Thursday, April 2, 2026

Pope Leo XIV at Mass of the Lord's Supper at the Basilica of St. John Lteran

 

Pope Leo: 'We are called to serve the People of God with our whole lives'

Celebrating the Mass of the Lord's Supper on Holy Thursday evening in the Papal Basilica of St. John Lateran, Pope Leo XIV tells his brother priests that they are to serve the Lord by giving all of their lives to the People of God, and stresses that in this time of great brutality around the world, we, too, are to kneel alongside the oppressed and all in need.

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

“In this world, and particularly in those places where evil abounds, Jesus loves definitively — forever, and with His whole being.”

Pope Leo XIV gave this powerful reminder on Holy Thursday evening during the Mass in Coena Domini at the Papal Basilica of St. John Lateran.

READ POPE LEO'S FULL HOMILY HERE

In his homily, the Pope recalled that the evening’s solemn liturgy marks their entry into the Holy Triduum of the Lord’s Passion, Death and Resurrection. 

The Lord kneels to wash each one of us

“Out of love,” Pope Leo emphasized as he reflected on the Lord’s washing of His Apostles' feet, “the Lord kneels to wash each one of us, and His divine gift transforms us.”

What the Lord shows us, in taking the water, the basin and towel, he noted, is "far more than a moral example," but is His entrusting to us "His very way of life," 

He stressed that the washing of the feet is a gesture that encapsulates the revelation of God.

By Jesus taking on the condition of a servant, the Holy Father noted, He reveals the Father’s glory, "overturning the worldly standards that so often distort our conscience."



'We are called to serve the People of God with our whole lives'

Pope Leo quoted Benedict XVI, who in his 2008 Homily for the Mass of the Lord's Supper, suggested that we, like Peter who at first resisted Jesus’ initiative, too must learn repeatedly that God’s greatness is different from our idea of greatness.

Benedict, Leo said, acknowledged that we are always tempted to seek a God who “serves” us, or grants us victory in some way, with us often failing to perceive that God does indeed serve us through the gratuitous and humble gesture of washing feet.

As the Pope reflected on the Lord's washing of the feet and the institution of the Eucharist with the breaking of the bread, he reminded that Jesus' gesture shows Him giving all of Himself, as priests are called to do with their whole being.

"Beloved brothers in the priesthood," the Pope would go on to say, "we are called to serve the People of God with our whole lives."

"Through Bishops and priests, constituted as priests of the New Covenant, according to the Lord’s command," the Pope said, "there is made present the sign of His charity towards the whole People of God."

Lord's love precedes our goodness

The Holy Father reminded that the Lord’s love precedes our own goodness or purity.

"He loves us first, and in that love, he forgives and restores us," Pope Leo said, stressing, "His love is not a reward for our acceptance of His mercy; instead, He loves us, and therefore cleanses us, thereby enabling us to respond to His love."

The Pope called on priests to learn from Jesus this reciprocal service, Who, he reminded, "does not ask us to repay Him, but to share His gift among ourselves."

He told priests that the necessary condition for serving as the Lord did, is for priests to allow themselves to be served by the Lord, for Christ said, "Unless you accept me as your servant, you cannot truly believe in me or follow me as Lord."  

As humanity is brought to its knees

In Him, God, the Pope said, has given us an example, on how not to dominate, but to liberate, and not of how to destroy life, but to give it.

"As humanity is brought to its knees by so many acts of brutality, let us too kneel down as brothers and sisters alongside the oppressed." 

In this way, he said, we seek to follow the Lord’s example, who has offered the perfect self-gift of Himself.

Thus, the Pope insisted, Holy Thursday is a day of fervent gratitude and authentic fraternity.  "May this evening’s Eucharistic adoration, in every parish and community, be a time to contemplate Jesus’ gesture, kneeling as he did, and to ask for the strength to imitate His service with the same love."

Continuing tradition

Continuing the tradition of Christ, Pope Leo during the Mass washed the feet of twelve priests.

The priests were Fr. Andrea Alessi, Fr. Gabriele Di Menno Di Bucchianico, Fr. Renzo Chiesa, Fr. Francesco Melone, Fr. Clody Merfalen, Fr. Federico Pelosio, Fr. Marco Petrolo, Fr. Pietro Hieu Nguyen Huai, Fr. Matteo Renzi, Fr. Giuseppe Terranova, Fr. Simone Troilo, and Fr. Enrico Maria Trusiani, eleven of whom were ordained by Pope Leo last year. Fr. Chiesa was the twelfth, who was not ordained by Pope Leo, but is spiritual director of the Pontifical Roman Major Seminary.


Pope Leo in prayer before Blessed Sacrament in the place of repose (@Vatican Media)


At the end of the liturgy, the Pope carried the Blessed Sacrament to the place of repose, in the Chapel of Saint Francis

At Chrism Mass, all priests called "friends of the Lord" and were thanked for their ministry

 

Thousands of priests joined Pope Leo XIV for the Chrism Mass in St. Peter's BasilicaThousands of priests joined Pope Leo XIV for the Chrism Mass in St. Peter's Basilica  (@Vatican Media)

Cardinal You Heung-sik calls all priests 'friends of the Lord'

Cardinal Lazzaro You Heung-sik, Prefect of the Dicastery for Clergy, pens a letter to all priests, deacons, and seminarians throughout the world for Holy Thursday, thanking them for bringing Christ close to His people through their ministry.

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

"Thank you for your daily fidelity, often silent and hidden. Thank you for your 'yes,' renewed each day, even amid hardships, loneliness, and misunderstandings. Thank you because, through your ministry, Christ continues to draw near to His people, to heal, to forgive, and to nourish them."

Cardinal Lazzaro You Heung-sik, Prefect of the Dicastery for Clergy, along with Dicastery's Secretary, Archbishop Carlo Roberto Maria Redaelli, expressed this appreciation in a letter sent to priests, deacons, and seminarians for Holy Thursday.

As the Church commemorates the institution of the Eucharist and the ministerial priesthood, Cardinal You said they wished "to reach all of you, in every part of the world, with a thought of profound gratitude, fraternal affection, and sincere encouragement."

Priests are friends of the Lord

He recalled that the Church contemplates the Lord Jesus, who, washed out of love the feet of the disciples and gives Himself in the breaking of bread, saying that "from this love, our vocation is born, and to this love we are continually called to conform our entire life."

Cardinal You thanked priests for their immense love and friendship with the Lord.

"The Holy Father Leo XIV, during the Holy Year of Hope," he recalled, "reminded us that 'the priest is a friend of the Lord, called to a personal and trusting relationship with Him, nourished by the Word, the celebration of the Sacraments, and daily prayer," and that friendship with Christ is the spiritual foundation of the ordained ministry.'"

With this in mind, the Cardinal reminded priests that being a priest is not merely a role to be performed, but a gift to be safeguarded with a grateful heart and filled with wonder.

He added that priests are not defined simply by what they do, as much as by "the infinite love with which Christ loves us."

Eucharist is the source and summit of our existence

In the letter, the Cardinal reflected on priestly sacrifice and service.

Sacrifice, in its deepest truth, he clarified, is not first of all renunciation but a gift. "It is," he said, "offering one’s life so that it may be wholly oriented to the love of God and of our brothers and sisters."

"We are called to live as men given over, consecrated, who find in the Eucharist the source and summit of our existence," he continued. "It is at the altar that we allow ourselves to be conformed to Christ, receiving the strength to accompany, to forgive, and to console."

Service, he explained, is the concrete form of this love.

The final recommendation Cardinal You offered priests is to not be discouraged by the difficulties of our time. "Even when the soil seems barren and the seed struggles to grow, the Lord continues to act," he reassured. "He has chosen us, He has consecrated us, and He never abandons us."

"Therefore," he said, "be priests with open hearts, capable of closeness, listening, and compassion; men of communion, credible signs of a synodal and missionary Church; joyful witnesses of the Gospel, even when this entails sacrifice."

Safeguard the joy of your calling

Cardinal You also thanked all permanent deacons, who, "through their generous and discreet service, make visible the charity of Christ the Servant."

The Cardinal Prefect insisted that the ministry of deacons is "precious and necessary for the life of the Church, today more than ever."

And finally, he turned to all seminarians preparing for the priesthood.

"Do not be afraid," the Cardinal encouraged, "to give your entire life to the Lord."

He urged all seminarians to safeguard the joy of their calling and allow themselves to be formed each day by His love, for the Church needs their authenticity, enthusiasm, and faith.

Finally, the Prefect and Secretary of the Dicastery for the Clergy concluded by entrusting all priests, deacons, and seminarians to the Blessed Mother, and wishing them a fruitful Holy Triduum in deep union with the Lord Jesus

Pope Leo XIV presides at the Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday Morning

 

Pope at Chrism Mass: Priests must spread Christ’s peace where death reigns

At the Chrism Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica, Pope Leo XIV invites priests, bishops, and all Christians to embrace their challenges with trust in God and “spread the fragrance of Christ where the stench of death reigns.”

By Devin Watkins

Pope Leo XIV presided at the Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday in St. Peter’s Basilica, joined by hundreds of bishops and priests who renewed the promises they made at their ordination.

In his first homily for the Chrism Mass as the Bishop of Rome, the Pope reflected on the mission to which God calls every Christian, which he said is the very same mission as that of Jesus.

“Each of us takes part in it according to our own vocation in a deeply personal obedience to the voice of the Spirit, yet never without others, never neglecting or breaking communion!” he said.

Ahead of the Easter Triduum, which begins with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper later on Holy Thursday, Pope Leo said the culmination of the Christian liturgical year has the power to transform human pride, heal wounds, reconcile us, and gather us together.

Pope Leo celebrates Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday   (@Vatican Media)



The Holy Father went on to reflect on three aspects of the Christian mission: detachment, encounter, and the possibility of misunderstanding and rejection.

As members of Christ’s Body, Christians—and especially ordained ministers—are sent out in service of His people, which requires us to leave behind attachments that are familiar and certain so that we can venture into something new.

“There is no mission without reconciliation with our past, with the gifts and limitations of the upbringing we have received,” he said. “But, at the same time, there is no peace without setting out, no awareness without detachment, no joy without risk.”

In self-emptying, we discover a fundamental secret of mission, which is that everything we let go of is given back to us multiplied in ways we cannot imagine.

Pope Leo XIV then spoke about “the law of encounter,” which he said has often been distorted historically by a desire for domination.

“It is now a priority to remember that neither in the pastoral sphere nor in the social and political spheres can good come from abuse of power,” he said.

Many great missionaries have borne witness, he said, to “quiet, unobtrusive approaches, whose method is the sharing of life, selfless service, the renunciation of any calculated strategy, dialogue and respect.”

The Holy Spirit makes Jesus present to His priests, working harder and better than they do and teaching them to welcome and follow Christ, he said.

“To establish this harmony with the transcendent,” he said, “we must go where we are sent with simplicity, respecting the mystery that every person and every community carry within them.”

Christians are guests, wherever they are, added the Pope, noting that in places where secularization has taken hold, we must learn to learn ways to communicate the Gospel of Jesus effectively.

Pope Leo then turned to the possibility of being misunderstood or rejected, which he said is the most radical element of the Christian mission.

Accepting the cross is an essential part of mission and has the power to bring true transformation to society and ourselves.

“The imperialist occupation of the world is thus disrupted from within; the violence that until now has been the law is unmasked,” he said. “The poor, imprisoned, rejected Messiah descends into the darkness of death, yet in so doing he brings a new creation to light.”

Even when we experience failure or our own shortcomings, we must learn to trust that God’s grace will help us to face unforeseen circumstances, as the saints have before us.

In conclusion, Pope Leo XIV urged Christians to overcome any sense of powerlessness or fear as we proclaim Christ’s death and resurrection.

“In this dark hour of history,” he said, “it has pleased God to send us to spread the fragrance of Christ where the stench of death reigns. Let us renew our ‘yes’ to this mission that calls for unity and brings peace.”

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

VP JD Vance releasing book about faith and his conversion to the Catholic faith

 

New Book by JD Vance Will Explore His Conversion to Catholicism

The vice president’s book, to be released in June, will detail his return to Christianity after leaving the loosely evangelical practice of his childhood.



Vice President JD Vance’s faith has become a conspicuous part of his political biography.Credit...Elizabeth Frantz for The New York Times

Vice President JD Vance, the country’s most powerful Roman Catholic politician, will publish a memoir about his conversion to the faith, his publisher, HarperCollins Publishers, announced on Tuesday.

The book, titled “Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith,” will be released on June 16 and will detail Mr. Vance’s return to Christianity after leaving the loosely evangelical practice of his childhood and his eventual conversion to Catholicism.

“I’m a Christian, and I became a Christian because I believe that Jesus Christ’s teachings are true,” Mr. Vance said in a news release announcing the book. “But I didn’t always think that, and by sharing my journey I might be helpful to others — Catholic, Protestant or otherwise — who are seeking reconciliation with God.”

The publisher framed the book as an exploration of how Mr. Vance’s faith guides his politics and also as a spiritual guide intended to draw others to the Catholic faith.

The announcement comes as many Republican strategists, officials and voters look to Mr. Vance as the early front-runner in the 2028 Republican primary race to succeed President Trump. While Mr. Vance has said “it feels so premature” to discuss the contest, he has been taking steps to demonstrate his support of the president’s MAGA base.

Mr. Vance’s faith has become a conspicuous part of his political biography, driving his views on issues like opposition to abortion rights and encouraging Americans to have more children. It has earned him early support from influential conservative Christian leaders.

His book is an effort to position Mr. Vance as a political leader — and potential next Republican presidential nominee — but also supports a larger effort by socially conservative leaders, activists and politicians to strengthen the power of conservative Christianity in American life.

Mr. Vance converted to Catholicism in 2019 at age 35, after a bespoke, private instruction with Dominican Friars in Cincinnati. He was inspired by St. Augustine, the political theologian whom he chose as his patron saint, and whose treatise “City of God” challenged Rome’s ruling class in the fifth century.

“It was the best criticism of our modern age I’d ever read,” Mr. Vance later wrote in a Catholic journal. “A society oriented entirely towards consumption and pleasure, spurning duty and virtue.”

But his newfound faith has come with complications, particularly as he has at times justified the Trump White House’s aggressive deportation campaign with his own interpretation of Catholic doctrine. His views prompted a strong denunciation from leaders in the Vatican and are in opposition to the priorities set by the most high-profile American Catholic, Pope Leo XIV.

Conservative Catholicism has grown increasingly powerful in American politics in recent years, particularly as converts, lay people like Mr. Vance and Catholic justices on the Supreme Court have elevated the place of their religious beliefs into American public life. This Easter, Catholic churches across the country have reported a surge of converts.

The title of Mr. Vance’s new book, “Communion,” also references the Eucharist, a central sacrament of Catholicism. The Eucharist has become a powerful symbol in American politics, as some American Catholic bishops publicly argued that top Democratic leaders, including former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the former House speaker, should be denied communion over their support for abortion rights.

Mr. Vance’s first book, “Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis,” detailed his journey from a hardscrabble childhood in Middletown, Ohio, a decaying steel town, and a family riddled with addiction struggles to Yale Law School.

Published in the summer of 2016, the best-selling book was widely seen by many liberals as an insightful analysis of the white working class that drove Mr. Trump to his surprise victory that year. It became a global hit that spent more than 200 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list and sold more than five million copies worldwide, according to HarperCollins.

The book put Mr. Vance on the political map, making him a national celebrity and a natural messenger for Mr. Trump’s populist movement — even as he, at times, delivered public and private criticism of the president.

In the years since, Democrats have accused Mr. Vance of overstating his blue-collar roots and turning his back on the working-class voters he purports to represent. This month, Gov. Andy Beshear of Kentucky said Mr. Vance’s first memoir amounted to “poverty tourism” and “trafficked in this tired stereotype” about the region.

With a memoir about his faith, Mr. Vance could appeal to a different and potentially wider audience than a purely political book might draw. Sales of books about religion and faith, including Bible sales, have surged recently, while overall nonfiction sales have stagnated.

Mr. Vance had previously been at work on a book about his Christian faith for HarperCollins, but set it aside in 2022. “Communion” is partly a continuation of that project, according to a HarperCollins spokeswoman.

Good Friday Stations of the Cross meditations

 

File photo of Fr. Francesco PattonFile photo of Fr. Francesco Patton  (AFP or licensors)

Fr. Patton: Good Friday meditations are not to judge, but to inspire change

Father Francesco Patton, author of the meditations for the Pope's Good Friday 'Via Crucis' at the Colosseum in Rome, notes that even today, many people are living a Way of the Cross.

By Roberto Cetera

“In the reflections and prayers, the inspiration from current reality and from concrete people is evident,” particularly from the sufferings of Christians in the Middle East due to the war.

In this way, Father Francesco Patton of the Order of Friars Minor, summarized the origin of the meditations written for the Way of the Cross that will be presided over by Pope Leo XIV at the Colosseum on Good Friday evening.

In the following interview with Vatican News, Fr. Patton, who served as the Custos of the Holy Land from 2016 until June 2025, explained how the Pope’s choice coincided with the eighth centenary of the death of St. Francis of Assisi.

Q: Father Patton, the Pope entrusted you with the writing of the meditations that will accompany the Good Friday Way of the Cross at the Colosseum. Is this an unequivocal sign of the Holy Father’s attention to the Holy Land and the tragedies afflicting the countries of the Middle East?

Since the day of his election, Pope Leo XIV has continuously invoked the gift of peace. He has expressed closeness and solidarity not only to the Holy Land but to all countries, peoples, and individuals suffering because of war.

This, after all, has been the Church’s line for over 100 years, since August 1, 1917, when Pope Benedict XV refused to bless the armies, defined the war being fought as an “useless slaughter,” and urged the leaders of the belligerent nations to reach a just and lasting peace through negotiation, respect for international law, the return of occupied territories, restoration of free movement, and disarmament to free resources to be invested in the common good and development.

Since then, the Church has always expressed closeness to populations devastated by war and repeatedly condemned armed conflicts, which continue to be an “useless slaughter.” Almost every Sunday after the Angelus and every Wednesday at the end of his catechesis at the General Audience, Pope Leo XIV has insisted on the necessity of achieving peace, not only in the Holy Land but in all countries currently involved in bloody wars.

Last Sunday, he used very strong words to reject violence perpetrated in the name of God, saying that God does not listen to the prayers of warmongers with hands stained with blood.

Q: I imagine receiving this invitation was a surprise for you.

A very big surprise, I would say. I was concretely contacted by the Secretariat of State, which told me that the Holy Father, in conjunction with the eighth centenary of the death of Saint Francis of Assisi, had instructed them to ask me to prepare the meditations.

The matter intimidated me but at the same time honored me.

Q: What inspired you most while writing these meditations?

I took inspiration from the Gospel texts, favoring the Evangelist St. John, who has a penetrating view of the mystery of the Lord’s Passion; and then from the “Writings” of Saint Francis, which are a treasure trove of Christian spirituality. In the reflections and prayers, it is evident that the inspiration also comes from current reality and from concrete people in whom, over these years, I have been able to see the characters of the Way of the Cross.

Where I speak about the suffering of mothers and women, women appear in watermark who have also been written about in L’Osservatore Romano and who today embody the figure of Mary, Veronica, and the women of Jerusalem.

Behind the reflection on the distorted conception of power and abuse of power there are international news events that are before everyone’s eyes; the Cyrenean has the face of many volunteers and humanitarian and communication workers whom I have met over these years and who risked their lives to care for someone or to make the truth known, without even being Christians.

The concrete situations named in the reflections do not want to trigger judgment on individual persons, but invite reflection, asking questions and — if necessary — even to change. The message is essentially religious and wants to express the closeness of Jesus Christ, as the incarnate Son of God, to every human person.

I tried to make the Way of the Cross at the Colosseum inspired by the Way of the Cross that we make every Friday along the Via Dolorosa and at the same time draw from the spirituality of Saint Francis to help believers “walk in the footsteps of Jesus” and non-believers discover that Jesus cares about each of us, and that in Him one can find hope and a reason for life even if it has been lost.

My desire is that, by encountering Jesus Christ and walking behind Him toward Calvary, every person may perceive His closeness and His love; perceive that Jesus Christ gave His life for each of us and wants to bring each of us “back to the Father” together with Him, to find life in its fullness thanks to Him and to live the human condition, which is finite and mortal, with the horizon of Easter, Resurrection, eternal life, and participation in God’s very life.

Q: Father Francesco, your custodial mandate has crossed through nine years of very serious events: the civil war in Syria, Covid, the war in Gaza. Now, at the end of your assignment, you have decided to remain as a simple friar in the Holy Land, on the mountain from which Moses could only see it. Why did you choose Mount Nebo?

More precisely, I offered my availability to live on Mount Nebo.After so many years spent in positions of authority and governance, I felt the need to return to living as a simple Minor Friar. Living in a small, somewhat peripheral fraternity allows me to recover a more regular rhythm of prayer, resume studying, serve pilgrims, and perform humble services.

Also, Mount Nebo has always had a great appeal to me, both because it is linked to the figure of Saint Moses, which is extraordinarily rich and that I like to deepen, and because this place was for centuries a Byzantine monastery and sanctuary, then swallowed up by historical events and left in ruins, and finally reborn a hundred years ago thanks to the friars of the Custody of the Holy Land, who here in Jordan were able to befriend the Bedouin family who owned it and who, after selling the site to the Custody in 1932, remained collaborating with us.

It is a meeting place for everyone and with everyone, frequented by Christians and Muslims alike, where all can breathe that climate of faith and peace it transmits, and where all can obtain “healing of body and soul,” as a pilgrim of the 5th century said.

Q: Christians in the Holy Land live a daily Way of the Cross, whose outcome increasingly is migration. How can one be the salt of the earth under those conditions?

It is very difficult, but not impossible. Christians living today in the Holy Land are very similar to the first generation of Christians; they have the same virtues and the same limits, and probably the same DNA. In any case, if 2000 years ago Jesus said to the few disciples He had: “Do not fear, little flock, for it has pleased your Father to give you the Hingdom’s mysteries,” it is because even then the disciples were statistically insignificant but had discovered the true meaning of life, that revealed by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount, culminating in the Beatitudes, forgiveness of enemies, and mercy; that revealed through welcoming children, women, the poor, the sick, but also tax collectors, sinners, and prostitutes; that revealed by washing the feet of His own, then giving His life and conquering death for us.

Being Christians in the Holy Land — but in all parts of the world where Christians are few and/or persecuted — is a vocation and a mission: we are called to show the merciful face of God who welcomes every person without distinction of gender, nationality, or religion; and we are called — even in this way — to reveal the filial dignity of being created in the image and likeness of God that every person has, even those belonging to another people, even those who have erred, even those who have harmed me.

Q: Religions as instruments of peace. Yet, wars in the Middle East, unlike in past decades, increasingly have a religious reference. Even Israel, born in a secular Western-style context, today seems prey to a messianic fundamentalism. What happened?

What happened is what happened elsewhere, especially after the fall of the Berlin Wall: secular ideologies fell, and those in power began to exploit religions to create identities and opposition. We could say that the “zealots,” who at Jesus’ time justified violence in God’s name, have come back into fashion.

Today, “zealots” are everywhere: we find them in the Muslim world through a galaxy of armed fundamentalist movements; we find them in the Jewish world, well represented by settlers and those who politically support them locally and internationally; we also find them among Christians, who unfortunately invoke strange blessings going in the opposite direction to that indicated last Sunday by Pope Leo XIV and 2,000 years ago by Jesus in Gethsemane; we even find them in secular form in state laicisms that censor religious expressions in a discriminatory and persecutory way.

What is happening in Israel is not an anomaly but a global trend. In this context, the Church has a very important role to play, that of reiterating some evangelical cornerstones: one must give to Caesar what is Caesar’s but to God what is God’s.

This means desacralizing and secularizing political power while guaranteeing religious freedom for all. It is necessary to remove the ground from under both religious fundamentalism and the political exploitation of religion.

To do this, religious leaders of all religions must be convinced to cooperate in delegitimizing any exploitation of religion to justify violence. The principles laid down in the Document on Human Fraternity signed in Abu Dhabi by Pope Francis and the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, and received in the encyclical Fratelli tutti, would be an excellent starting point for a kind of “UN” of religions.

Obviously, it is also necessary to educate the faithful in this perspective, knowing well that the “zealots” will strongly oppose this, citing religious reasons themselves.

Q: The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has lasted for 80 years now. 95% of today’s combatants have never known peace. I ask you very simply: will there ever be peace in the Holy Land?

Sooner or later there will be, inevitably, but the path will still be long; it will require a generational change, a change of political class (hoping not to go from the frying pan into the fire), and above all a cultural change. Today — unfortunately — there are no true prophets or men with a vision, but this is not a problem only in Israel and Palestine or the Middle East; it is a global problem. There are nonetheless positive signs in civil society.

I think of the movement started by the Israeli Maoz Inon and the Palestinian Aziz Abu Sarah, or the “Mothers Who Walk Barefoot for Peace,” or the “Women of Faith for Peace,” and many other small groups that are hoped to grow.

Our own schools are an example of education towards coexistence and fraternity. As I have repeatedly said over these years, there is also a political responsibility to introduce in the school system compulsory programs of education for respect and welcoming of the other, for conflict management and peace, following the model of what is done at Rondine, the citadel of peace in the Arezzo area. This is not only true for Israel and Palestine but also for European countries.