‘To be close to you’: Pope pays surprise visit to Rome prison ahead of Easter

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Pope Francis visiting Regina Coeli prison in Rome, on April 17.

Pope Francis meeting inmates in Regina Coeli prison in Rome on April 17.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis, still recovering from double pneumonia, paid a surprise visit on April 17 to Rome’s Regina Coeli, one of Italy’s most overcrowded prisons, to wish inmates well ahead of Easter.

The 88-year-old pontiff, gradually making more public appearances as he recovers from

the biggest health crisis

in his 12-year papacy, made a short foray outside of the Vatican, as the prison is only about a five-minute drive away.

The Pope was greeted with applause from guards and staff at the facility as aides rolled his wheelchair inside shortly after 3pm.

As during his two most recent public appearances, the Pope was breathing on his own without the aid of oxygen tubes.

The Pope stayed at the prison for about half an hour. The Vatican said he met with a group of about 70 inmates.

“I wanted to be close to you,” he said, according to the Vatican. “I pray for you and your families.”

The Catholic Church on April 17 celebrates Holy Thursday, the day of Jesus’ Last Supper with his apostles on the night before he died. It is the first of four days of celebrations leading to Easter, the most important Christian holiday, on April 20.

Pope since 2013, he has visited prisons throughout his papacy, often on Holy Thursday.

Regina Coeli, a former 17th-century monastery in the touristy Trastevere neighbourhood, is primarily a men’s prison. It currently houses about 1,100 prisoners, nearly double its official capacity of 628 inmates, according to the Italian justice ministry. The Pope last visited the prison in 2018.

Pope Francis stayed at Rome’s Regina Coeli prison for about half an hour. He met around 70 inmates on April 17.

PHOTO: AFP

The Pope nearly died during his five-week

bout of double pneumonia.

His medical team have urged him to take two months’ rest after leaving hospital to allow his body to fully heal.

He initially remained out of view after returning home to the Vatican on March 23 but has now made several brief public appearances.

It is not known how much the Pope will participate in the Vatican’s calendar of celebrations leading to Easter.

Asked by journalists who approached his car as he was leaving the prison about how he would celebrate Easter in 2025, he smiled and responded in a soft voice: “As I can”. REUTERS

See more on