Pope gives migrant children a ride on his popemobile
Source: Vatican Media/Twitter
Pope Francis arrived for the Wednesday General Audience yesterday with eight children on his popemobile.
As he was being taken through the crowds in St Peter's Square, the Holy Father asked the popemobile driver to stop to allow the children to jump aboard for a ride.
Alessandro Gisotti from the Holy See Press Office told journalists some of the kids had arrived in Italy from Libya through a 'humanitarian corridor' on 29 April, while the others reached shore on a migrant boat a few months ago. They were all wearing T-shirts that said: "Welcome, protect, promote and integrate" the appeal coined by Pope Francis in his message for the World Day of Migrants and Refugees.
He said they belong to different nationalities including Syrian, Nigerian and Congolese, and are currently being hosted, together with their families, by an association on the outskirts of Rome.
The self-funded 'Humanitarian Corridors' project, which Pope Francis has repeatedly supported, is carried out by the Community of Sant'Egidio in collaboration with the Federation of Evangelical Churches and the Waldensian and Methodist Churches.
It aims to avoid migrant journeys on boats in the Mediterranean in which so many - usually trafficked people - have died, and at the same time fight human trafficking. It is able to grant people in "vulnerable conditions" (victims of persecution, torture and violence, as well as families with children, elderly people, sick people, and persons with disabilities) legal entry on Italian territory with humanitarian visas, and the possibility to apply for asylum.
Once in Italy, the refugees are welcomed in houses at the expense of the associations involved, and are offered Italian language lessons, school enrolment for the children, and activities that promote integration and the search for employment.