Pope Francis will head to two cities in Morocco March 30-31, 2019, the Vatican announced Tuesday.
Pope Francis will visit the cities of Rabat and Casablanca, a Nov. 13
message stated. The schedule of the trip is not yet published.
According to papal spokesman Greg Burke, the visit takes place at the
invitation of King Mohammed VI of Morocco and the Catholic bishops.
Francis will be the second pope to visit the country, after St. Pope
John Paul II went in 1985 as the first pope to visit a Muslim country at
the invitation of the state.
Morocco, which is located on the north-west side of Africa, is a
majority Muslim country. The total population, as of 2014, was around 29
million. There were an estimated 21,000 Catholics in the country in
that year; just .1 percent of the population.
The country has two archdioceses; one in Ribat, the country’s capital city, and one based in Tanger.
After Pope Francis received an invitation to visit the country from
King Mohammed earlier this year, there had been rumors about whether he
would attend a United Nations gathering in December for the adoption of
the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly, and Regular Migration.
Now that the trip has been announced for March, what the pope’s
agenda in Morocco will be has not yet been revealed, though it will
likely focus on Christian-Muslim relations and migration.
The visit to Morocco falls just two months after the pope will travel
to Panama Jan. 23-27, 2019, the only other Vatican confirmed apostolic
visit in the upcoming year, though there have been comments from heads
of state and bishops that say Francis may also be traveling to Romania
and to Mozambique.
He has also expressed the desire to visit Japan. Cardinal Désiré
Tsarahazana said at a Vatican press briefing Oct. 9 that the pope will
visit Madagascar in 2019. Holy See spokesperson Greg Burke said at the
time he could not confirm the trip, but that the possibility was “well
under study.”
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