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    EWTN News

    BREAKING:
    Speaking to reporters aboard the papal plane to Algeria on Monday, Pope Leo XIV said:
    “I think that the people who read will be able to draw their own conclusions: I am not a politician, I have no intention of entering into a debate with him. Rather, let us always seek peace and put an end to wars. I am not afraid of the Trump administration. I speak about the Gospel, I am not a politician. I do not think the message of the Gospel should be abused in the way some people are doing. I will continue to speak out loudly against war, to try to promote peace, multilateral dialogue between states in order to seek the right solution to problems. The message of the Church is the message of the Gospel, blessed are the peacemakers; I do not see my role as that of a politician, I do not want to enter into a debate with him. Too many people are suffering in the world.


    https://x.com/EWTNews/status/2043617913957912620



    Courtney Mares

    In response to a personal attack by President Donald Trump the night before, Pope Leo told journalists on the papal plane to Algeria:

    “I have no fear of the Trump administration or speaking out loudly of the message of the Gospel, which is what I believe I am here to do, what the Church is here to do. We are not politicians. We don’t deal with foreign policy with the same perspective he might understand it, but I do believe in the message of the Gospel, as a peacemaker.”

    (Video:
    @OSVNews
    )
    https://x.com/catholicourtney/status...19307993665935


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Catholic Sat
    (The pope was of the order of St Augustine before he became pope)

    Catholic Sat

    Pope Leo XIV has become the first Pope to visit Algeria the land of St. Augustine Pope Leo XIV has become the first Pope to visit Algeria the land of St. Augustine

    https://x.com/CatholicSat/status/2043620028440842679


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    EWTN News

    Pope Leo walks without shoes in the Great Mosque of Algiers, Algeria.

    Video: Marco Mancini / EWTN News

    https://x.com/EWTNews/status/2043709233519358172




    https://x.com/VaticanNews/status/2043730959221080532


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Courtney Mares

    Inside the Basilica of Our Lady of Africa in Algiers where Pope Leo XIV will pray with Algeria’s small Catholic community.

    The basilica contains relics of both Saint Augustine and Saint Monica.

    https://x.com/catholicourtney/status...22874859470968


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Catholic Sat

    The Pope’s message at the Grand Mosque of Algiers: “May the mercy of the Most High preserve in peace and freedom the noble Algerian people and the entire human family.”

    https://x.com/CatholicSat/status/2043723400028295257


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Vatican News

    In a private visit to a community run by Missionary Augustinian Sisters in Algiers, Pope Leo XIV highlights the enduring witness of martyrdom and encourages a renewed commitment to peace, dignity, and respect for differences

    https://x.com/VaticanNews/status/2043751299573846035


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Vatican News

    "God desires peace for every nation: a peace that is not merely an absence of conflict, but one that is an expression of justice and dignity."

    Pope Leo stressed this at the Martyrs’ Monument in Algiers, Algeria on the first day of his Apostolic Journey to the African continent.

    https://x.com/VaticanNews/status/2043673749333893321



    Vatican News

    Pope Leo urged the Algerian authorities not to let “absurd polarizations” dishearten them but to confront them with intelligence.

    He called on societies to foster oases of peace in which human life and dignity are recognized as inviolable and never exploited.

    https://x.com/VaticanNews/status/2043698219331522800


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    The News

    Translated from French

    🇩🇿☪️🇻🇦✝️ INTERRELIGIOUS RESPECT I During his official meeting at the Vatican, the Algerian president #Tebboune presented #Pope Leo XIV with leaves from the olive tree of Souk Ahras [in Algeria], under which Saint Augustine, father of the foundations of Christian culture, loved to take refuge to reflect and meditate.

    https://x.com/thenews_fr/status/1948648560301408661


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Part of the pope’s speech today in Algiers

    Mériame

    🇻🇦🇩🇿 To every Christian supporting Israel's "right" to colonize Palestinian land :

    Today in Algeria, a nation that endured 132 years of French colonization and genocide, Pope Leo XIV said :

    “Our presence here pays tribute to the spirit of a people who fought for their independence, dignity and sovereignty. […]
    God desires peace for every nation : a peace that is not merely the absence of conflict, but an expression of justice and dignity.”

    Colonization is a crime, whether in
    Algeria yesterday or in Palestine today.

    Peace without justice is hypocrisy.

    What part of this don’t you understand?

    https://x.com/Msemen2020/status/2043662777349292466


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    EWTN News

    The powerful inscription inside the Basilica of Notre Dame d’Afrique in Algiers reads: “Our Lady of Africa, pray for us and for the Muslims.” This beautiful church is also a place of pilgrimage for many Muslims in Algeria. Photos: Patrick Leonard / EWTN News

    https://x.com/EWTNews/status/2043738841014489239


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Beautifully sung,

    Catholic Sat

    Pope Leo XIV leads the Catholic Community of Algeria in singing the Our Father in Arabic

    https://x.com/CatholicSat/status/2043741464060968986


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Catholic Sat

    The Hymn of Peace performed by a choir made up of both Christians and Muslims in the Basilica of Our Lady of Africa, Algiers, Algeria.

    You can see Pope Leo XIV really enjoying it.

    https://x.com/CatholicSat/status/2043737716605460776


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    محمدباقر قالیباف | MB Ghalibaf

    Honoring Pope Leo’s fearless stand!

    “I have no fear” echoes as he condemns the war crimes of Israel and the US.

    This slogan lights the path for all who refuse to stay silent on the killing of innocents.

    @Pontifex
    leadership inspires millions – thank you for this light!

    https://x.com/mb_ghalibaf/status/2043764933700047019


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Pope Leo XIV

    Communion between Christians and Muslims takes shape under the mantle of Our Lady of Africa. Here, in #Algeria, the maternal love of Lalla Meryem gathers everyone as children, within our rich diversity, in our shared aspiration for dignity, love, justice, and peace. In a world where division and wars sow pain and death, living in unity and peace is a compelling sign. #ApostolicJourney

    https://x.com/Pontifex/status/2043758869164503512



    The Pope’s complete speech here,

    https://www.vatican.va/content/leo-x...-algerina.html


    Apostolic journey to Algeria: Meeting with the Algerian Community Basilica of Our Lady of Africa (Algiers 13 April 2026)

    In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
    Peace be with you!

    Dear brothers in the Episcopate,
    Dear priests and deacons, men and women religious,
    Beloved children of the Church in Algeria,

    It is with profound joy and fatherly affection that I meet with you today, you whose discrete and precious presence in this land is marked by an ancient heritage and by luminous witnesses of the faith.

    Your community has deep roots indeed. You are the heirs of a host of witnesses who gave their lives, motivated by love for God and neighbor. I am particularly reminded of the nineteen men and women religious who were martyred in Algeria, choosing to stand alongside this people in its joys and sorrows. Their blood is a living seed that never ceases to bear fruit.

    You are also heirs to a still more ancient tradition, dating back to the early centuries of Christianity. In this land resounded the fervent voice of Augustine of Hippo, preceded by the testimony of his mother, Saint Monica, and of other saints. Their memory shines as a call to be authentic signs of communion, dialogue and peace today.

    To all of you, dear friends, and to those who are not able to be present but are following this meeting from afar, I express my gratitude for your daily commitment to manifest the maternal heart of the Church. I thank His Eminence for his words, and also Rakel, Ali, Monia and Sister Bernadette for what they have shared. In light of what we have heard, I would like us to pause and reflect together on three aspects of Christian life that I consider to be essential — particularly in light of your presence here: prayer, charity and unity.

    First, prayer. We all need to pray. Saint John Paul II emphasized this when he told young people: “Man cannot live without prayer, any more than he can live without breathing” (Meeting with Young Muslims in Casablanca, 19 August 1985, 4). He presented dialogue with God as indispensable — not only for the life of the Church, but also for each individual. Saint Charles de Foucauld also recognized this, and embraced his vocation as a prayerful presence. He wrote: “I am happy, happy to be before the Blessed Sacrament at all hours” (Letter to Raymond de Blic, 9 December 1907) and he urged others: “Pray much for others. Devote yourself to the salvation of your neighbor by every means in your power: by prayer, by goodness, by example” (Letter to Louis Massignon, 1 August 1916).

    Regarding our need for prayer, Ali shared his experience of service at Notre Dame d’Afrique, where many come to enter into silence, to express their concerns, to pray for their loved ones, and to meet someone willing to listen to them so they can share the burdens they carry in their hearts. He noted that many find peace here and are happy to have come. Prayer unites, humanizes, strengthens and purifies the heart. Through prayer, the Church in Algeria sows humanity, unity, strength and purity, reaching places known only to the Lord.

    The next aspect of ecclesial life that I would like to consider is that of charity. Sister Bernadette spoke to us about this in particular, in sharing her experience of supporting children with disabilities and their parents. From what she has shared, we have come to understand that mercy and service are about more than just providing material help to the weakest among us. Above all, such acts become an opportunity for grace, enabling everyone involved to grow and be enriched. Sister Bernadette explained how a simple, initial gesture of closeness — visiting the sick — blossomed first into a community center and then into an increasingly structured care organization. It has now become an authentic community, where many people share moments of joy and sorrow, united by bonds of trust, friendship and fellowship. Such an environment is life-giving and healing, and it is no surprise that those who suffer can find within it the resources they need to improve their health, while at the same time bringing joy to others, as in the case of Fatima.

    After all, it is precisely love for their brothers and sisters that inspired the witness of the martyrs we have commemorated. In the face of hatred and violence, they remained faithful to charity even to the point of sacrificing themselves alongside many other men and women, Christians and Muslims. They did so without ostentation or fanfare, with serenity and steadfastness, neither falling into presumption nor despair, for they knew the One in whom they had placed their trust (cf. 2 Tim 1:12). On behalf of all of them, we can recall the simple words of Brother Luc, the elderly monk and physician of the community of Notre-Dame de l’Atlas. When offered the possibility of leaving and saving himself from potential dangers, at the cost of abandoning his patients and friends, he replied: “I want to stay with them” (C. Henning - T. Georgeon, Fratel Luc di Tibhirine. Monaco, medico e martire, Vatican City 2025, Introduction), and so he did. On the occasion of their Beatification, Pope Francis spoke of him and all the others saying: “Their courageous witness is a source of hope for the Catholic community of Algeria and a seed of dialogue for the entire society. May this Beatification be for everyone an inspiration to build together a world of fraternity and solidarity” (8 December 2018).

    And so we come to the third point of our reflection: our commitment to promoting peace and unity. The motto of this visit is drawn from the words of the risen Jesus: “Peace be with you!” (cf. Jn 20:21). In an inscription found among the mosaics of Tipasa, we read: “In Deo, pax et concordia sit convivio nostro,” which we could translate as: “In God, may peace and harmony reign in our life together.” Peace and harmony have been fundamental characteristics of the Christian community from its very beginnings (cf. Acts 2:42-47), in accordance with Jesus’ own desire (cf. Jn 17:23), who said: “By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another” (Jn 13:35). Saint Augustine, in this regard, affirmed that the Church “brings forth diverse peoples, but they are members of him whose body she is” (Sermon 192, 2), and Saint Cyprian wrote: “Our peace and brotherly agreement is the greater sacrifice to God — and a people united in one in the unity of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit” (The Lord’s Prayer, 23). It is beautiful, today, to hear such a rich variety of words and examples resonating in what we have heard.

    As His Eminence mentioned, this very basilica is a sign of our desire for peace and unity. It symbolizes a Church of living stones, where communion between Christians and Muslims takes shape under the mantle of Our Lady of Africa. Here, the maternal love of Lalla Meryem gathers everyone as children, within our rich diversity, in our shared aspiration for dignity, love, justice and peace. All her children are eager to walk together, to live, pray, work and dream, since faith does not isolate, but opens us up; it unites us, but does not create confusion; it brings us closer, without homogenizing, and fosters true fraternity. This is what Monia told us. Rakel likewise shared the same sentiment in her testimony about her experience in the Tlemcen Fellowship. In a world where division and wars sow pain and death among nations, in communities, and even within families, your experience of unity and peace is a compelling sign. Together, you spread fraternity and inspire a deep longing for communion and reconciliation with a powerful and clear message that is borne in simplicity and humility.

    A considerable part of this country’s territory is desert, and in the desert, no one can survive alone. The hostile environment dispels any presumptions of self-sufficiency, reminding us that we need one another, and that we need God. When we acknowledge our fragility, our hearts become open to supporting one another and to invoking the One who can grant what no human power can ensure: the profound reconciliation of hearts and, with it, true peace.

    Therefore, dear brothers and sisters, I encourage you to continue your work in Algeria as a cohesive and open community of faith, as a living presence of the Church, the “universal sacrament of salvation” (Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 48). Thank you for all that you do, for your prayer, your charity, and your witness to unity. I assure you of a remembrance in my own prayers before the Lord, and entrusting you to Mary, Notre Dame d’Afrique, I cordially bless you.

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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    A new 3 minute clip of Donald Trump castigating Pope Leo.

    "I don’t think he’s doing a very good job": Donald Trump takes aim at Pope Leo


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Courtney Mares

    What an incredible joy and honor to speak with Pope Leo XIV on the papal plane about Saint Augustine and the pope’s favorite spiritual reading.

    He told me that St. Augustine’s “Letter to Proba,” written in A.D. 412, also known as “Letter 130,” is a beautiful letter on prayer in which “Augustine gives some wonderful guidelines, and hints if you will, about how our prayer can really be meaningful.”


    https://x.com/catholicourtney/status...13483444052304



    New spiritual reading recommendation from Pope Leo just dropped!

    Speaking with
    @OSVNews
    aboard the papal plane, the pope recommended St. Augustine’s “Letter to Proba,” also known as Letter 130, written in A.D. 412.

    “Augustine gives some wonderful guidelines and hints, if you will, about how our prayer can really be meaningful,” he said.

    https://x.com/catholicourtney/status...38609774538946



    https://www.osvnews.com/need-a-guide...-st-augustine/

    Need a guide for deeper prayer? Pope Leo recommends a letter by St. Augustine
    Courtney Mares7:09 PM April 13, 2026

    ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE (OSV News) — Pope Leo XIV shared some of his favorite spiritual reading recommendations on the papal flight to Algeria, pointing to a particular letter by St. Augustine that he said provides wonderful tips for how to deepen prayer.

    Speaking with OSV News aboard the papal plane April 13 on the first leg of his pilgrimage to Africa, the pope commended St. Augustine’s “Letter to Proba,” also known as Letter 130, written in A.D. 412.

    “Augustine gives some wonderful guidelines and hints, if you will, about how our prayer can really be meaningful,” Pope Leo said.

    The letter was written by St. Augustine in response to a wealthy Roman widow named Proba, who had written to her bishop, Augustine, expressing her confusion over a passage in Romans 8:26, in which St. Paul writes that “we do not know how to pray as we ought.”

    In his response, St. Augustine reframes prayer not simply as speech directed toward God, but as desire. True prayer, he writes, consists less in words than in the persistent longing of the heart.

    “To use much speaking in prayer is to employ a superfluity of words in asking a necessary thing,” St. Augustine writes, “but to prolong prayer is to have the heart throbbing with continued pious emotion towards Him to whom we pray. For in most cases prayer consists more in groaning than in speaking, in tears rather than in words.”

    St. Augustine goes on to tell Proba that what every person ultimately seeks — a happy life — is nothing other than the possession of God himself, a reality people desire but cannot fully comprehend or articulate. It is precisely this, St. Augustine argues, that is at the heart of authentic Christian prayer. People pray, in a sense, for what they cannot yet see, increasing their desire for the One who exceeds all imagining.

    “A happy life is to be sought after, and this is to be asked from the Lord God,” St. Augustine writes in the letter. “It has been briefly and truly stated in the divine Scriptures, ‘Blessed is the people whose God is the Lord.'”

    Pope Leo’s recommendation came with a light-hearted acknowledgment that St. Augustine has become something of a recurring theme for him, a member of the Augustinian order who famously described himself as a “son of Augustine” right after his papal election in May 2025 and frequently quotes the influential Church father. The pope joked that on a previous occasion someone had told him, when asking a question, “Don’t talk about Augustine.” But he said he could hardly avoid it on this trip, traveling on pilgrimage through Northern Africa, the very land where St. Augustine served as bishop of Hippo.

    “On this trip especially, I would say if anyone has not read ‘The Confessions of St. Augustine,’ it is a wonderful place to start,” the pope said of the saint’s autobiography, written about a dozen years before his response to Proba.

    Pope Leo described the Letter to Proba as “relatively brief, but a beautiful letter” about prayer.

    On April 14, Pope Leo will fly to Annaba, Algeria, where the pope will visit the Roman ruins of the ancient North African city of Hippo Regius and offer Mass at the Basilica of St. Augustine. The basilica was built near the ruins of the Basilica Pacis, where Augustine died in A.D. 430 as Vandals besieged the city. Inside the basilica today stands a statue of the saint containing a relic of one of his arm bones.

    This was not the first time Pope Leo has recommended his favorite spiritual reading while flying at 30,000 feet. On the return flight from Pope Leo’s first international trip to Turkey and Lebanon in 2025, Pope Leo recommended “The Practice of the Presence of God,” a collection of spiritual reflections by the 17th-century Carmelite Brother Lawrence, and after the pope’s comments the book went flying off the shelves.

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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Tommaso Greco

    Translated from Italian
    A young Augustinian priest, who in 2025 would become Pope #LeoneXIV, protests against the installation of American missiles in Comiso, in the early 1980s. A commitment to peace that comes from far away.

    (photo posted on fb by
    @lukacasa
    ).

    https://x.com/togreco/status/2044085281519731166


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    Ugochukwu Ugwoke, ISch

    Pope Leo with his Augustinian brothers who work in the Basilica of St Augustine in Annaba.

    A brother among his brothers❤️

    https://x.com/FrUgochukwu/status/2044152562723541491


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    A little humor from the Washington Post

    Frank Amari

    Today's cartoon by Michael Ramirez for the Washington Post:


    https://x.com/FrankAmari2/status/2044014801559409009


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    Default Re: Pope Leo XIV

    البطريركية المارونية

    Translated from Arabic
    Statement of Condemnation Issued by His Beatitude Cardinal Mar Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi

    Holiness Pope Leo, Messenger of Love and Peace

    The Maronite Patriarchate condemns, with the utmost condemnation, every assault or offense that touches upon the dignity and sanctity of the Supreme Pontiff Pope Leo XIV, who represents the voice of the Catholic Church and the voice of the living human conscience, the constant advocate for upholding truth, establishing justice, and building peace among peoples.

    What has been issued in this unacceptable overreach is incompatible with the most basic rules of respect due to the supreme authority in the Church and its spokesperson, constituting an offense to every Christian individual in general and Catholic in particular, and an assault on the human values that unite rather than divide, and build rather than destroy. For the Pope, in his positions and teachings, has never been anything but a messenger of love, a bearer of hope, and a fierce defender of human dignity, especially in a world weighed down by the burden of wars and conflicts.

    The Patriarchate affirms its full solidarity with His Holiness the Pope, who has been and remains a true supporter of Lebanon, carrying its cause in his heart, and raising his voice in international forums calling for its protection, preservation of its mission, and safeguarding of its unique pluralism. Moreover, his repeated appeals to halt wars, reject violence, and call for a just and comprehensive peace remain a moral compass by which the international community must be guided.

    We, in this delicate circumstance, renew our commitment to a culture of dialogue and mutual respect, and reject every inciting or exclusionary discourse, regardless of its source. We also call for halting the arms race and adopting the language of wisdom and reason, for the good of humanity and the preservation of its dignity.

    We ask God to preserve His Holiness the Pope in his mission, bless his efforts in spreading peace, and inspire the world's leaders to walk the paths of justice and reconciliation.

    From our See in Bkerke, on 14 April 2026

    + Cardinal Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi
    Patriarch of Antioch and All the East

    https://x.com/bkerki/status/2043976218182144288


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