Uganda masses turn out for pope

Francis honors 1800s martyrs, urges crowds to draw on faith

Crowds greet Pope Francis on Saturday at the Kololo airstrip in Kampala, Uganda. He told Ugandans, “In your veins runs the blood of martyrs, and for this reason you have such a strong faith.”
Crowds greet Pope Francis on Saturday at the Kololo airstrip in Kampala, Uganda. He told Ugandans, “In your veins runs the blood of martyrs, and for this reason you have such a strong faith.”

NAMUGONGO, Uganda -- Pope Francis on Saturday honored Uganda's 19th-century Christian martyrs and encouraged its 21st-century Christian youths during a day in which nearly half a million Ugandans turned out to see the pontiff before he heads to Central African Republic for the final leg of his African journey.

photo

AP

Pope Francis arrives Saturday at a cathedral in Kampala, Uganda, to meet with priests and seminarians. The pope got an enthusiastic welcome as he made many stops in Uganda, with nearly a half-million people thronging to see him before he heads to Central African Republic to wrap up his Africa trip.

The welcome at each of Francis' many stops was as enthusiastic as he has ever received: Pilgrims camped out overnight in rain showers to score a spot for his morning Mass at the site of Uganda's most famous shrine. And some 150,000 young people gave him a rock star's welcome when he arrived in his popemobile for a pep rally.

At each venue, Francis reminded Ugandans of their strong Christian roots -- the former British colony is 47 percent Catholic and 36 percent Anglican -- and to apply their faith to today's challenges.

"Remember, you are a people of martyrs," he said. "In your veins runs the blood of martyrs, and for this reason you have such a strong faith."

Francis began the day with a Mass before an estimated 300,000 people honoring the 45 Anglican and Catholic martyrs who were burned alive because they wouldn't renounce their faith during an anti-Christian persecution in the late 1800s.

At the Namugongo shrine, the site of their execution, Francis urged the faithful to use the martyrs' example to be missionaries at home by taking care of "the elderly, the poor, the widowed and the abandoned."

Later, Francis headlined a large pep rally at an unused airstrip.

He ditched his prepared speech and spoke from the heart in a casual, conversational style.

He heard from a woman, Winnie Nansumba, who was born HIV-positive and lost her parents before she turned 7. She suffered from depression but now is an activist promoting abstinence before marriage and monogamy in wedlock.

Francis also heard from Emmanuel Odokonyero, who was abducted by Uganda's brutal Lord's Resistance Army and was held captive and tortured for three months before he escaped. He later got a university degree.

Francis told them that faith can help them overcome all of life's difficulties.

"Overcome difficulties, transform the negative into positive, and pray," Francis told the crowd.

Francis is expected to shift his message to pressing geopolitical concerns when he arrives today in Bangui, Central African Republic, where deadly violence between Christians and Muslims has flared recently despite the presence of a United Nations peacekeeping force.

A Section on 11/29/2015

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