• Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Account
  • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • International
    • U.S. Politics
  • Culture
    • Books
    • Film
    • TV
    • Ideas
  • Faith
    • Faith in Focus
    • Faith and Reason
    • Prayer
    • Spirituality
    • Jesuitical Podcast
  • Vatican
    • Vatican Dispatch
    • Vatican News
    • Pope Leo XIV
    • Inside the Vatican Podcast
  • Scripture
    • Scripture Reflections
    • The Word
    • The Good Word
    • Preach Podcast
  • Podcasts
    • The Spiritual Life
    • Jesuitical
    • Inside the Vatican
    • Preach
    • Hark!
    • All Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • All issues
  • Donate

Sections

  • Politics
  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Vatican
  • Scripture
  • Podcasts

More from America

  • Podcasts
  • Video
  • Newsletters
  • Events
  • Voices
  • YouTube
  • Mobile App
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us

Print Edition

May 2026

May 2026

Past Issues

May 2026

Current Issue
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

Sections

  • Politics
  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Vatican
  • Scripture
  • Podcasts

More from America

  • Podcasts
  • Video
  • Newsletters
  • Events
  • Voices
  • YouTube
  • Mobile App
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us

Print Edition

May 2026

May 2026

Past Issues

May 2026

Current Issue
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
Skip to content
  • Donate
America Magazine

America Magazine

The Jesuit Review

  • Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Account
Subscribe
  • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • International
    • U.S. Politics
  • Culture
    • Books
    • Film
    • TV
    • Ideas
  • Faith
    • Faith in Focus
    • Faith and Reason
    • Prayer
    • Spirituality
    • Jesuitical Podcast
  • Vatican
    • Vatican Dispatch
    • Vatican News
    • Pope Leo XIV
    • Inside the Vatican Podcast
  • Scripture
    • Scripture Reflections
    • The Word
    • The Good Word
    • Preach Podcast
  • Podcasts
    • The Spiritual Life
    • Jesuitical
    • Inside the Vatican
    • Preach
    • Hark!
    • All Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • All issues
Posted inFaith, News

Pope Francis visits high-security prison on Holy Thursday

Oloughlin (1) by Michael J. O’Loughlin April 13, 2017

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Pope Francis kisses the foot of a refugee during Holy Thursday Mass of the Lord's Supper at the Center for Asylum Seekers in Castelnuovo di Porto, about 15 miles north of Rome in March 2016. The pope washed and kissed the feet of refugees, including Muslims, Hindus and Copts. (CNS photo/L'Osservatore Romano, handout)
Pope Francis kisses the foot of a refugee during Holy Thursday Mass of the Lord's Supper at the Center for Asylum Seekers in Castelnuovo di Porto, about 15 miles north of Rome in March 2016. The pope washed and kissed the feet of refugees, including Muslims, Hindus and Copts. (CNS photo/L'Osservatore Romano, handout)

Pope Francis is once again using Holy Thursday to highlight the Gospel mandate to visit individuals in prison.

“At times, a certain hypocrisy pushes us to see prisoners only as people who have messed up, for whom the only path is prison. But we have the possibility to make mistakes,” he said in an interview published on April 13 by Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper.

Francis has made a point of visiting prisoners during his pontificate, including during his 2015 visit to the United States when he spoke to inmates at a Philadelphia corrections center.

He told La Repubblica that he was inspired by the late Cardinal Agostino Casaroli, a Vatican secretary of state who regularly visited a Roman prison anonymously.

It is the third Holy Thursday that Francis has spent at a detention center, part of his longstanding emphasis on ministering to prisoners and giving them rehabilitation and hope.

“Every Saturday evening he would disappear: ‘He’s resting,’ they would say. He would take the bus, with his work briefcase, and would stay to confess young people and play with them. They called him ‘Don Agostino’; they didn’t really know who he was,” Francis said, according to a translation from Vatican Radio.

As he did in an interview published on the night before Ash Wednesday, Francis suggested individuals look at their own lives before judging others. He said human beings construct their own prisons when they idolize economic systems that oppress other people.

“When we remain closed in our own prejudices, when we are slaves to idols of a false well-being, when we move within ideological frames or when we absolutize economic laws which crush people, in reality we are doing nothing other than remaining within the cramped cell walls of individualism and self-sufficiency, deprived of truth which generates freedom,” he said.

“And to point the finger against someone who has messed up cannot become an alibi for hiding one’s own contradictions,” he continued.

Francis also denounced warfare, calling on the world to “stop the lords of war, because those who suffer most are the last and the helpless” and condemning an eye-for-an-eye mentality.

Related Stories

Pope Francis at Chrism Mass: find joy in the “little things.”

Pope Francis at Chrism Mass: find joy in the “little things.”

by Pope Francis
Holy Thursday: In mercy, poverty is more abundant than wealth

Holy Thursday: In mercy, poverty is more abundant than wealth

by Terrance Klein

“I always ask myself,” he said, “Does violence allow us to obtain long-lasting objectives? Are not the results only a further escalation of reprisals and a spiral of lethal conflicts, which benefit only a few lords of war?’”

Francis will wash the feet of 12 prisoners on April 13, in commemoration of Jesus washing the feet of his followers. The pope will continue his tradition of including women and Muslims in the ceremony.

It is the third Holy Thursday that Francis has spent at a detention center, part of his longstanding emphasis on ministering to prisoners and giving them rehabilitation and hope.

The Vatican said two of the 12 inmates chosen for the feet-washing ceremony are serving life terms, while the others have release dates between 2019 and 2073.

“They adore this pope and are looking for a word of comfort for themselves and their families,” prison chaplain the Rev. Luigi Paoletti told Vatican Radio.

Because of the nature of the prison and its inmates, Francis’ visit is being conducted under unusually private terms: The Vatican said audio and selected television images of his homily would be released only after the fact. Usually, the pope’s activities are covered live by Vatican TV and radio.

Paliano’s 60 to 70 inmates include about 50 former members of organized crime in Italy who became government witnesses. The prison also houses four women and has a special ward for tuberculosis-infected inmates.

Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.

Watch the related video

Related

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window)X
  • Share on Mail (Opens in new window)Mail
Tagged: Catholic Social Teaching, Pope Francis, Vatican
Oloughlin (1)

Michael J. O’Loughlin

Michael J. O’Loughlin is national correspondent at America and author of Hidden Mercy: AIDS, Catholics, and the Untold Stories of Compassion in the Face of Fear.

More by Michael J. O’Loughlin

More from America


In a surprise Chicago appearance, Pope Leo pledges support to efforts against the death penalty

In a surprise Chicago appearance, Pope Leo pledges support to efforts against the death penalty

Canadian cardinal urges vote to stop the expansion of assisted suicide to those with mental illness

Canadian cardinal urges vote to stop the expansion of assisted suicide to those with mental illness

Martin Scorsese’s final interview with Pope Francis

Martin Scorsese’s final interview with Pope Francis

Classifieds

Your source for jobs, books, retreats, and much more.


  • Chief Executive Officer
  • Executive Director/Spirituality and Retreat Center
  • University of San Diego: University Chaplain
  • Chancellor and Promoter of Justice
  • Executive Director, Kansas Catholic Conference

See all classifieds

Most Popular


Pope Leo speaks on same-sex blessings, migration and more on plane back to Rome
Asked about regime change in Iran, Pope Leo says, ‘I cannot be in favor of war.’
Pope Leo’s powerful lesson in vulnerable leadership
What Pope Leo’s critics get wrong about Augustine and just war doctrine
Getting past headlines that pit the pope against the president: Leo has a bigger job in mind

America Today

Your daily guide to the most important stories from the Church and around the world - delivered to your inbox each morning. See more newsletters

May 2026

May 2026

Faith. Culture. Perspective

Support a trusted Catholic voice at the intersection of the Church and the world.

Subscribe

Politics

See all


Getting past headlines that pit the pope against the president: Leo has a bigger job in mind

In the Brazilian Amazon, a Catholic Indigenous community endures amid land invasions and government neglect

How to justly conduct an unjust war? Catholic scholars weigh in on Iran

Faith

See all


To understand Christian hospitality, look to the host

The Very Young Catholics project: How one book series shares children’s stories from around the world

Education is about more than test results. But how do we tell if it’s working?

Culture

See all


Finding a Lenten vulnerability in Rilke’s ‘Letters to a Young Poet’ 

Review: The ‘Scopes Monkey Trial’ and church-state tensions

Rob Reiner’s gift: Finding humanity—both on and off the screen

Vatican

See all


Vatican Diplomacy 101 with Archbishop Joseph Marino

Pope Leo’s powerful lesson in vulnerable leadership

Pope Francis remembered by those who knew him

Scripture

See all


Let God lead you out of fear

When the ‘bread of life’ takes on new meaning 

When the word ‘hopeful’ doesn’t suffice

Podcasts

See all


Does the Gen-Z religious revival live up to the hype?

Father James Martin on the importance of going to confession (even when you’re nervous)

Preaching the Risen Christ: Daily resurrections in war-torn areas

Sections

  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Scripture
  • Politics
  • Vatican
  • Podcast

About America

  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Writing Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Jesuit Vocations

More

  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Classifieds Marketplace

America Today

Your daily guide to the most important stories from the Church and around the world - delivered to your inbox each morning. See more newsletters

Sign up
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
© 2026 America Press Inc. | All Rights Reserved. Powered by Newspack
  • Donate

Gift this article