Pope prays for people slain in war, recalls Ukrainian soldier Oleksandr
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
"In my hands, I hold a rosary and a New Testament left by a soldier who died in the war. This young man was named Oleksandr - Alexander: 23 years old."
Pope Francis shared this detail before concluding his Wednesday General Audience in the Vatican, as he remembered the countless dead in Russia's war in Ukraine.
"Oleksandr," the Pope reflected, "read the New Testament and the Psalms, and he had underlined in the Book of Psalms, Psalm 129: 'Out of the depths, I cry to you, Lord; Lord, hear my voice.'"
This 23-year-old, the Holy Father shared, "died in Avdiivka in the war."
'He left behind a life'
"He left behind a life," the Pope said, revealing that "this is his rosary and his New Testament, which he read, and with which he prayed."
The Holy Father invited the faithful in St. Peter's Square to join him in observing a moment of silence, "thinking of this young man and so many others like him, who have died in this madness of war."
"War always destroys," Pope Francis concluded. "Let us think of them and pray."
This marks the Pope's latest appeal for Ukraine, and follows his most recent plea for the war-torn nation under attack since Russia's invasion in February 2022, during his Urbi et Orbi address to the faithful of the city of Rome and to the world on Easter Sunday.
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