Pope lands in Thailand, start of two-country Asian tour

Agence France-Presse

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Pope lands in Thailand, start of two-country Asian tour

AFP

Francis is the first pontiff in nearly four decades to visit Thailand where the nearly 400,000-strong Catholic community makes up a little more than 0.5% of the population

BANGKOK, Thailand – Pope Francis arrived in Thailand on Wednesday, November 20, the first leg of an Asian tour that will sweep in Japan and carry a message of interreligious dialogue and nuclear disarmament. 

The pontiff landed at just after midday (0500 GMT) in Bangkok’s Don Mueang International Airport, according to an AFP journalist onboard. 

This will be the pope’s third trip to Asia — and his 32nd abroad — taking him to two Buddhist-majority countries with minority Catholic populations both evangelised by Jesuit missionaries in the 16th century. 

Francis is the first pontiff in nearly four decades to visit Thailand where the nearly 400,000-strong Catholic community makes up a little more than 0.5% of the population.

The last visit from a pontiff to Thailand came in 1984 by Pope John Paul II. 

Before his departure, Francis praised the Southeast Asian country as a “multi-ethnic nation”, and hoped his trip would strengthen the Catholic community’s bonds of friendship with “many Buddhist brothers and sisters”. 

“I trust that my visit will help to highlight the importance of inter-religious dialogue, mutual understanding and fraternal cooperation,” the Pope said in the video marking his November 20-23 visit.

On Thursday, he will meet with the 20th Supreme Patriarch Somdej Phra Maha Muneewong — the head of Thailand’s Buddhist clergy — at a temple. 

He will also have meetings with Thailand’s prime minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha and King Maha Vajiralongkorn. 

His day will end with a holy mass at the national stadium, where tens of thousands are expected to attend from many walks of life, including ethnic Karen Christians from northern Thailand, Vietnamese Catholic refugees living in Bangkok, and faithful from all over Southeast Asia.

On Friday the pope’s day will be filled meeting with priests and bishops of Thailand, and it will end with a youth-oriented mass at a cathedral. 

On Saturday, he will fly to Japan and stop in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, two cities devastated when the US dropped atomic bombs at the end of World War II in 1945. 

More than 140,000 people were killed in Hiroshima, while the port city of Nagasaki suffered a death toll of 74,000.

The pope, who years ago had hoped to be a missionary in Japan, has made strong calls for the ban of the “immoral” use of nuclear weapons.

Since Francis’ election six years ago, he has made two trips to Asia, visiting the Philippines and Sri Lanka in 2014, followed by Myanmar and Bangladesh in 2017. – Rappler.com

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