More than 30,000 Poles, including President Alexander Kwasniewski and Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek, are to travel to Rome from July 6-8.
Published:
6 July 2000 y., Thursday
More than 30,000 Poles, including President Alexander Kwasniewski and Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek, are to travel to Rome from July 6-8 on a "national pilgrimage" as part of the Jubilee 2000 celebrations, organizers said Tuesday.
More than 90 percent of Poles declare themselves to be Catholic. Some 60 Polish bishops will also take part in this unprecedented pilgrimage, as well as the chairmen of both chambers of parliament and Solidarity leader and presidential candidate Marian Krzaklewski, said Jacek Pedziwiatr of the pilgrimage’s organizing committee. "We would like to thank God for the gift of the Jubilee of the 2,000th anniversary of the birth of Christ. We also have special gratitude to him for having given us a Polish Pope," Father Adam Schulz, spokesman for the Polish Episcopate, was quoted as saying in the daily Zycie.
The main events of pilgrimage include celebrating mass Thursday morning with Pope Jean-Paul II and a meeting later in the day.
Šaltinis:
Central Europe Online
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The international medical aid agency Medicine Sans Frontieres say the migrants - who are being employed in Southern Italy, are being exploited by living in very poor conditions and being paid meagre wages.
more »
Inmates at the Philippine national prison never imagined they would serve sentences by making dresses.
more »
In Albert Einstien's view "common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age 18".
more »
Prosecutors in Poland are examining whether the exhibition entitled 'Bodies' is illegal.
more »
New proposal to strengthen disaster prevention capacities and increase cooperation with developing countries.
more »
Private broadcaster Channel 10 aired "The Tonight Show" with Lior Shlein last week, with a skit depicting the Virgin Mary as a pregnant teenager and Jesus as being too fat to walk on water.
more »
Stockholm and Hamburg named first ‘green capitals’. Budapest wins European mobility week award.
more »
Bells ringing out to mark the start of the ceremony in Melbourne - capital of the disaster-hit state of Victoria.
more »
Carnival's celebrated in Germany's mainly Catholic regions - the south and the west.
more »
Circus campaign will raise awareness of EU social policies in 2009.
more »