Pope Francis' Oct. 12 appointment of Monsignor Diego Ravelli as
office chief of the Office of Papal Charities rounds out the bureau
which delivers charity to the poor in the name of the Roman Pontiff.
Already on Aug. 3, Archbishop Konrad Krajewski, a priest of the Lódz
diocese in Poland, was appointed head of the office, or almoner.
Traditionally, the pontifical almoner sends parchments with the Papal
blessing to those who request them, and with the proceeds, as well as
with other offerings, he sends a “modest donation” to those in need.
The
pontifical almoner also accompanies the Pope at official appearances
and during international trips.
But under Pope Francis, Archbishop Krajewski's role is to be something more.
Since both Archbishop Krajewski and Monsignor Ravelli have been part of
the office of the papal master of ceremonies, it would seem that Pope
Francis wishes to mark his pontificate with a sort of “liturgy of the
poor.”
The archbishop recounted to L'Osservatore Romano Oct. 4 that Pope
Francis immediately explained to him the way he wanted to re-design his
office.
“You will not stay behind a desk signing parchments,” Pope Francis told
Archbishop Krajewski. “I want you always among the people. In Buenos
Aires I often went out in the evening to go find the poor. Now I no
longer can: it is difficult for me to leave the Vatican. You will do it
for me.”
Through Archbishop Krajewski, Pope Francis has already sent a $270 check
to an old woman from Marghera, in northern Italy, who had been robbed
of the wallet containing only $73.
Pope Francis also sent his almoner to buy international phone cards to
be delivered to the refugees who survived the Oct. 3 shipwreck in
Lampedusa, so that they might get in touch with their families.
Archbishop Krajewski was at Lampedusa four days later, saying Mass,
blessing the corpses of those who died, and saying the rosary together
with Archbishop Francesco Montenegro of Agrigento and Fr. Stefano
Nastasi, Lampedusa's parish priest.
Following that, he visited the survivors, giving them consolation from the Pope as well as financial aid and the phone cards.
Archbishop Krajewski's activism is something new to the Office of Papal Charities.
Archbishop Guido Pozzo, who was papal almoner until Archbishop
Krajewski's appointment, told L’Osservatore Romano Dec. 29 that in 2011
his office had delivered some $1.2 million in response to 7,000 requests
for aid.
He explained that “the almoners' donations are of modest amount, in
order to extend the aid we can give to the biggest number of people.”
He
also stressed that anyone's “request for financial aid must come
together with a written acknowledgment of their parish priest.”
In accord with Pope Francis' mind, however, Archbishop Krajewski will
not be waiting for parish priests' written acknowledgments.
He recounted to L'Osservatore Romano that “if, for example, our office
gets a request for an aid to pay an electricity bill, I would go to
visit that family and see with my very eyes what their conditions are.”