Pope Francis Arrives in Cyprus

First Leg of 35th Apostolic Journey

Pope Francis Cyprus
The Pope with the President of the Cyprus Chamber of Deputies © Vatican Media

Pope Francis has begun his apostolic journey to the eastern Mediterranean region, flying first to Cyprus in his two-nation visit.  After a three-hour flight from Rome on an A320 plane of Italy’s new state-owned flag carrier ITA Airways, he touched down at Larnaca airport in Cyprus at 3:00 pm in the afternoon, reported Vatican News.

Arrival in Larnaca

© Vatican Media

After the Pope’s plane stopped in front of the “Head of State Executive Terminal”, Apostolic Nuncio Archbishop Tito Yllana went up the steps to greet the Pontiff inside the aircraft.  Awaiting him on the red carpet on the tarmac, at the foot of the steps, was the Speaker of the House of Parliament, Annita Demetriou, accompanied by three children in traditional dresses, who offered him flower bouquets in welcome.  Present also were also several Church dignitaries.  After the guard of honor to the playing of band music, the Pontiff and the President of the Parliament introduced members of their respective delegations.

Present on the tarmac were also many children holding the Vatican and Cypriot flags, whom the Pope greeted as they cheered: “We love you”.  One of them held a banner with the words, “Pope Francis, symbol of peace”.

There were no speeches at the airport but the Pope and Demetriou talked a while inside the terminal.  The Holy Father was then driven some 50 kilometers to the Cathedral of Our Lady of Graces in the capital Nicosia, the see of the Maronite Catholic Archdiocese of Cyprus, where he was to address priests, religious, deacons, catechists, and ecclesial associations and movements of Cyprus.

The Eastern Mediterranean

This is the second visit by a Pope to Cyprus after that of Pope Benedict XVI in 2010. The motto of Pope Francis’ trip to the Mediterranean island is, “Comforting each other in the faith”, taken from the First Letter of St. Paul to Timothy. The Acts of the Apostles explains that the name of Saint Barnabas means “son of consolation”.

Eighty percent of Cyprus’ 850,000 people are Christians, with Catholics numbering some 38,000, or about 4.47 percent of the population.  Muslims make up 2 percent. The vast majority of Cypriots identify themselves as Greek Orthodox. Many of the Christians trace their roots to the Crusaders who settled there after the fall of Jerusalem in the 12th century.

St. Paul stopped off in Cyprus in the first century AD and converted the island’s Roman governor Sergius Paulus to Christianity.

Last week, the Holy Father released a video message to the people of Cyprus and Greece in which he set the tone of his visit.  “I am preparing to come as a pilgrim to your magnificent lands, blessed by history, culture, and the Gospel,” the Pope said on November 27.  He said he was coming to them with joy, precisely in the name of the Gospel, in the footsteps of the first great missionaries of those lands, especially the Apostles Paul and Barnabas. “It is good to return to the origins and it is important for the Church to rediscover the joy of the Gospel,” he said.

Pope talks with reporters on flight to Cyprus ©️ Exaudi’s Deborah Lubov

The visit to the two nations has an ecumenical tone.  Besides going to strengthen the faith of the small Catholic communities, he said he will also meet the local heads of the Orthodox Churches in “apostolic fraternity”.

Describing Cyprus as “the outpost of the Holy Land on the continent” and “Greece, the home of classical culture,” he said his visit would be an opportunity to drink from the ancient wellsprings of Europe.  Europe, he said, cannot ignore the Mediterranean, which has seen the spread of the Gospel and the development of great civilizations.

However, he lamented that today the Mediterranean Sea has become a great cemetery, with refugees and migrants swallowed up in its waves as they flee war and poverty. “As a pilgrim to the wellsprings of humanity,” the Pope said, he will re-visit migrants and refugees in the Greek island of Lesbos, convinced that “the sources of common life will only flourish again in fraternity and integration”.

Telegram

Pope Francis’ 35th Apostolic Journey began this morning, this time in Cyprus and Greece.


Before leaving the Casa Santa Marta, Pope Francis greeted some refugees accompanied by the Almoner of His Holiness, Cardinal Konrad Krajewski. The migrants, now resident in Italy, come from Syria, Congo, Somalia, and Afghanistan. They passed through the Lesbos camp in recent years and were received upon arrival by the Sant’Egidio Community. Some of them had arrived in Italy with the Pope on the papal plane in 2016.

After leaving the Vatican, the Pope stopped at the parish of Santa Maria Degli Angeli, near Fiumicino Airport, where he paused in prayer in front of the image of Our Lady of Loreto and met a group of refugees hosted by the parish community.

Telegram to the President of the Italian Republic

At the moment of leaving Italian territory, the Holy Father Francis sent the following telegram to the President of the Italian Republic, Hon. Sergio Mattarella:

 

TO HIS EXCELLENCY HON. SERGIO MATTARELLA

PRESIDENT OF THE ITALIAN REPUBLIC

PALACE OF THE QUIRINAL

AS I LEAVE ITALIAN TERRITORY TO PAY A PASTORAL VISIT TO CYPRUS AND GREECE, AS A PILGRIM YEARNING FOR THE ANCIENT SOURCES, WITH A LIVELY DESIRE TO MEET MY BROTHERS IN FAITH AND THE LOCAL PEOPLE, I AM PLEASED TO EXTEND TO YOU, MR PRESIDENT, AND TO THE ENTIRE ITALIAN PEOPLE, THE MOST CORDIAL GREETINGS, TOGETHER WITH FERVENT WISHES FOR SERENITY AND MUTUAL COOPERATION FOR THE COMMON GOOD.

FRANCISCUS PP.