Pope Francis Washes Feet of Women Prisoners
Pope Francis washed the feet of 12 women detained in a prison in Rome, a traditional Maundy rite at the beginning of the Easter weekend.
Seated in a wheelchair, the 87-year-old pontiff washes the feet of each of the 12 inmates, some of them in tears, before wiping them with a towel and kissing them.
Pope Francis offered his solidarity to Catholics in Israel and the Palestinian territories ahead of Easter, after meeting Jewish and Muslim bereaved fathers campaigning for peace.
"You are not alone," the 87-year-old pontiff wrote in a letter ahead of the holiest weekend in the Christian calendar, when believers mark the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, as the Hamas-Israel war continues to rage.
"I embrace all of you, in the variety of your rites, particularly those most affected by the senseless tragedy of war -- the children robbed of their future, those who grieve and are in pain, and all who find themselves prey to anguish and dismay.
"In these bleak times... you are lamps shining in the night," he said, adding that "soon we hope to return among you as pilgrims, to draw near to you, to embrace you".
Before his weekly audience at the Vatican, the pontiff met with two fathers of children killed during past violence in the region, who are now campaigning together for peace.
Bassam Aramin, a Palestinian from Jericho in the West Bank, saw his 10-year-old daughter Abir die outside her school after she was shot by an Israeli soldier in 2007.
Rami Elhanan, an Israeli, lost his teenage daughter Smadar in a Hamas suicide attack in Jerusalem in 1997.
The two fathers "do not look at the enmity of war", Francis said at the audience.
Instead, they believe in "the friendship of two men who care about each other and have experienced the same crucifixion".
Speaking to reporters after meeting the pope, Elhanan said Francis had been "deeply touched" by their story of campaigning for peace together.