By Vatican News staff reporter
The Archdiocese of the Mother of God in Moscow is organizing organized a special pilgrimage on the occasion of Pope Francis’ Apostolic Journey to Kazakhstan , from 13-15 September.
Under the motto "We are witnesses of unity”, the pilgrimage will begin in the Russian capital on September 12, stopping in the Siberian city of Omsk, before leading to Karaganda, in Kazakhstan, on the next day, September 13. From there - according to the programme published on the Archdiocese’s website - the pilgrims will go to Karlag, one of the largest Soviet gulags where, between 1930 and 1960, tens of thousands of inmates lost their lives. It was place of martyrdom also for many Christians, including Russians.
On September 14, the group will move on to the Kazakh capital Nur-Sultan to attend the the Holy Mass presided over by Pope Francis in the “Expo grounds”. The return journey to Moscow will begin on 15 September.
In an interview granted to Vatican News, Archbishop Paolo Pezzi, of the Mother of God in Moscow said the pilgrimage is of great significance.
“The Pope's journey is very important for the Russian Catholic faithful. First of all, because we don’t know if and when he will be able to come and see us, and Kazakhstan is the closest country (to Russia). It is, therefore, a great opportunity.”
According to Archbishop Pezzi, the pilgrimage offers an opportunity for Catholics in Russia to express their faithfulness and affection to Pope Francis“, by meeting him personally, because - he said - they “love the Pope”
In inviting Russian Catholics to join the pilgrimage the Archdiocese’s website recalls the words of Bishop José Luis Mumbiela Sierra of the Diocese of the Holy Trinity in Almaty, Kazakhstan, president of the Bishops' Conference of Central Asia (CEVAC) who in a recent interview to Vatican News on the the upcoming Pope’s visit remarked tha: “We are not pilgrims in search of an unattainable unity but witnesses of a unity that is already lived in our hearts, because the one God dwells in our souls and sends us so that all those created in his image and likeness may enjoy his life and love”.
Unity in diversity and human fraternity will be the golden thread running through Pope Francis’ Apostolic Journey to Kazakhstan, a multinational and multireligious country which, since its independence from the Soviet Union over three decades ago, has become a model of peaceful coexistence between different ethnic groups and religions.
These aspects were underscored several times by St. John Paul II, the first Pope to visit the central Asian Nation in 2001, who on that occasion described Kazakhstan as “a land of encounter, exchange and newness; a land which stirs in everyone the desire for new discoveries and makes it possible to experience difference not as a threat but as an enrichment”.
This same desire to promote the values of coexistence and dialogue between peoples and faiths, as opposed to attempts to exploit religion for political ends, inspired the “Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions” which was first launched in 2003 in Astana (now Nur-Sultan) by former President Nazarbayev following the “spirit of Assisi”, the interreligious meetings convened for the first time in 1986 by St. John Paul II. During his stay, Pope Francis will intervene in the seventh edition of the Congress, taking place this year from 14-15 September on the theme "The Role of Leaders of World and Traditional Faiths in the Socio-Spiritual Development of Humanity after the Pandemic."