Continuing his tradition of performing a spiritual or corporal work of mercy on one Friday a month during the Church's Jubilee of Mercy in 2016, the Pope went in the afternoon of March 31 to the St. Alessio-Margherita di Savoia Regional Centre for the blind in Rome.
According to a March 31 communique from the Vatican, the Pope wished to make this visit as a “follow-up” to the private visits of the Jubilee.
This particular act of mercy, the communique stated, was to guests of the centre, which organizes activities “aimed at social inclusion of the blind and visually impaired.”
During his visit, the Pope met with the different guests, some of whom have been blind from birth and others who have no vision or impaired vision due to a serious disease. Some of the guests have multiple disabilities.
Among the guests there are around 50 children who attend the centre to receive practical training in life skills and in navigating daily activities, as well as 37 elderly people who are permanent residents of the facility.
Francis also greeted the president and director general of the centre, the medical staff and volunteers.
Before leaving, he left a gift and signed a parchment for the centre's chapel, in memory of his visit. He returned to the Vatican around 6:00 p.m.
Pope Francis kicked off his monthly works of mercy in January 2016 by visiting a retirement home for the elderly, sick, and those in a vegetative state, and a month later traveled to a centre for those recovering from drug addiction in Castel Gandolfo.
Other visits throughout the year included refugees, children, formerly sex-trafficked women, former priests, infants and the terminally ill.
In December 2016, Pope Francis said in an interview with the official website for the Jubilee of Mercy that he would be making “different gestures” of mercy once a month on Fridays during the Holy Year.
(Story from the Catholic News Agency)