Pope
Francis greeted some seventy journalists aboard the papal plane Monday
as it flew from Rome to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for World Youth Day
celebrations.
The reporters included 10 Brazilians, 10 from the U.S., 9
from France, 6 from Spain, plus journalists from the U.K. Mexico,
Germany, Japan, Argentina, Poland, Portugal and Russia.
Pope
Francis told reporters “this first trip of mine is to meet young
people, (to see them) … not as isolated young people but immersed in
their social context, in society. Because when we isolate young
people, we do them an injustice: we take away their ‘belonging.’”
Young
people, the Holy Father said, “belong to a family, to a country, to a
culture and a faith.”
They represent the future of a people “because
they have the energy;” but Pope Francis added, “the future is also the
elderly because they are the custodians of the ‘wisdom of life’, the
history, the home and the family."
A people has no future - he continued
- if it goes ahead without the strength of its youth and the elderly.
The
Pope reflected on the global economic crisis and the possibility that
young people may find themselves out of work. "We have the risk of
having a generation that did not have work" said the Pope. And from
work he noted, one derives "the dignity of the person" - "from earning
his bread."
“Young people today are in crisis,” he said, “and we
are used to this disposable culture: it happens all too often to the
elderly.”
But young jobless people are also getting caught up in this
disposable culture. What we need today he said, is a "culture of
inclusion, a culture of encounter."
And this invitation to reporters: "I
ask you to help me”- concluded the Pope - and work for the good of the
society of young people and the elderly."
Greeting the Pope on
behalf of all the journalists, Valentina Alazraki, correspondent in
Italy for the Mexican network Televisa, gave him a small statue of the
Virgin of Guadalupe, "not only the Queen of Mexico,” said the
journalist, “but Patroness of all America.”
In her brief introductory
remarks, Alazraki cited the biblical story of Daniel in the lions' den,
referring to journalists who are often portrayed as such.
Pope Francis
joked on this point by stating that lions "were not so bad" and
confessed to not his not readily giving interviews because “it's a bit
exhausting to do them.”