Pope urges inmates to seek ‘rebirth’ during prison visit

28 April 2024, 11:44

Pope on boat
Italy Pope. Picture: PA

Francis travelled to Venice, where the Holy See’s pavilion at the Biennale contemporary art show is being staged in a jail.

The Pope has urged prisoners to view their time behind bars as a chance for “moral and material rebirth”, as he viewed an art show in a women’s jail in Venice.

Francis travelled to the lagoon city to visit the Holy See’s pavilion at the Biennale contemporary art show and meet with the people who created it.

Because the Vatican decided to mount its exhibit in the women’s prison, and invited inmates to collaborate with the artists, the whole project took on a far more complex meaning – touching on Francis’s belief in the power of art to uplift and unify, and of the need to give hope and solidarity to society’s most marginalised.

Francis hit on both messages during his visit, which began in the courtyard of Giudecca prison where he met with the women inmates one by one.

Pope Francis
Pope Francis delivered an address in front of the Church of the Salute in Venice (Alessandra Tarantino/AP)

As some of them wept, Francis told them: “Paradoxically, a stay in prison can mark the beginning of something new, through the rediscovery of the unsuspected beauty in us and in others, as symbolised by the artistic event you are hosting and the project to which you actively contribute.”

Francis then met with Biennale artists in the prison chapel, decorated with an installation by Brazilian visual artist Sonia Gomes of objects dangling from the ceiling, meant to draw the viewer’s gaze upwards.

He urged the artists to embrace the Biennale’s theme this year of Strangers Everywhere, to show solidarity with all those on the margins.

Pope Francis
Francis travelled in a popemobile to meet well-wishers outside the Church of the Salute (Alessandra Tarantino/AP)

“Art has the status of a ‘city of refuge’, a city that disobeys the regime of violence and discrimination in order to create forms of human belonging capable of recognising, including, protecting and embracing everyone,” Francis said.

The Vatican exhibit has turned the Giudecca prison, a former convent for reformed prostitutes, into one of the must-see attractions of this year’s Biennale, even though to see it visitors must reserve in advance and go through a security check.

It has become an unusual art world darling that greets visitors at the entrance with Maurizio Cattelan’s wall mural of two giant filthy feet, a work that recalls Caravaggio’s dirty feet or the feet that Francis washes each year in a Holy Thursday ritual that he routinely performs on prisoners.

Pope in St Mark's Square
St Mark’s Square was packed as the Pope, bottom left, arrived for Mass (Alessandra Tarantino/AP)

Francis’s Sunday morning visit represented an increasingly rare outing for the 87-year-old, who has been endured health and mobility problems that have ruled out any foreign trips so far this year.

But it was also unusual because it came as Venice, sinking under rising sea levels and weighed down by the impact of over-tourism, is in the opening days of an experiment to try to limit the sort of day trips that Francis undertook on Sunday.

Venetian authorities last week launched a pilot programme to charge day-trippers 5 euro (£4.20) apiece on peak travel days. The aim is to encourage them to stay longer or come at off-peak times to cut down on crowds and make the city more liveable for its dwindling number of residents.

For Venice’s Catholic patriarch, Archbishop Francesco Moraglia, the new tax programme is a worthwhile experiment, a potential necessary evil to try to preserve Venice as a liveable city for visitors and residents alike.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

President Salome Zourabichvili

Georgia’s president vetoes media law that has provoked weeks of protests

Damaged houses after heavy flooding in Ghor province in western Afghanistan

Flash floods kill at least 68 people in Afghanistan after heavy rain

Climate activists lie on an access road for runways at Munich Airport

Climate protesters close Munich Airport after gluing themselves to runway

Slovakia Prime Minister

Man accused of trying to kill Slovakia’s prime minister to remain behind bars

Donald Trump speaking during the NRA Convention in 2023

‘Best president for gun owners’ Trump to address National Rifle Association

Foreign journalists report from an observation point while smoke rises after a Russian attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine

Mobilisation law comes into force as Ukraine struggles to boost troop numbers

Policemen guard the area as a convoy brings the suspect in shooting of Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico, to court in Pezinok

Man accused of trying to kill Slovak prime minister makes first court appearance

Smoke rises during protests in Noumea, New Caledonia

French authorities report sixth death in New Caledonia violence

Climate activists have glued themselves to an airport runway

Chaos as climate activists glue themselves to runway of major airport, causing dozens of flight cancellations

An auto-rickshaw driver drinks water as he takes a break in New Delhi, India

New Delhi on high alert as parts of northern India scorched by extreme heat

Itzhak Gelerenter, Shani Louk and Amit Buskila

Bodies of three hostages killed at October 7 music festival recovered in Gaza

A member of the LGBTQ+ community holds up a sign with a message that reads 'Nothing to cure', during a protest in Lima, Peru

Protests in Peru against classification of gender identities as ‘mental illness’

Justice Department Boeing Explainer

Boeing shareholders approve chief’s compensation as company faces investigations

Steve Buscemi

Man charged over random assault on actor Steve Buscemi in New York

Obit Dabney Coleman

Actor Dabney Coleman, who specialised in curmudgeons, dies aged 92

David DePape, 44, has been sentenced to 30 years in prison in the US.

Man who attacked Nancy Pelosi's husband with hammer sentenced to 30 years behind bars