Yad Vashem. I have been to Yad Vashem more than 100 times, but each time is always like the first, and I am not ashamed to weep there, Lopez told the I Media agency. He repeated that the Popes appearance there was very movingvery moving. Into Galilee The Holy Father celebrated Mass on the Mount of the Beatitudes on March 24, with an estimated 100,000 young people in attendance. The outdoor location for the Mass, on the hill overlooking the Sea of Galilee, was soaked by rain on the previous day. Nevertheless, thousands of young people gathered there, beginning on the night before the celebration, bringing plastic sheets and cardboard boxes to protect themselves from the mud. The Fides news service observed that the enormous crowdpossibly the largest in Israels historywas a sort of dress rehearsal for the next World Youth Day in August in Rome. Most of the congregation came from Israel and the Palestinian territories, although thousands also came from nearby countries such as Lebanon and Syria. There were also groups arriving on pilgrimages from Europe (an estimated 17,000 from Italy, 9,000 from Spain) and even American (10,000) and Asian (1,000) countries. Dozens of lay groups were in evidence, among them Communion and Liberation, Opus Dei, and Focolare. But the largest single presence was that of the Neo-Catechumenal Way, which is building a large new seminary and study center nearby in the hills of Galilee. As he arrived at the Mount of the Beatitudes, approaching from the nearby town of Korazim where his helicopter had landed, Pope John Paul stopped briefly to see the construction site of the study center, which is known as Domus Galilaeae. Kiko Arguello, the founder of the Neo-Catechumenal Way, led in the singing for the young people, playing his guitar, and joined by a variety of other performers on different instruments. In his homily, the Pontiff said that the Sermon on the Mount constitutes a challenge from Christ, prodding the believer toward a great conversion of the heart. He continued, speaking with emphasis: You young people, you know why this change of heart is necessary. He observed that the young people would understand how the voice of conscience conflicts with the message of a materialistic society. Unlike those who suggest that happiness can be gained by self-gratification, the Pope explained, Jesus offers a very different message in the Sermon on the Mount. And moreover, he was not content to proclaim the beatitudes. He lived them. During the afternoon, Pope John Paul II continued his pilgrimage by visiting three sites linked to the New Testament, and particularly to St. Peter. First the Pontiff spent some time at prayer in a 20th-century church on the site of the multiplication of the loaves. The new church, built over the ruins of an early Christian sanctuary, is now served by Benedictine monks. Built in the Byzantine style, the church is decorated with unusually fine mosaics, including one 6th-century piece that depicts the Gospel story of how Jesus fed the crowd. One of the Benedictine monks showed the Pontiff an ancient key, dating back to the end of the 1st century, which was found in the ruins of what is believed to be St. Peters home. Father Bargil Pixner, a renowned archeologist, remarked: This is the key to the first Vatican! Next the Pope visited another church, entrusted to the Franciscans of the Holy Land, built on the spot where, after the Resurrection, Christ told Peter to feed my sheep. This churchon the shore of the Sea of Galileeis dedicated to the primacy of Peter. For that reason, the Pope was particularly insistent on including it in his pilgrimage. Finally, John Paul visited Capharnum, where St. Peter lived as a fisherman before leaving that work behind to follow Christ. There he saw the ruins of another home where Peter once lived, and of the synagogue where Jesus once preached. On Saturday, March 25, Pope John Paul celebrated the feast of the Annunciation with a Mass in the basilica built on the spot in Nazareth where the Virgin Mary received the word that she would be the mother of Christ. John Paul had carefully timed his trip to the Holy Land so that he could spend this day at the Basilica of the Annunciation. That church, which receives one million Christian pilgrims every year, has been the focus of controversy in recent months, because a Muslim activist group has announced plans to build a large mosque on a spot adjacent to the basilica. Nazareth has the heaviest Arabic concentration of any city in Israel, and because Muslim influence is heavy and tensions are high, the Holy Father traveled through the streets in his Popemobile under heavy security. But there were no incidents, and in fact the crowds were large and friendly. Arriving at the basilicaa 20th-century structure, built on the ruins of an ancient sanctuarythe Pope went immediately to the lower story, to the crypt that is recognized as the place where the Annunciation actually took place. There he knelt on the ground and kissed the spot where a Latin inscription relates that the Incarnation occurred: Verbum caro hic factum estHere the Word became flesh. Then the Pontiff moved to a prie-dieu that had been set in the crypt for him, and remained for some moments in silent prayer, with his head in his trembling hands. After that private prayer, the Pope celebrated Mass in the Latin rite (the most common rite for the Christians of Nazareth). In his homily he spoke of the joy he felt at visiting the site of the Annunciation. Today, the eyes of the whole Church are turned toward Nazareth, he reminded the Christians of that Galilean town. And he spoke of how the Virgin Mary, like the patriarch Abraham, had willingly served the will of God, helping to carry out the divine plan. Immediately after this homily, the congregation joined the Pope in the recitation of the Nicene Creed. Upon reaching the words and became man, the Pope fell to his knees, again recalling the Incarnation in his prayer. And at the conclusion of the Mass, he led the Angelus, again recalling the words spoken by the angel Gabriel to Mary. After the ceremony, Patriarch Michel Sabbah asked the Popes blessing on the common pastoral plan approved by the bishops of the Holy Land at their synod. That synod, which began in 1995 and concluded just one month ago in Bethlehem, called for renewed cooperation among Catholics of the different rites represented in the Holy Land. Meetings with other religious leaders At a meeting with the religious leaders of the three major faiths represented in Jerusalem, Pope John Paul said that inter-religious cooperation could be an immense benefit for the cause of peace in the region. The Pope spoke to a March 23 meeting of Christians, Jews, and Muslims at the Notre Dame Center in the Old City of Jerusalem. Addressing an overflow crowd in a room that holds 500 people, he said: We are truly entering into a new era of inter-religious dialogue. Flanked by Rabbi Meir Lau, a leader of the Ashkenazic Jewish community; and Taizir al Tamin, the head judge of the top Palestinian Muslim tribunal, the Pope repeated his frequent assurances that he understands how the city of Jerusalem is held as sacred by the representatives of the three great monotheistic faiths. He also admitted: We understand all the misunderstandings and conflicts of the past, and we know that they still bear a heavy influence on relations among Jews, Christians, and Muslims. However, the Pope continued, believers of all these faiths must find in our respective religious traditions the understanding and the desire to work toward mutual understanding. He suggested that a keen awareness of past offenses should help religious leaders to understand the need to cooperate in building a new climate of mutual respect. At an ecumenical meeting of Christian leaders, hosted by the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem on March 25, Pope John Paul II issued a vigorous new call for ecumenical cooperation. In the Holy Land, where Christians live side by side with the faithful of Judaism and of Islam, and where there are tensions and conflicts nearly every day, it is essential to overcome the scandalous impression caused by our dissension and our controversies, the Holy Father said. Nearly 200 people were on hand for the meeting at which Patriarch Diodoros I and Pope John Paul served as chairmen. Also included were the Armenian Apostolic Patriarch Torkom II, and representatives of the Coptic and Syrian Orthodox churches. Diodoros, despite his own illness, had provided the Pope with a warm welcome to the throne room of the Orthodox patriarchate. Speaking in Greek, with a translator rendering his words into English for the benefit of the audience, the patriarch said that the visit by John Paul was without any doubt a historic event. Although the ecumenical encounter ended on a cordial note, there was at least one small sign of discord. The apostolic nuncio in the Holy Land, Archbishop Pietro Sambi, had suggested that the various religious leaders close their gathering by praying the Lords Prayer, each in his own language. But when the time came for that final prayer, only the Latin Pater Noster could be heard; the other religious leaders had apparently considered the suggestion inappropriate. On March 26, as he began his final day in Jerusalem, Pope John Paul completed his round of visits to other religious leaders by meeting with the leading Muslim official of the ancient city. The Popes talk with Sheikh Ikrimah Sabri took place at the Al Aqsa mosque, on the eastern side of the Temple Mount. This mosque, built in the 7th century, is regarded at the third most sacred site in the world of Islam, after Mecca and Medina. Last days in Jerusalem On March 23, Pope John Paul celebrated Mass in the Cenaclethe upper room in Jerusalem that is the site of the Last Supper. The building in which the Cenacle is located is administered by the Israeli government. There is a lower room, said to mark the tomb of King David, which is the object of pilgrimages for Jewish believers; the building is also the site of a 14th century Franciscan convent. The Cenacle itself is a small Gothic chapel which also dates back to the 14th century. There the Holy Father concelebrated Mass with a dozen bishops from the Holy Land. After the Mass, John Paul spoke of the profound emotion he felt as he said the words of Consecration in the place where they were first said by Jesus himself. The Pope observed that the Eucharist, instituted in that spot, is the greatest treasure of the Church. The Holy Father also indicated that as he celebrated the Mass at the Cenacle, he was thinking of all the worlds priests. Each year, the Pope addresses a letter to the priests of the world, usually signed on Holy Thursday as the Church celebrates the institution of the Holy Eucharist. This year, John Paul signed the letter after his Mass at the Cenacle. The Pope also observed that he was keenly aware of his role as the successor to St. Peter. In a certain sense, he said, Peter and the apostles, through their successors, have come to the upper room of the Cenacle again today to profess the eternal faith of the Church: Christ has died; Christ is risen; Christ will come again. On March 26, before celebrating Mass at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Pope John Paul II visited the Western Wall of the ancient Temple in Jerusalems Old Citythe most sacred site in Judaism. After praying silently at the Wall, the Pope followed Jewish tradition by inserting a small paper, containing a prayer, into a crack in the old stone façade. That prayer was the same one that he had read in St. Peters Basilica during the Day of Pardon ceremony a week earlier: a prayer for Gods forgiveness for the sins committed by Christians against the people of Israel. The Pontiff also joined Jewish leaders in the recitation of Psalm 122, King Davids homage to Jerusalem. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem, he read. The Holy Father then concluded his historic pilgrimage by celebrating Mass at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the basilica built above the spot where Jesus was buried. The Pontiff was greeted at the door by the custodians of the basilica: the Catholic, Greek Orthodox, and Armenian Apostolic administrators who share responsibility for the building. Once inside, the Pontiff headed immediately to the grotto marking Christs tomb. There he knelt in silent prayer, leaning down to kiss the stone. Later, as he celebrated Mass in the basilica, the Holy Father commented on that visit to the tomb. The tomb is empty, he observed. That is a silent witness to the central event in human history: the Resurrection of our savior Jesus Christ. The Pope continued by suggesting that all Christians should look upon the Passion of Christ as an invitation to overcome our divisions and work together to build a future of reconciliation, unity, and peace. Speaking as the successor to St. Peter, he repeated the words of the first Pope: Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. Reflections after the trip Returning to Rome on March 26, the Pope immediately plunged back into his regular work schedule at the Vatican. Papal spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls told reporters on March 28 that the Pontiff had shown no signs of fatigue, despite the heavy schedule of the trip. On Monday, March 27 his first day back in the Vaticanthe Pontiff met with the Secretariat of State, and held a private audience with 8,000 Italian pilgrims. He then began work preparing for his regular Wednesday public audience, at whichfollowing his usual practicehe gave a public accounting of his recent travels. At that audience, the Holy Father left no doubt that he considered his trip to the Holy Land one of the high points of his pontificate. The joy and the understanding that I carry in my soul because of this gift from the Lord, which I had so deeply desired, are impossible to express, the Pontiff told a crowd of pilgrims in St. Peters Square. Describing his week-long trip as a return to the origins, the roots of the faith and of the Church, the Pope retraced each step of his travels. In a certain sense, I began my travels precisely through the view of Moses, he said. Then he visited the Jordan River and the figure of John the Baptist pointed me toward the trail of Christ. He also recalled the Mass that he celebrated in Amman, Jordan, for the Christian minority, which the Pope characterized as rich in religious zeal, and well established within the social context of that country. Next the Pontiff spoke of Bethlehem, the center of attention for the Christian world during this year 2000. He continued: With emotion, I knelt in the grotto of the Nativity, where I felt the spiritual presence of the entire Church, of all the poor people of the world, at the site where God chose to plant his tentthe God who, in order to lead us toward him, made himself an exile and a refugee. Those thoughts of refugees and exiles remained with him, the Pope revealed, as he toured the Palestinian refugee camp just outside Bethlehem. The memory of Jerusalem is indelibly impressed on my spirit, the Pope continued. He observed that the stones of that ancient city are mute yet eloquent witnesses to the central and culminating event in the history of salvation: the Paschal mystery of Christ. Last Sundaythe Lords dayI renewed the proclamation of salvation which echoes down the centuries and millennia: Christ is risen! the Pope said. He went on: That was the moment when my pilgrimage reached its high point. And that is why I felt the need to return to pray that afternoon on Calvary, where Christ shed his blood for mankind.
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