Pilgrimage to the Holy Land
13. And how can I not recall my personal Jubilee along the pathways of
the Holy Land? I would have liked to begin that journey at Ur of the
Chaldeans, in order to follow, tangibly as it were, in the footsteps of Abraham
"our father in faith" (cf. Rom 4:11-16). However, I had to be
content with a pilgrimage in spirit, on the occasion of the evocative Liturgy
of the Word celebrated in the Paul VI Audience Hall on 23 February. The actual
pilgrimage came almost immediately afterwards, following the stages of
salvation history. Thus I had the joy of visiting Mount Sinai, where the gift
of the Ten Commandments of the Covenant was given. I set out again a month
later, when I reached Mount Nebo, and then went on to the very places where the
Redeemer lived and which he made holy. It is difficult to express the emotion I
felt in being able to venerate the places of his birth and life, Bethlehem and
Nazareth, to celebrate the Eucharist in the Upper Room, in the very place of
its institution, to meditate again on the mystery of the Cross at Golgotha,
where he gave his life for us. In those places, still so troubled and again
recently afflicted by violence, I received an extraordinary welcome not only
from the members of the Church but also from the Israeli and Palestinian
communities. Intense emotion surrounded my prayer at the Western Wall and my
visit to the Mausoleum of Yad Vashem, with its chilling reminder of the victims
of the Nazi death camps. My pilgrimage was a moment of brotherhood and peace, and
I like to remember it as one of the most beautiful gifts of the whole Jubilee
event. Thinking back to the mood of those days, I cannot but express my deeply
felt desire for a prompt and just solution to the still unresolved problems of
the Holy Places, cherished by Jews, Christians and Muslims together.
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