Pope commissions showers for the homeless under the colonnades at St. Peter’s

Pope commissions showers for the homeless under the colonnades at St. Peter’s November 13, 2014

f45e0c4e72

Remarkable: 

“Father, I can’t go to the restaurant with you because I smell.”

Franco is a homeless man from Sardinia, he has a bristly grey beard and weather-beaten skin. At the beginning of October, he was the one who explained to a bishop, who invited him to dinner to celebrate his birthday, what the biggest need for the homeless in Rome is.

“Here no one starves to death, you can find a sandwich every day. But there is no place to use the toilet and wash.”

The bishop is Konrad Krajewski, the Papal Almoner. The message was immediately received; on Monday 17th November work will begin to build three showers within the public restrooms for pilgrims under St. Peter’s colonnades. They will be devoted to the homeless who find themselves near the Basilica. They will be able to wash and change their underwear beneath the windows of the Apostolic Palace. And upon the invitation of the Pope’s Almoner, ten parishes in Rome in the neighborhoods most frequented by the homeless have already built showers which are available to them.

Monsignor Krajewski, known as Father Conrad, has been taking provisions and aid to those who live on the streets for years. Pope Francis has chosen him for this reason, appointing him bishop and entrusting him the Almonry; he has the task of being the Pope’s “first responder”: of providing small economic help to those who are enduring hardships. The Polish bishop tells of the meeting at the beginning of October, which opened his eyes: “I had just come out of the Church of the Holy Spirit, where I go to hear confessions. In the Via della Conciliazione I met Franco, a homeless man. He told me that he was turning fifty that day and that he had been living on the street for ten years.” The bishop invites him for dinner at a restaurant. The man answers: “But I smell…” Monsignor Krajewski continues, “I took him with me nonetheless. We went to a Chinese restaurant. During dinner, he explained to me that you can always find some food in Rome. What is missing is places to wash.”

In the capital, there are Caritas soup kitchens, there’s the soup kitchen of the Community of Sant’Egidio, but there are also many initiatives in parishes. Those who live on the streets know where to go. There are also places where it is possible to take a shower. The Community of Sant’Egidio, who are on the frontline in helping the homeless, published an updated handbook entitled “Where to eat, sleep and wash.” Franco explained that “it is always very crowded and there is little time available. That is why I prefer to set money aside and book a shower room at Termini Station from time to time.” The Papal Almoner, who had previously considered food as the primary need of the homeless, has no time to lose. He is used to acting immediately, without making grand plans, without organizing fundraisers that take months. “In the Gospel, Jesus always uses the word ‘today’… And it is today that we must respond to people’s needs…”

Read it all.  

Last year, I posted more on the Papal Almoner, and noted the position’s close ties to the diaconate:

The position of almoner emerged over the centuries.  It is based on a tradition of giving charity to those in need which goes right back to the earliest centuries of the Church. Originally, it was one of the immediate responsibilities of the Deacons in the Church. Later on, responsibility for the Pope’s charities came to be exercised by one or more members of the papal household, but with no particular hierarchical dignity – that came later.


Browse Our Archives