Pope celebrates Mass with hosts made by Argentine prisoner
August 16, 2013 - Since July 18, Pope Francis has been celebrating Mass each day
in the chapel of the Santa Martha Residence in the Vatican, with hosts made by a woman
in prison in his native Argentina. Pope Francis sent a letter to the woman, known
as “Gaby C,” thanking her for a previous letter she had sent him. “I thank you for
confiding in me...and for the hosts,” the Holy Father wrote on July 17. “Starting
tomorrow I will celebrate Mass with them and I assure you that I am moved. Your letter
made me think, and it has led me to pray for you...but it gives me joy and assures
me that you are praying for me,” the Pope wrote. “May Jesus bless you and the Holy
Virgin care for you,” Pope Francis told her, adding that he keeps the photos she sent
in his office. “This brings comfort not only to me but to my parents, who are believers,
as well,” Gaby C said. The woman began making hosts a year ago after meeting Father
Jorge Garcia Cueva, the prison chaplain, and Father Juan Ignacio Pandolfini, a local
pastor. The two priests explained that the project “brought meaning to her life in
captivity” and has helped her from falling into discouragement. The Benedictine Sisters
of San Isidro provided her with training on how to make the hosts, and soon parishes
in the diocese began placing orders. “Gaby and the prison ministry team were immensely
thrilled upon receiving the letter written by Pope Francis. From the Vatican to the
prison!” the priests said. They noted that ever since she began serving her sentence,
she has endured typical hardships of female prisoners, such as harassment and mistreatment.
“There are many Gabys,” they added. “Today she is the symbol of those who are incarcerated.
She is the voice of all the excluded we accompany and visit in each pavilion, in each
cell.” “We have no doubt that it is the voice of Jesus in prison in each one of them,
who shouts to society to be heard, accompanied and recognized. The prison brings us
the mercy of God to make heard the voices of the forgotten and marginalized, those
who society refuses to look at and listen to.” (Source: CNA)