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‘I'm Suffering, I Have No Job To Feed’—Nigerian Man To Pope Francis After Migrant Mass In Cyprus

December 6, 2021

Jonathan, who was waiting outside the church on the divided island of Cyprus, where Pope Francis held an ecumenical prayer service for migrants and refugees in Cyprus on Friday, said he needs prayers as he is without accommodation and a job to feed himself.

A 25-year-old Nigerian man in Cyprus, Kingdom Miracle Jonathan called on Pope Francis to pray for him as he confessed that he had been suffering since he arrived in the country. 

Jonathan, who was waiting outside the church on the divided island of Cyprus, where Pope Francis held an ecumenical prayer service for migrants and refugees in Cyprus on Friday, said he needs prayers as he is without accommodation and a job to feed himself.

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He said, "I would like the pope to conduct a prayer for me and to tell him how I need his help," he said. "I've been suffering here ... I have no accommodation, no job, I'm struggling to feed myself here in Cyprus, so I need help."


During the prayer on Friday, the Pope spoke out against "closed-mindedness and prejudice."

Francis was expected to take 50 migrants back to Italy — a gesture that inspired dozens more to flock to the Church of the Holy Cross, some in apparent hopes that they too may get the chance to start new lives there, AFP reports.
 
Catholics from the Middle East, Africa, and Asia filled the pews of the Nicosia church next to the UN-patrolled buffer zone that divides the city and the Mediterranean island, a key destination for people fleeing war and poverty.

The Pope said, "Your presence, migrant brothers and sisters, is very significant for this celebration.”

He praised "the dream of a humanity freed of walls of division, freed of hostility, where there are no longer strangers, but only fellow citizens -- fellow citizens who are diverse, yet proud of that diversity and individuality, which are God's gift."

The plight of migrants and the notion of fraternity have been key themes of the visit of Francis, who Saturday travelled to Greece, including the key migrant hub island of Lesbos.

Francis – on his 35th international trip since becoming pope in 2013 – is the second Catholic pontiff to visit Cyprus after Benedict XVI in 2010.


In the church, he thanked migrants who had shared their testimonies of journeys from Iraq, Sri Lanka, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Cameroon, including one migrant who had declared being "wounded by hate."

One South Asian spoke of a harrowing journey: "I have had to run away from violence, bombs, knives, hunger, and pain. I have been forced along dusty roads, pushed into trucks, hidden in the trunks of cars, thrown into leaking boats –deceived, exploited, forgotten, denied." 


The pope said: "Your testimonies are like a mirror held up to us, to our Christian communities.

"We should not be afraid of our differences, but of the closed-mindedness and prejudice that can prevent us from truly encountering one another and journeying together."


Staff from the charity Caritas tried to defuse tensions outside the church as around 100 migrants and asylum seekers, some with their names on the list to enter, many others not, gathered to try to go into the church to see the pope.


Many others had patiently waited for their chance to see Francis, who had earlier also addressed 7,000 faithful at a football stadium.


Among those set to travel with Francis, said the Cyprus interior ministry, are two migrants who have been trapped for months in the no-man's land of the "Green Line" that separates Cyprus, sleeping in a tent.

Francis on Thursday bemoaned "the terrible laceration" of Cyprus while also urging greater unity in Europe, instead of nationalism and "walls of fear", as the continent faces an influx of migrants.

"May this island, marked by a painful division, become by God's grace a workshop of fraternity," he said in the church.