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Pope Francis paid a surprise visit yesterday to the Italian mountain communities devastated by an August earthquake, mixing poignant silent prayers amid the ruins with grinning selfies alongside survivors he implored to believe in a brighter future.
In keeping with his desire to make a relatively low-key visit to an area where nearly 300 people died barely six weeks ago, the 79-year-old Pontiff’s trip to the shattered town of Amatrice and the devastated nearby hamlets of Accumoli and Arquata del Tronto was only announced to the media after he had arrived.
He had said he wanted to come like a parish priest carrying out his pastoral duty.
But there was no escaping the crowds as news of his visit spread quickly.
In one of the most poignant images of the day, Francis stood briefly in silent prayer in the closed-off “red zone” of Amatrice, his stooped silhouette framed by the shells of condemned buildings and piles of rubble.
He later repeated the gesture outside the ruins of the St Francesco church in Accumoli, having spent two hours over lunch chatting with 60 pensioners in a retirement home where some of the elderly victims of the quake are now housed.
But there were also many lighter moments as he smiled broadly for selfies with local youngsters and group photos with firefighters.
“I did not come earlier so as not to create any problems, knowing the state you were in,” he told survivors. “I did not want to cause any bother.”
“But from the outset I felt I had to come to you, simply to tell you that I am with you, nothing more, and that I am praying for you.”
After blessing the crowd in Amatrice and saying a brief Ave Maria prayer, Francis issued a message of hope for an area still struggling to come to terms with the scale of Italy’s deadliest quake since the 2009 L’Aquila disaster.
“We go forward, there is always a future,” he said on what was the feast day of St Francis of Assisi, the venerated Catholic figure in whose honour Francis selected his papal name. “There are many dear ones who have left us, who fell here under the masonry. We pray to the Madonna for them, we all do together.”
“Always look forward. Go forward, have courage and help each other. We walk better together, on our own, we cannot get there.”
The Pope’s first point of call had been the prefabricated huts brought in to replace Amatrice’s combined elementary and middle school, which was destroyed in the quake despite having been expensively renovated to make it quake resistant a few years ago.
Francis had confirmed his intention to visit the quake-hit area on his flight home from Azerbaijan on Sunday, saying that he wanted to visit “privately, alone, as a priest, a bishop, a pope”.
The government has estimated the cost of the damage done to the area hit by the quake at €4bn ($4.5bn) and has vowed to rebuild the worst-affected communities where they were, having ruled out any relocations.
Just under 1,400 people remain housed in temporary accommodation – either tented villages or hotels in the surrounding area, according to an official update issued yesterday.
The 6.0-6.2-magnitude earthquake, which was felt in Rome, 150km (93 miles) from the epicentre near Amatrice, killed 297 people and injured hundreds more.
Around two-thirds of the deaths occurred in Amatrice, a beauty spot and popular tourist destination packed with holiday-makers when the quake struck at the height of the summer season.
The devastated area was only 50km from the city of L’Aquila, which was hit by a 2009 earthquake in which more than 300 people perished.
This handout picture released by the Vatican press office yesterday shows Pope Francis during his visit in Amatrice.
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