Thursday, April 28, 2011

Pope expresses concern for Roma seeking refuge in Rome basilica

Benedict XVI has sent a top Vatican official to the Basilica of St Paul Outside the Walls to convey his concern for a group of Roma who had sought refuge in the church after their camp was bulldozed by the city of Rome.

Fr Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman, said that Archbishop Fernando Filoni, who is in charge of the general affairs section of the Vatican Secretariat of State, had gone to “express the closeness of the Holy Father to the group of Roma”.

About 100 Roma entered the basilica courtyard and the church on April 22, Good Friday, after city officials dismantled their camp on the edge of Rome. 

The camp was one of four bulldozed during Holy Week, displacing close to 1,000 people, including children, said the Rome diocesan charity, Caritas.

Caritas Rome, working with a private charity, found temporary accommodation for the group in the early evening on Easter Sunday, Fr Lombardi said. 

First, however, the Roma ate an Easter lunch on the lawn outside the basilica.

According to Italian news reports, there were moments of tension late on April 23 when the Vatican police, who patrol the basilica and the property surrounding it, opened the basilica for the faithful to attend the Easter Vigil, but tried to keep a small group of Roma out of the church itself, directing them instead to an adjacent room set aside for them.

“The behaviour of the Vatican gendarmes was always proper and humane,” Fr Lombardi said. They worked closely with officials from Caritas and Rome public safety officers, he said.

Fr Lombardi said he hoped the temporary accommodation arranged by Caritas would be the “prelude to a stable and adequate” arrangement.

Social service agencies and human rights groups particularly criticised Rome’s mayor, Gianni Alemanno, for ordering the Roma camps to be dismantled without providing for the people who would be made homeless by their destruction.

After Caritas found housing for the group from St Paul’s, Mr Alemanno issued a statement thanking the Diocese of Rome, but also saying the city would continue to dismantle camps erected without permits and that it would not provide alternatives for them because that could encourage more Roma and other homeless people to come to Rome.