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Pope to open Holy Door at Rome prison at beginning of Jubilee 2025

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Pope Francis opens the Holy Door of St Peter’s Basilica to inaugurate the Jubilee Year of Mercy at the Vatican in this file photo from Dec. 8, 2015. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Two days after opening the Holy Door of St Peter’s Basilica to inaugurate the Holy Year 2025, Pope Francis will travel to a Rome prison to open a Holy Door as a “tangible sign of the message of hope” for people in prisons around the world, the Vatican announced.

The pope will go 26 December to Rebibbia prison on the outskirts of Rome, “a symbol of all the prisons dispersed throughout the world,” to deliver a message of hope to prisoners, Archbishop Rino Fisichella, pro-prefect of the Dicastery for Evangelisation’s section for new evangelization and the chief organizer of the Holy Year 2025, announced at a news conference 28 October.

Pope Francis will open the Holy Door of St Peter’s Basilica 24 December. He will then open the Holy Doors at the major basilicas of St John Lateran 29 December, St Mary Major 1 January 1 and St Paul Outside the Walls 5 January.

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In his “bull of indiction,” the document formally proclaiming the Holy Year 2025, Pope Francis wrote that during the Holy Year he will have close to his heart “prisoners who, deprived of their freedom, feel daily the harshness of detention and its restrictions, lack of affection and, in more than a few cases, lack of respect for their persons.”

In the document, the pope also called on governments to “undertake initiatives aimed at restoring hope” for incarcerated persons during the Holy Year, such as expanding forms of amnesty and social reintegration programs.

Barbara Jatta, director of the Vatican Museums, speaks during a news conference at the Vatican Oct. 28, 2024. To the right is Archbishop Rino Fisichella, pro-prefect of the Dicastery for Evangelization’s section for new evangelisation. (CNS photo/Justin McLellan)

Archbishop Fisichella announced that the Vatican had signed an agreement with Italy’s minister of justice and the government commissioner for Rome to implement reintegration programs for incarcerated individuals by involving their participation in activities during the Jubilee Year.

The archbishop also outlined the schedule of cultural offerings leading up to the Jubilee Year, during which the city of Rome estimates that 30 million people will visit the Italian capital.

The Vatican will organise a concert of Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 5, to be performed by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in Rome 3 November; three art exhibitions in November and December, including a display of rare Christian icons from the collection of the Vatican Museums; and a concert from the Sistine Chapel Choir two days before the opening of the Holy Door.

Archbishop Fisichella also unveiled the official mascot of the Holy Year 2025: “Luce” (Italian for light), a cartoon pilgrim dressed in a yellow raincoat, mud-stained boots, wearing a missionary cross and holding a pilgrim’s staff. Luce’s glowing eyes feature the shape of scallop shells, a traditional symbol of pilgrimage and hope.

The mascot, he said, was inspired by the church’s desire “to live even within the pop culture so beloved by our youth.”

“Luce” (Italian for “Light”), the official mascot for the Holy Year 2025, is seen during a news conference at the Vatican Oct. 28, 2024. (CNS photo/Justin McLellan)

Luce” will also serve as the mascot of the Holy See’s pavilion at Expo 2025, which will take place in Osaka, Japan, from April to October 2025.

The Holy See pavilion—which will be hosted inside of Italy’s national pavilion—will have the theme “Beauty brings hope,” and display the 17th-century painting “The Entombment of Christ” by Caravaggio—the only one of his works housed in the Vatican Museums.

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