BRNO, Czech Republic – Some 120,000 worshippers turned out at an airfield yesterday for a Mass led by Pope Benedict XVI as part of his visit aimed at drawing Czechs and other secular Europeans back to the Catholic Church.
Waving national flags from several neighbouring countries, the crowd heard the pope urge people gathered in the country’s second-biggest city to keep God in their lives.
Many in the crowd came from nearby Poland, Slovakia and Hungary to greet the pope in the Czech Republic, where centuries of religious wars and decades of brutal communist repression have made it one of the world’s most secular countries.
“History has demonstrated the absurdities to which man descends when he excludes God from the horizon of his choices and actions, and how hard it is to build a society inspired by the values of goodness, justice and fraternity, because the human being is free and his freedom remains fragile,” the pope said.
The three-day visit is his first trip to the central European country in 12 years and precedes the 20th anniversary in November of the “Velvet Revolution” that ended decades of communist totalitarian rule.
The church has struggled with faltering appeal in a nation where about a third of the country’s 10.5 million residents identify themselves as Catholic. “Your country, like other nations, is experiencing cultural conditions that often present a radical challenge to faith and therefore also to hope,” the pope said.
Unlike in neighbouring Poland, most leaders of the Czechoslovak state that emerged from the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian empire in 1918 were avowedly secular or more in tune with the reformist tradition of medieval priest Jan Hus – a heretic for the Catholic Church.
Four decades of communist rule starting in 1948 suppressed religious activity and the government closed monasteries and jailed many priests and believers. – (Reuters)