France24 – AFP, 27 July 2013
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| Hundreds
of thousands of young Catholic pilgrims attend the start of World Youth Day at Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, on July 27, 2013. |
AFP -
Heeding Pope Francis' call to shake up the Church, hundreds of thousands of
young Catholics marched across Rio on Saturday, singing, beating drums and
chanting "this is the pope's youth!"
They waved
flags from around the world -- Brazil, Australia, South Africa, the United
States -- and pitched tents on the crescent-shaped beach of Copacabana for an
all-night vigil and final mass with the pope to cap World Youth Day
festivities.
Since his
election in March, history's first Latin American pope has sought to
re-energize Catholics, using his Rio trip to urge young believers to spread the
Gospel and "make a mess" in their dioceses.
Flanked by
the Sugarloaf mountain and Christ the Redeemer statue atop a peak, the faithful
reflected on the pope's message during a nine-kilometer (5.5-mile) pilgrimage
to the beach.
Many agreed
that the Catholic Church needs a dose of energy, lamenting that too many have
lost interest in a religion that has been hurt by pedophilia scandals.
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Pilgrims
walk across Rio de Janeiro to
reach Copacabana beach to join other
young
Catholics attending World Youth
Day for a prayer vigil with Pope Francis
on
July 27, 2013.
|
"Oh
yeah! Shake it up, big time! You have to," said Adrian Antonio Flores, a
31-year-old from the US state of Minnesota who works for a website catering to
young Catholics.
"We're
alive, we're on fire. When people see others on fire, it's contagious," he
said before a prayer with 33 other Americans. "The Church needs to say to
young people, here's social media and there's a light in media."
Roque
Sanchez, a 22-year-old mathematics student holding a flag of his native Mexico,
said the Church "needs to adapt, use things like Facebook."
"The
Church must renew itself, otherwise it will be like in the Middle Ages,"
he said.
While
Yu-Chun Hung, a 25-year-old English teacher from Taiwan, agreed that the Church
needs to adapt to a fast-moving society, she warned that social media must be
used carefully.
"Young
people can be easily seduced. Using social media could be bad or wrong, but it
depends on how we use it. Like a gun, it can hurt people but a gun can also
protect people," she said, wearing a conical straw hat.
Although
many said the Church must stick to dogma, Priti Khatiwada, a 16-year-old
Catholic school student from Australia, said it should consider allowing
priests to marry.
Some of the
sins committed by clergymen, she said, may be due to the fact that "they
have been deprived of basic human necessities."
The Church
has struggled with scandals that have alienated some faithful. Even Brazil, the
world's biggest Catholic country, has seen its flock dwindle while Evangelical
churches and secularism advance.
But Pope
Francis has generated wall-to-wall news coverage of his visit.
Many
pilgrims said the 76-year-old pontiff has connected with them with his charisma
and tendency to break protocol to embrace people who have lined the streets to
see him.
"I
think he's lovely, really down to earth," Khatiwada said.
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Argentine
pilgrims wait outside the
Municipal Theatre in Rio de Janeiro where
Pope
Francis is due to arrive for a meeting
with leaders of Brazil, on July 27, 2013.
|
The grand
finale was supposed to take place on a field west of Rio, but rain turned it
into a mud pit, forcing authorities to move the events to Copacabana.
During
Saturday's march, some pilgrims stood in huge lines for as long as three hours
to receive a food box being distributed near a war monument. Some shouted at
people trying to break in line.
"It's
very chaotic," said Yolanda Chao, 48, of Vancouver, Canada.
But Chao
and most pilgrims have remained upbeat despite the rain and logistical
missteps.
"There
are a million people so it will be hard for everything to run smoothly,"
said Australian student Bronte Dunne, 16. "People should understand and be
patient."
And many
were looking forward to spending the night on Copacabana, usually famous for
curvacious women in tiny bikinis.
"God
will work a miracle after we're gone," said Father Pierre Claver of Ivory
Coast. "The girls in the sexy bikinis will see that the young people here
today are giving another message, that Jesus is here and everywhere."



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