Pope Francis made a historic visit Friday to Auschwitz-Birkenau, the notorious former German Nazi concentration camp in Poland, to pay tribute to the more than 1 million people, mostly Jews, who lost their lives there in the Holocaust.
The Pope arrived early Friday for his first trip to Auschwitz and sat alone for some time by a tree in solemn reflection. He was surrounded by piles of rubble -- destroyed gas chambers once used to put Jews to death during World War II.
Francis is the third Pope to visit the
site of wartime torture and killings, and the trip comes after he made a
stern warning this week that "the world is at war."
The Pope remained silent throughout most of the visit, but he left a message noting the horror and the need to forgive.
In
the camp's guestbook, Francis signed his name and wrote: "Lord, have
mercy on your people! Lord, forgiveness for so much cruelty!
Pope 'like my friend'
The Pope also met briefly with Holocaust survivors and their families.
Among those in attendance was survivor and Jewish activist Marian Turski, who was held at the concentration camp.
Turski said he felt the Pope was "like my friend," commending his ability to relate to people.
He said he was tattooed at Auschwitz to signify he had been "purchased" by the camp.
"I was in this camp until almost the last day and then put in the death march to another camp" he told journalists.
Reacting to recent violence, Francis warned "the world is at war" days before visiting Auschwitz.
He
said the camp commanders would tell the prisoners that surviving for
two months was a reasonable time for the Polish. "If you are a priest or
a Jew, I don't think you can survive longer than a week or two weeks,"
he said, relaying the commanders' comments.
A song for the departed
The
Pope visited cells where prisoners were held, sitting in the middle of
one in prayer, making the sign of the cross before seeing others.
One of the cells held the Polish
Catholic priest Maximilian Kolbe, who died in 1941 when he volunteered
to take the place of another prisoner set to be executed.
The
Pope also visited the nearby Birkenau camp, known as Auschwitz II,
where he met with dozens of people who housed Jews or risked their lives
to protect them from the Nazis.
They knelt before the Pope, and many kissed his hand as Francis handed out little red boxes containing rosaries.
Bishops attend a Mass celebrated by Pope Francis on Thursday in Czestochowa, Poland.
He
stood in front of 23 plaques that represented the languages spoken at
the camp, holding a hand on his heart in grave silence, as a rabbi sang
Psalm 130, dedicated to the departed.
'Culture of waste'
Later
Friday, Francis met with patients at the University Children's Hospital
in Krakow, where he called on Christians to spend more time with the
ill and to care for them, as he said Jesus did.
He
spoke to a crowd of more than 100, including children in wheelchairs
and child cancer patients with their heads shaved in the front row.
"I would love so much that we as Christians could be close to the sick," he said.
"Our society is unfortunately more inclined to the culture of waste, which is the opposite (of) the culture of welcoming."
'When hatred is allowed to fester'
On
Thursday, he delivered an outdoor Mass before a huge gathering of young
Catholics in Krakow on the 1,050th anniversary of Poland's "baptism" as
a Catholic country.
On his flight to Poland on Wednesday, the Pope addressed this week's slaying of a Catholic priest in northern France's Normandy region by two jihadists who declared their allegiance to ISIS.
Francis greets the faithful Thursday as he arrives at a monastery in Czestochowa.
He told reporters that "the world is at war" but stressed it was not a war of religion.
"The
world is at war because it has lost peace," he said. "There is a war of
interests, there is a war for money, a war for natural resources, a war
to dominate people," he said.
Ronald S. Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, hailed
the Pope's Auschwitz trip as "a strong signal" against hatred and
called the Catholic Church leader "one of the closest allies Jews have
today in the fight against anti-Semitism and bigotry."
"Auschwitz is an eternal reminder of
what can happen when hatred is allowed to fester, when the world remains
silent in the face of evil and looks the other way as unspeakable
crimes are being committed nearby," Lauder said.
"We
thank him for going to Auschwitz. His visit there sends an important
signal to the world that this dark chapter must never be forgotten and
that the truth about what happened seven decades ago must not be
obfuscated."
World Youth Day central to Francis' trip
The Auschwitz-Birkenau camp opened in 1940 in Oswiecim, a Polish city that the Nazis annexed.
It was established as the local prisons grew beyond capacity with the Nazis' mass arrests of Poles.
But it soon transformed into the largest death camp for Jews and other so-called enemies of the Nazi state.
As the Soviets came to liberate
Auschwitz in January 1945, the Nazi SS soldiers destroyed much of the
evidence of their crimes at Auschwitz, including gas chambers and
crematoriums.
The Pope's five-day visit to Poland marks his first trip to the predominantly Catholic Eastern European country.
Central
to his trip is World Youth Day -- an event organized by the church that
draws young Catholics on pilgrimages from around the world every two or
three years. Young people from 187 countries are expected to attend.
At an
early Mass on Thursday in the southern Polish city of Czestochowa,
Francis, who is 79, stumbled and fell after appearing to trip on a step.
Members of the clergy swiftly assisted him, and the service continued
without interruption.





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