Pope Francis has arrived in Krakow to celebrate a mass before a huge gathering of young Catholics on the 1,050th anniversary of Poland’s “baptism” as a Catholic country.
Hundreds of thousands of cheering worshipers gathered in Blonia Park in the southern Polish city Thursday to hear the Pope deliver an open-air Mass on his first visit to the predominantly Catholic Eastern European country.
The crowds had gathered to hear the pontiff deliver the welcoming sermon for World Youth Day — an event organized by the Church which draws young Catholics on pilgrimages from around the world every two or three years.
Among the attendees were Dunya Saleem and Dunya Azad, who had traveled from Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan. Speaking to CNN, they spoke of their prayers for persecuted Christians in many parts of the Middle East.
Earlier Thursday, while leading an outdoor Mass in the southern Polish city of Czestochowa, the 79-year-old Pope stumbled and fell after appearing to trip on a step. He was swiftly assisted by members of the clergy, and the service continued without interruption.
The Mass, before a crowd of about 100,000 people. was held in celebration of the 1,050th anniversary of Poland’s acceptance of the church, marking a date in 966 when a medieval king was baptized and set the course of the country’s modern identity.
This is the second day of the Argentine pontiff’s five-day visit — his first to Eastern Europe.
On his flight to Poland Wednesday, Francis addressed the recent slaying of a Catholic priest in Normandy, France, by two jihadists who declared their allegiance to ISIS.
He told reporters that “the world is at war,” but stressed it was not a war of religion.
“The world is at war because it has lost peace,” he said. “There is a war of interest, there is a war for money, a war for natural resources, a war to dominate people,” he continued.
“Some might think it is war of religion. It is not. All religions want peace. Others want war.”
Poland is the birthplace of one of the most celebrated modern popes, John Paul II. The late pontiff, who spent 27 years as pope before he died in 2005, was made a saint in 2014.