Pope Francis heads to Papua New Guinea to visit remote Catholic communities

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Pope Francis looks on on the day he leads the holy mass at Gelora Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta, Indonesia, Thursday, Sept. 5, 2024.  Dita Alangkara/Pool via REUTERS

Pope Francis' visit to the country will include time in the capital Port Moresby where he will meet the authorities, civil societies and church leaders.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Pope Francis will touch down in Papua New Guinea later on Sept 6 as the pontiff undertakes his longest-ever overseas journey with an aim to reach Catholics in the most remote corners of the world and highlight a cause close to his heart – climate change.

The Pope’s three-day visit to the country will include time in the capital Port Moresby where he will meet the authorities, civil societies and church leaders, participating in Sunday mass before heading to the remote town of Vanimo to meet Catholic missionaries.

Papua New Guinea is a vast and sprawling country of mountains, jungle and rivers with some of the world’s last uncontacted tribes, and a population estimated at anything from nine million to 17 million. The Vatican estimates there are around 2.5 million Catholics in the country.

Professor of religious studies Paul Morris at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand, said this visit was part of the push to be a truly global church.

"In the last decade or so the popes have celebrated more distant communities,” he said.

Flags welcoming the Pope were fluttering through capital Port Moresby, and all the major intersections were decked out for his impending arrival. Merchandise, including yellow T-shirts with a large image of the Pope and brightly coloured bucket hats, were available for sale.

“During the mass, we’ll also be having a traditional entrance procession as well as we have the official procession, which will be traditional dancers showcasing something from the cultural context of Papua New Guinea,” said spokesperson Sister Daisy Anne Lisania for the Catholic Church in Papua New Guinea.

A chair had been carved for the ageing pope to use during the papal mass to be held at a local football stadium.

Christianity in Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea, which is spread over more than 400,000 sq km and 600 islands, is home to over 800 languages – some 12 per cent of the world's total.

Christian missionaries arrived nearly 200 years ago, and Christianity is now core to government and daily life.

“There's a church in every village, without a doubt. There's a church pastor or a reverend in every village, and in some cases, there will be two or three of them,” said Papua New Guinea Israel Jewish Council co-chair Douveri Henao.

“Much of Papua New Guinea is still reliant on church institutions to drive their socioeconomic livelihoods and increasingly in developing their economic participation as well,” Mr Henao said.

Past papal visits there have been colourful, nerve-racking and sometimes humorous.

During the 1984 visit of Pope John Paul II to the Western Highlands, rival tribes billeted in dormitories in the mining town engaged in an all-night chanting match, leaving security officials on tenterhooks, fearing an eruption of intertribal violence. In 1995, John Paul II was hailed as bringing rains to the country, which was in a drought.

On this visit, Pope Francis is expected to talk about climate change and the need to do more to reduce global warming. Some Catholics hope the pope will announce Peter To Rot, a Catechist who was killed during Japanese occupation in 1945, will become the country's first saint.

Papua New Guinea has also found itself increasingly of interest recently as Western countries, including the US, worry about its growing relationship with China. Pope Francis is just the latest in a list of influential or senior leaders to tour.

In April, Seventh-day Adventist Church head Ted Wilson visited. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi both attended the Pacific Island leaders meeting in May 2023, while China's Premier Li Qiang has also visited. REUTERS

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