Pope Francis to visit Knock shrine during trip to Ireland

Pontiff’s Phoenix Park Mass is expected to be the largest-ever ticketed event

Pope Francis will pay a brief visit to the Marian Shrine at Knock, Co Mayo, and may meet prisoners and clerical abuse survivors, as part of his visit to Ireland for the World Meeting of Families.

He will fly by plane from Dublin to Knock airport on Sunday August 26th and, it is planned, travel by motorcade the 20-kilometre route along the N17 to Knock shrine. There, according to details of his itinerary obtained by The Irish Times, he will say the rosary followed by Angelus at noon in the Apparition Chapel. It is unclear whether he will visit the Basilica.

Afterwards he will fly back to Dublin for a 3pm Mass in the Phoenix Park where crowds will be limited to 600,000 by Garda and city authorities for health and safety reasons.

Free entry

Organisers believe this will be the largest-ever ticketed event in the world. Entry is free.

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Pope Francis will fly back to Rome at about 7pm that Sunday evening, after spending about 36 hours in Ireland on Saturday August 25th and Sunday August 26th. Plans have yet to be agreed on whether he will travel through the city, possibly in the popemobile.

On the Saturday, he will visit President Michael D Higgins and his wife Sabina at Áras an Uachtaráin, with a civic reception at Dublin Castle hosted by Taoiseach Leo Varadkar in the afternoon.

Prison

Later that afternoon he will visit Br Kevin Crowley and the Capuchin Day Centre for Homeless People on Dublin's Bow Street. He is likely to visit a prison – yet to be finalised – and will meet clerical abuse survivors privately.

As of now there are no plans for him to visit Northern Ireland. The Northern Catholic bishops have been pressing the Vatican hard to include a visit across the Border in the papal itinerary.

The planned visit to Knock is believed to be at Pope Francis’s instigation. He has a particular devotion to Mary and earlier this year instituted a new feast in her honour as Mother of the Church. It is to be celebrated on the first Monday after Pentecost every year, May 21st this year.

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry is a contributor to The Irish Times