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'Spiritual battery': Pilgrims gather in Lisbon for Catholic festival
Crowds of flag-waving pilgrims converged on Lisbon on Tuesday for the start of a week-long religious festival known as World Youth Day, a day before the arrival of Pope Francis.
Around 300,000 people from around the world are expected to attend the opening mass at 7:00 pm (1800 GMT) at the hillside Eduardo VII park, which offers sweeping views of the Portuguese capital and the Tagus river.
Pilgrims roamed around Lisbon in a festive mood ahead of the mass, waving national flags in the air, dancing and singing Catholic anthems from their home countries.
"My goal is to recharge my spiritual battery because sometimes, as young people, we let it run low," Xochilt Cecilia Velis, a 24-year-old from El Salvador, told AFP in central Lisbon.
Francis is set to arrive in Lisbon on Wednesday morning to celebrate World Youth Day, which is actually a week of religious, cultural and festive events held about every three years in a different city.
The 86-year-old pontiff is by Church standards the most liberal pope in decades and is very popular with young people.
During his papacy, he has tried to create a more compassionate church, reaching out to the gay community and talking frankly to youngsters about abortion, divorce and gender identity.
Fernanda Euceda, a 21-year-old pilgrim from Honduras, said she felt "deep affection" for Francis "because the messages he sends out has so much love for young people."
"I think this is above all what fills your heart with hope," she told AFP.
- 'Coming together' -
In Portugal, he has a typically packed schedule for his five-day visit, despite having spent nine nights in hospital after undergoing hernia surgery in June.
Francis, the first Latin American pope, is due to make 11 public pronouncements and hold numerous meetings, and on Saturday will visit the shrine of Fatima north of Lisbon.
Church organisers expect one million faithful will attend the event's closing mass held by the pope on Sunday at a waterside park on the outskirts of Lisbon.
Images of the pope were on display on banners across the city as well as on screens on automatic bank machines along with the message: "I am with you".
A Lisbon pastry shop is even selling cookies with the image of the smiling pontiff wearing a crucifix.
"It's going to be extraordinary, all this Christian youth coming together," said Gabriel Forestier, a 28-year-old engineer from Amiens in northern France.
World Youth Day, which has been dubbed the "Catholic Woodstock", is part of the Vatican's efforts to galvanise young Catholics at a time when secularism and disgust over clerical child sex abuse cause some faithful to abandon the Church.
- Meeting with abuse victims -
Pope Francis is expected during his visit to meet privately with victims of sexual abuse by members of the Portuguese clergy.
A report released in February by an independent commission -- similar to audits elsewhere in Europe and the Americas -- determined that at least 4,815 children had been abused by clergy members in Portugal since 1950.
The inquiry -- similar to audits elsewhere in Europe and the Americas -- concluded that the Church hierarchy in Portugal "systematically" tried to conceal the abuse.
Around 16,000 members of law enforcement, civil protection and medical staff are being deployed for the pope's visit, officials said.
Initially scheduled for August 2022, but postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Lisbon World Youth Day is the 16th international edition of what has become the largest gathering of Catholics worldwide.
The brainchild of late Pope John Paul II that started in 1986, this year's event is the fourth presided over by Pope Francis, who became head of the Catholic Church in 2013.
The last three events took place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2013, Krakow, Poland in 2016 and Panama City, Panama in 2019.
A.Ruiz--AT