More than two million people are expected to converge near a shrine in the Ugandan capital where Pope Francis will celebrate Mass on Saturday, a Church official in the country has said.
The shrine is undergoing major renovations, including replacing aluminum with glass on its dome and repairing the narrow road leading to it in the Kampala suburb of Namugongo.
“To receive all these people is not easy. You have got to provide facilities for all of them, for all the pilgrims coming from everywhere,” said Fr Vincent Lubega, the rector of the Uganda Martyrs Shrine.
Although work inside the shrine is complete, workers are planting grass at the entrance and the terraced pavilion where pilgrims will sit is under construction.
Many Ugandans, meanwhile, have donated cash toward improving the shrine.
The shrine holds a special place in local Catholicism as it is dedicated to a group of Christians – referred to as the Uganda Martyrs – who were murdered on the orders of a local king eager to thwart the influence of Christianity.
Francis is expected to refer to the example of those martyrs – 45 Anglicans and Catholics killed during the persecution of Christians between 1885 and 1887. Paul VI canonised the 22 African Catholics in 1964.
“We invited the Pope to celebrate with us the 50 years since the canonisation of the Uganda Martyrs. This is a top priority for which he accepted our invitation,” said Archbishop John Baptist Odama, the head of the conference of local bishops.
The Pope’s “compassion for the poor and his frankness of spirit is an encouragement to all of us who live in the light and stand for the causes that matter to humanity,” Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said in a statement on Monday.
Francis is visiting Kenya, Uganda and the Central African Republic from November 25-30. For a full schedule of the papal visit to Africa go here.
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