Pope Francis holds 1st public audience in 6 months
The audience on Wednesday was held in a Vatican courtyard instead of St. Peter's Square
Pope Francis held his weekly general audience in public for the first time in six months on Wednesday, smiling and chatting as he re-emerged from the constraints of the coronavirus lockdown.
The audience, at which the Pope announced a day of prayer and fasting for Lebanon, was held in the San Damaso courtyard of the Vatican's Apostolic Palace and gave him the public contact he thrives on.
Visitors had their temperatures checked as they entered the Vatican and nearly everyone among the audience of 500 or so — including Swiss Guards in ceremonial uniforms — wore masks. The public sat in seats arranged to ensure physical distancing.
"After so many months, we resume our encounters face to face and not screen to screen, face to face, and this is beautiful," he said to applause at the start of the audience.
Francis clearly enjoyed himself as he walked past guests who had pushed together behind barriers, frequently stopping to converse with them from a distance of one to two metres.
The Pope last held an audience with a public crowd in early March. After that, the coronavirus pandemic forced him to hold virtual audiences transmitted from the official papal library over television or the internet, an experience he described as akin to being "caged."
He blessed children from a distance as he passed on the way to a dais to make his address.
Calls for peace for Lebanon
Francis appeared to be energized by the crowd — even though it was a far cry from the tens of thousands that can fill St. Peter's Square, where outdoor audiences are usually held.
Francis kissed a Lebanese flag handed to him by Lebanese priest Georges Breidi and bowed his head to say a silent prayer for the country, still reeling from last month's deadly port blast and rising sectarian tensions.
At the end of the audience he invited the priest to the front to hold up the flag as the Pope made an appeal for peace and dialogue in Lebanon.
The current pandemic has highlighted our interdependence: we are all linked to each other, for better or for worse. Therefore, to come out of this crisis better than before, we have to do so together, all of us, in solidarity. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/GeneralAudience?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#GeneralAudience</a>
—@Pontifex
He announced that Friday, Sept. 4 would be a day of prayer and fasting for Lebanon and that he was sending his Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, to Beirut on that day to represent him.
He invited members of other religions to take part.
"Lebanon cannot be abandoned to itself," Francis said, asking politicians and religious leaders to commit themselves with "sincerity and transparency" to reconstruct the country and for nations to help "without getting involved in regional tensions."