Pope sets up Madrid mass, security and floral spectacle

King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia will join crowds of devotees in hot conditions at the emblematic Cibeles Square on day two of the first state visit by a pontiff to Spain since 2010. Authorities have prepared a huge logistical and security operation, including a stage, seven giant screens, 608 loudspeakers, 2,300 toilets, 10 water points and more than 8,000 fences. Leo will then lead a procession from Cibeles for hundreds of metres up to the famed Gran Via commercial thoroughfare and back. More than
30,000 yellow and white carnations – matching the colours of the Vatican flag – will adorn the procession’s route in an elaborate floral carpet. Crowds of believers – including pilgrims from across Spain and beyond – will line the streets of central Madrid for a second day to glimpse Leo on his popemobile after the ceremony. Call to stop polarisation The solemn ceremonies come as traditional religious observance continues to decline in Spain, historically a deeply Catholic country. Later on Sunday, Leo will meet the
leading lights of culture, sport and the economy to foster dialogue between faith and modern civil society. On Saturday, 500,000 attendees gathered with Leo outside Real Madrid’s Bernabeu stadium for a prayer vigil that stretched into the night. READ ALSO: ‘Prevost is Real Madrid!’: Pope enters Spanish football schism Leo kicked off his visit with pomp and ceremony during a reception at Madrid’s royal palace, where he urged society to put an end to “polarising narratives” and “sterile simplifications”. The pope also praised Spain, whose
left-wing government has sparred with his native United States as well as Israel over wars in the Middle East, for its “active commitment to peace and solidarity among peoples”. Leo is due to visit Barcelona on Tuesday and Wednesday, where he is set to bless the Sagrada Familia basilica’s recently completed tower, which made it the world’s tallest church. His trip will end with a focus on migration on Thursday and Friday in the Canary Islands, a key destination for irregular arrivals, with thousands dying
in the Atlantic Ocean every year trying to reach them.
Pope Leo, Madrid, Cibeles Square, Gran Via, Felipe VI, Letizia, Sagrada Familia, migration, Canary Islands, carnations, security operation