CNA Staff, 01 September, 2024 / 8:00 pm (ACI Africa).
Pope Francis will be visiting the country of Papua New Guinea from Sept. 6-9 as part of an 11-day, multi-country papal trip. But he won’t be the first pope to set foot on the South Pacific island nation — Pope John Paul II visited the island twice, in 1984 and 1995.
Papua New Guinea (PNG), situated on the eastern half of an island in the southwestern Pacific, is home to nearly 9 million people. (The other side of the island consists of two Indonesian provinces.) Considered one of the most ethnically diverse countries in the world, PNG is made up of hundreds of ethnic groups indigenous to the island with 851 Indigenous languages spoken in the country.
Nearly the entire island is made up of Christians with 26% of the population being Catholic.
John Paul II visited Papua New Guinea for the first time in May 1984 and paid tribute to the strength of Catholicism on the island. During his papal visit, he celebrated Masses for vocations, for the sick, and for evangelization. He also addressed the youth, the bishops, and the clergy, religious people, and laity.
In his Mass for vocations at Port Moresby Stadium, in the capital of Papua New Guinea, John Paul II highlighted the history of the missionaries who arrived to the island bringing the Catholic faith.