
Pope Leo will have lunch with about 200 people experiencing poverty on Saturday at the Borgo Laudato Si’ educational centre, located within the Pontifical Gardens of Castel Gandolfo, where the Pope is on a summer break. Source: Vatican News.
The initiative, called Lunch with the Pope, will begin with the celebration of the Eucharist using the Liturgy for the Care of Creation, followed by a moment of welcome and refreshments, a guided visit through Borgo Laudato Si’, and a shared meal with the Holy Father.
The gathering builds on an initiative first launched in August last year, when Pope Leo shared lunch with poor people from the Diocese of Albano, in Italy. That encounter has since become an annual event promoted by the Laudato Si’ Centre for Higher Education, which oversees the development of the Borgo Laudato Si’ project.
Each year, a different diocese will be invited to bring together poor people, refugees, migrants, and others experiencing difficulties, offering them a day immersed in the beauty of creation and an opportunity to meet the Pope.
Cardinal Fabio Baggio, Director General of the Laudato Si’ Centre for Higher Education, said Borgo Laudato Si’ was created to demonstrate that “the care of creation and the care of the human person are one and the same mission”.
He described the initiative as another step in Pope Leo’s outreach to those living on the social peripheries, noting that the encounter reaffirms the Church’s vocation to be present wherever human dignity calls for “listening, closeness, and hope.”
Echoing that message, Archbishop Luis Marín de San Martín, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Service of Charity, said the Pope’s choice highlights that authentic charity is expressed through “closeness, encounter, and sharing”.
“When the Church places the most vulnerable people at the centre,” he said, “it makes the Gospel visible and bears witness that no one is on the margins of God’s heart.”
Cardinal Baldassare Reina, the Pope’s Vicar General for the Diocese of Rome, said those invited were people who are accompanied daily by parishes, Caritas, and numerous ecclesial and social organisations throughout the city.
“The encounter with the Holy Father restores centrality to those who too often remain on the margins,” he said, adding that it is also a call for the entire Christian community to embrace the responsibility of welcome.
FULL STORY
Pope to have lunch with 200 poor people from Rome in Castel Gandolfo (Vatican News)
