Pope Francis arrives in Jakarta, Indonesia

After more than 13 hours aboard the papal flight, Pope Francis lands in Jakarta, as he sets forth upon his 45th Apostolic Journey abroad, and longest thus far of his pontificate, to Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Timor Leste, and Singapore.

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis has arrived in Jakarta, kicking off his 45th Apostolic Journey abroad to Asia and Oceania.

The flight arrived a few minutes early at the Jakarta Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in the Indonesian capital at about 11:19 AM local time. The ITA-Airways papal flight, carrying the Pope and the journalists following the Journey, had left Rome’s Fiumicino International Airport at 5:32 PM local time Monday afternoon.

Aboard the aircraft, the Holy Father individually greeted the press accompanying him.

Pope Francis greeting journalists aboard the papal flight to Jakarta

Once landed, the Holy Father was welcomed warmly in Jakarta. While he will take it easy on Tuesday with no public events on his schedule, on Wednesday, the Pope will have several appointments in the capital as he kicks off the intense 12-day Visit.

The Holy Father will spend three nights in Jakarta, before continuing his Asiatic Visit, marking the longest thus far of his pontificate, to Papua New Guinea, Timor Leste, and Singapore. The Pope will be welcomed by Cardinals in each country, three of whom were created Cardinals by Pope Francis himself, as the first-ever Eminences of their countries.

Indonesia

Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim majority nation, is a very large country consisting of many islands, almost 17,000 of them and many tribes, ethnic groups, languages and cultures. Before Pope Francis, two Popes had visited the country: Pope St. Paul VI in 1970 and Pope St. John Paul II in 1989.

This Apostolic Visit to Southeast Asia is a visit Pope Francis has been anticipating prior to the pandemic.

Pope Francis is welcomed in Jakarta, Indonesia

Given that Indonesia is widely seen as a model of tolerance and coexistence, the Pope, who wrote his encyclical Fratelli tutti on human fraternity, likely will continue promoting human fraternity and interreligious dialogue.

Even if Catholics make up about 3 percent of the primarily Muslim population, that 3 percent, however, is some 8 million Catholics of the country’s 280 million people in the country built on respect for individuals and their differing religious beliefs.

The Pope will spend three nights in Jakarta, where he will hold an interreligious meeting in the Istiqlal Mosque and will celebrate Mass for the country’s Catholics.

In an interview with Vatican News, Cardinal Ignatius Suharyo Hardjoatmodjo of Jakarta suggested it is very common for men and women of different faiths, such as Catholics and Muslims, to marry, which is not typical within other Muslim-majority countries. He also noted that often priests come from families where a parent is Muslim or Buddhist.

For all these reasons, it is fitting Pope Francis travels here with the motto ‘Faith, Fraternity, Compassion.’

Vatican News

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