Pope Francis
Pays Moving Silent Tribute To Auschwitz Death Camp Victims
“Lord, forgiveness for so much cruelty,” he wrote in the commemorative boo
OSWIECIM,
Poland (Reuters) - Hunched on a bench near the gate to the Auschwitz death camp
site in Poland, Pope Francis prayed silently on Friday in tribute to 1.5 million
people, most of them Jews, gassed there by Nazi occupiers during World War Two.
Marking the third
day of his trip to Poland for an international gathering of Catholic youth, Francis spent a few minutes speaking quietly
and exchanging gifts with about 12 Auschwitz survivors, including a
101-year-old woman.
One of the male
survivors gave the pope a picture of himself surrounded
by other inmates in a bunk, and asked Francis to sign it. The somber-looking pope kissed
each survivor.
The Argentine-born
pontiff, 79, made no statement as he proceeded to walk through the barely-lit
corridors of the drab, brick building of Auschwitz Block 11 which had housed
prisoners selected for special punishment.
Before his trip, Francis said
he had decided that silence in prayer was the best way to pay tribute
to those who died.
With aides using
small flashlights to light his way, Francis visited the underground cell
where Franciscan
monk Maksymilian Kolbe was killed after offering his life to save a Polish man
whom camp handlers had picked to die of starvation.
In Auschwitz’s
commemorative book, Francis wrote in Spanish: “Lord, have
mercy on your people. Lord, forgiveness for so much cruelty”.
German occupation
forces set up the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp during World War Two in Oswiecim, a
town around 70 km (43 miles) from Poland’s second city, Krakow, in the
country’s south.
Between 1940 and
1945 Auschwitz developed into a vast complex of barracks, workshops, gas
chambers and crematoria.
On July 29, 1941,
the camp director, in reprisal for the escape of a prisoner, chose 10 others
and sentenced them to death by starvation
When the selection
was completed, Kolbe stepped forward and volunteered to die in place of one of
them, Franciszek Gajowniczek. Kolbe was later killed by
lethal injection but the man he saved survived the war. He was made a saint in
1982 by then-PopeJohn
Paul II, a Pole.
On Friday, the
75th anniversary of Kolbe’s sacrifice, Francis also visited Birkenau, a part
of the camp where most of the killings were committed in gas chambers.
He walked solemnly
past guard towers, barbed wire fences and remains of crematoria that the Nazis
blew up before the camp was liberated by the Soviet Red Army on Jan. 27, 1945.
Francis listened silently
as Poland’s chief rabbi, Michael Schudrich, and a priest recited Psalm 130
meters (yards) away from the end of the infamous single rail track where cattle
cars brought hundreds of thousands of prisoners to the camp.
During a visit to
Rome’s synagogue in January, Francis appealed to Catholics to reject
anti-Semitism and said the Holocaust, in which some six million Jews were
killed, should remind everyone that human rights should be defended with
“maximum vigilance”.
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