By Philip Pullella and Layli Foroudi
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Francis arrives on Friday in the French port city of Marseille for a lightning visit that will last a mere 27 hours but draw further attention to Europe’s continuing migration crisis.
The trip, to make concluding remarks at a meeting of Catholic young people and bishops from the Mediterranean area, was months in the planning. But it is now taking place in the wake of a new surge of thousands of arrivals of migrants last week at Lampedusa.
The small southern Italian island outpost, where most migrants making the dangerous crossing on often unseaworthy boats arrive in Europe, is closer to north Africa than it is to Sicily.
Nearly, 130,000 migrants have arrived in Italy so far this year, according to government data, nearly double the figure for the same period of 2022.
That, Italy’s right-wing Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni says, makes migration a problem for the entire EU, not just the burden of front-line receiving countries such as Italy, Malta, and Spain.
While Francis has said often that migrants should be shared among the 27 EU countries, his overall openness towards migrants, including once calling their exclusion “scandalous, disgusting and sinful,” has riled conservative politicians, not least in France.
“He behaves like a politician, or the head of an NGO, and not a pope,” said Gilles Pennelle, general director of the far-right Rassemblement National party of Marine Le Pen, President Emmanuel Macron’s main challenger in last year’s presidential vote.
“I think that the Christian message is one of welcome on an individual level, but it (migration) is an immense political problem and whether or not to welcome migrants is for politicians to decide,” he told Reuters in a telephone interview.
HEROES AND VICTIMS
Francis has said the visit is “to Marseille, not France,” and one of the first events will be a visit on Friday evening to a monument to the heroes and victims of the sea.
It will have echoes of Francis’ first visit as pope – in 2013 to Lampedusa, where he paid tribute to migrants who died at sea and condemned “the globalisation of indifference”.
The French bishops deliberately chose the diverse port city for the week-long “Mediterranean Encounters” event. It has a long history of migration – particularly from Europe, the Middle East and North Africa – and the influences of these different cultures are still felt in its streets.
“It is a cosmopolitan city that has not completely embraced the French republican idea, where many keep their double-triple identities,” Cesare Mattina, a sociologist at the University of Aix-Marseille, told Reuters in a telephone interview.
Marseille is a rare French city where migrant populations still live in the centre. Indeed, a former bishop of the city was fond of saying: “In Marseille you can go around the world in 80 hours, not 80 days,” a play of words on the title of the Jules Verne novel.
But Marseille is no immigration utopia. The city has many of the problems that plague most urban centres – crime, drugs, racism and indifference.
The city’s current archbishop, Cardinal Jean Marc Aveline, an Algerian-born Frenchman, said the meetings will also discuss social issues, economic disparities, the environment and climate change.
Macron is scheduled to meet the pope twice during the visit and is expected to attend a papal Mass on Saturday, which has gotten him into hot water with left-wing critics who say it violates strict separation of state and faith, known as laïcité.
(Layli Foroudi reported from Paris; additional reporting by Michael Rose in Paris and Alvise Armellini in Rome; Editing by David Gregorio)