Life without parole is not a solution to crime, pope says

954 0
Pope Francis greets a child during an audience with members of the Italian Prison Police in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican Sept. 14, 2019. The pope told prison guards, chaplains and officials that life sentences in prison without the possibility of parole are not the solution but a problem to be solved. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Sentencing someone to life in prison without the possibility of parole is “not the solution to problems, but a problem to solve,” Pope Francis told Italian prison guards, prison chaplains and officials from the Ministry of Justice.

“If you close hope in a cell, there is no future for society,” the pope told thousands of guards, chaplains, volunteers and their family members Sept. 14 during an audience in St. Peter’s Square.

Among those present were two detainees who are serving life sentences, but are engaged in a formal process of recognizing the gravity of their crimes, making amends as far as possible and preparing to apply for parole.

While protecting its citizens, the pope said, every society also must seek ways to rehabilitate those who have committed crimes and find ways to help them make positive contributions to society.

Making someone pay for the “errors of the past” cannot mean “canceling their hope for a future,” he said. In fact, everyone has “the right to hope.”

Saying he wanted to address all inmates, Pope Francis said he had one word for them: “courage.”

Have courage “because you are in God’s heart, you are precious in his eyes and, even if you feel lost and unworthy, don’t lose heart,” the pope said. “You who are detainees are important to God who wants to accomplish marvels in you.”

Even behind bars, he said, “never let yourselves be imprisoned in the dark cell of a heart without hope; don’t give in to resignation. God is bigger than every problem and he is waiting for you in order to love you.”

“Put yourselves before the crucifix, under the gaze of Jesus, before him with simplicity and sincerity,” the pope told prisoners. “There, with the humble courage of one who doesn’t lie to him- or herself, peace will be reborn, and trust in being loved and the strength to go on will flourish.”

Pope Francis was not speaking only figuratively. During the audience, he blessed the “cross of mercy” made by detainees in the Paliano prison, which the pope visited in 2017. The tall crucifix is decorated with “biblical scenes of liberation, ransom and redemption” and will be taken on pilgrimage to prisons throughout Italy.

Speaking to prison police, prison guards and prison staff, Pope Francis publicly thanked them for their work, which is often hidden and poorly paid.

“I know that it isn’t easy,” the pope said, “but when, in addition to watching over security, you are a presence close to those who have fallen into the web of evil, you become builders of the future, you lay the foundations for a coexistence that is more respectful and, therefore, for a society that is safer.”

If a prison sentence has the ultimate aim of preparing detainees to return to society and contribute to their community as upstanding citizens, Pope Francis said, then the guards who spend the most time with them must be models of treating others with dignity and respect.

“I thank you for not only being vigilant, but especially for safeguarding the people entrusted to you so that in recognizing the wrong they did, they will accept avenues of rebirth for the good of all,” the pope told the guards.

“You are called to be bridges between the prison and civil society,” he told the guards. By “exercising a correct compassion, you can overcome the mutual fears and the drama of indifference” that separate the inmates and wider society.

Related Post

Jonathan and Nicole Hughes and their daughters, Lily and Reese, are finding light in the darkness following the accidental drowning death of their young son and brother, Levi. Nicole Hughes has launched a website, www.levislegacy.com, to promote a system to oversee children around water, with individuals alternating as the designated "water guardian." (CNS photo/Kadee Fillers)

Mother on mission to preserve legacy of young son, promote water safety

Posted by - December 9, 2018 0
BRISTOL, Va. (CNS) — It has taken time for Nicole Hughes to get settled back into her routine at St.…
New archbishops are seen as Pope Francis celebrates Mass marking the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican June 29. At the conclusion of the Mass the pope presented palliums in boxes to dozens of new archbishops from around the world. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Pope at pallium Mass: Jesus wants disciples unafraid to aid others

Posted by - July 7, 2018 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — God wants his disciples to bring his mercy and love to everyone, everywhere on earth, which…
Quintuplets, from left, Grace, Alex, Mary Kate, Ben and Emma Whelan, pose for an Aug. 11, 2018, photo at St. Francis DeSales High School in Columbus, Ohio, where the sisters are cheerleaders and the brothers are soccer players. The Whelan quintuplets are expected to graduate from St. Francis DeSales High School in the spring of 2019. (CNS photo/courtesy St. Francis DeSales High School)

Ohio quintuplets continue school tradition in a way not seen before

Posted by - March 10, 2019 0
COLUMBUS, Ohio (CNS) — When it comes to upholding tradition and pride in a particular school, the Whalen family of…