Pope To Wind Up Portugal Visit With Big Outdoor Mass
Pope Francis will celebrate an open-air Mass before a huge crowd on Sunday at a riverside park near Lisbon to wrap up an international jamboree of Catholic youth.
The service will take place at the Parque Tejo on the outskirts of the Portuguese capital where on Saturday night 1.5 million pilgrims attended a vigil held by the pontiff.
Many slept overnight in the park, which was built for the occasion on a former landfill site, to be there for the Mass which gets underway at 9:00 am (0800 GMT).
The weather is a concern with temperatures expected to soar to 41 degrees Celsius (106 degrees Fahrenheit).
Portugal's state weather agency has issued a "red" alert -- its highest level -- for Lisbon on Sunday due to the heat.
With little shade in the park, pilgrims at Saturday's vigil protected themselves from the sun with umbrellas or makeshift tents made from sheets.
The 86-year-old pope urged the crowd at the vigil to "pick themselves up" whenever they suffer a setback in life.
"Those who remain on the ground have retired from life, have lost their hopes and dreams," he added.
Drones formed the words "rise up" and "follow me" in the sky above the stage as the pope spoke.
Charlotte Bordas, a 26-year-old who came from Mont-de-Marsan in southwestern France, said she was moved to see the pope had made the trip despite his health problems.
"We see he's really tired, weakened, but he still took the time to come to see us, talk to us, and it particularly touches me to see him," she told AFP.
The Argentine pope is in increasingly fragile health, and now uses a wheelchair or walking stick to get around,.
This is his first foreign trip since he spent nine nights in hospital after undergoing hernia surgery in June.
Francis arrived in Portugal on Wednesday for World Youth Day, a six-day international Catholic jamboree featuring festive, cultural and religious events.
It comes as Francis attempts to galvanise young Catholics at a time when secularism and priest paedophilia scandals cause some to abandon pews in Europe.
The pope met with 13 victims of clerical abuse at the Holy See's diplomatic mission in Lisbon during his first day in Portugal.
"The meeting was held in an atmosphere of intense listening and lasted more than an hour," the Vatican said in a brief statement after.
He also met with 15 youths from war-torn Ukraine's delegation, visited a community centre in Lisbon's impoverished Serafina neighbourhood and prayed at the shrine of Fatima north of the Portuguese capital.
"The pope finds time for everything," Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, a conservative practising Catholic, told Portuguese media earlier this week.
Francis has received an enthusiastic welcome throughout his visit to the Catholic-majority country, with wellwishers lining the streets to see him go by.
This edition, initially scheduled for August 2022 but postponed because of the pandemic, will be the fourth for Francis after Rio de Janeiro in 2013, Krakow in 2016 and Panama in 2019.
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