Catholics on the net
Charities | Shopping | Vocations | Singles

Church Teaching Q&A
Life & Family
Lighthouse Catholic Media
Lifestyle
Scriptures & More
Prayers & Devotions
News & Media
Faith & Finance

GLOBAL ZENIT NEWS
Rome's Zenit News


Pope Greets Nigerian Freed From Prostitution Slavery

VATICAN CITY, NOV. 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI today greeted a Nigerian woman who was recently freed from the slavery of prostitution thanks to the endeavors of the Community of Pope John XXIII.


The young woman represented the community at today's general audience in St. Peter's Square. She was at the Vatican with some 3,000 members of the group, commemorating the second anniversary of the death of the founder, Italian Father Oreste Benzi.
 
Father Benzi dedicated himself to the poor and least in society, and particularly to freeing people from the chains of prostitution and drugs. He created the Community of Pope John XXIII in 1968. It is now a private international association of pontifical right, with more than 600 centers in 25 countries, at the daily service of some 40,000 people.
 
On greeting the members of the community, Benedict XVI referred to the anniversary of Father Benzi's death and expressed his hope that "the fruitful spiritual legacy of this worthy priest will be a stimulus for you so that the providential work he began in favor of the least of our society will bear fruit in the Church and in the world."
 
"I am pleased to support you with prayer," the Pontiff assured.
 
On several occasions, Father Benzi introduced Pope John Paul II to girls and women the community had been able to free from prostitution.

--- --- ---

On the Net:

Community of Pope John XXIII: en.apg23.org/en/TheCommunity
© 2010 Zenit. All rights reserved. Terms of Use available at www.zenit.org
Podcast & Webcast
Think & Learn
Did you go to Catholic school?
Yes
No
Info & Resources


 © 2010 Catholic.net Inc.
 Reproduction of material from any Catholic.net pages without written permission is strictly prohibited.
 All rights reserved.