The Vatican will host a concert for the poor and homeless of Rome
next month, not only using the concert to raise money for Pope Francis’
charities, but also inviting the poor to attend as the guests of honor.
Called “With the Poor and for the Poor,” free-will donations taken at
the end of the concert will benefit Pope Francis’ charitable projects:
this year, the building of a new cathedral in Moroto, Uganda, and an
agrarian school in Burkina Faso.
The concert will take place Nov. 12 in the Vatican’s Paul VI Hall.
Following the concert, volunteers of the Jubilee of Mercy and members
of the choir of the Diocese of Rome will distribute a meal and a small
gift to the invited guests as a reminder of the evening.
Performances at the concert will be by the Roman Symphonic Orchestra
and the National Choir of Saint Cecilia, directed by Academy
Award-winner Ennio Morricone. They will be performing excerpts from some
of Morricone’s most famous works.
Alongside them, Msgr. Marco Frisina will direct the choir of the
Diocese of Rome in performing several sacred songs and will lead those
present in reflections on the theme of charity in honor of the end of
the Jubilee of Mercy.
The event, organized by the Opera Nova Onlus and the choir of the
Diocese of Rome, is sponsored by the Pontifical Council for the
Promotion of the New Evangelization and by the St. Matthew Foundation in
memory of Cardinal Van Thuan, a Vietnamese cleric who was imprisoned by
his nation's communist government for 13 years.
Guests of an earlier edition of the concert
which took place at the Vatican May 14, 2015 included detainees from
Rome’s Rebbibia prison, in addition to elderly, the sick, families and
young persons from Roman parishes, particularly in poorer areas.
In his speech for the announcement of the 2015 concert, Msgr. Diego
Giovanni Ravelli drew attention to the emphasis on poverty, and quoted
Pope Francis, saying it is something which “calls us to plant hope!”
In reference to the event’s title, he explained that the concert will
be “with” the poor because the protagonists will be those most in need.
All donations made by the sponsors of the concert as well as those
who wish to make an offering will be given to Pope Francis’ charitable
projects, which in 2014 boasted over one and a half million in
charitable giving.
Distribution of the funds is a responsibility of the
papal almoner, Archbishop Konrad Krajewski.