Pope Leo urges Cameroon to reject violence
Pope Leo XIV stopped in Cameroon as part of his 11-day Africa trip. During a Mass attended by over 100,000 people, he urged the crowd to reject violence.
Pope Leo XIV stopped in Cameroon as part of his 11-day Africa trip. During a Mass attended by over 100,000 people, he urged the crowd to reject violence. Grouped from 9 articles across 8 sources.
Ranked reports inside the event cluster. Open any publisher link to read the original coverage.
Pope Leo XIV stopped in Cameroon as part of his 11-day Africa trip. During a Mass attended by over 100,000 people, he urged the crowd to reject violence.
Preaching at a packed stadium in Douala, Pontiff shares a message of hope, peace and faith during Africa trip.
Some 120,000 cheering Catholics attended Pope Leo XIV's Friday mass in Cameroon. The pontiff implored those gathered to be the architects of peace and to reject the deceit of violence and abuse.
Pope Leo XIV is on his third day in Cameroon before he heads to Angola on Saturday.
Cameroon saw thousands of faithful gather on Wednesday 16 April at Bamenda’s airfield, where Pope Leo XIV celebrated an open‑air Mass and called for a “decisive change of course” towards peace.
Pope Leo XIV used a Mass attended by more than 100,000 people in Cameroon on Friday to openly criticize the uneven distribution of wealth.
Friday marked the halfway point in Leo’s 11-day tour of four African nations
Pope Leo XIV was in Bamenda in conflict-hit northwest Cameroon, urging peace in a region beset by deadly fighting.
The Vatican is expecting about 600,000 to throng the streets.
Nearby clusters pulled from title, summary, and keyword similarity in PostgreSQL.
The pope spoke aboard the papal plane on his way to Angola. Grouped from 4 articles across 4 sources.
Without naming anyone, the pontiff also denounced politicians who use religious rhetoric to justify war
Pontiff has been issuing sharp denunciations of war and inequality that have sparked repeated attacks from Trump Grouped from 2 articles across 2 sources.
Trump’s attacks on Pope Leo XIV polarizing the diverse community as faith and politics come to a head Maryellen Lewicki meets once a week for Bible study with a group of Catholic women in Decatur, Georgia, in a space…
The federal government has been urged by its own NDIS advisory group to delay the rollout of a controversial new way of determining support plans for participants.
The war in Iran and a spat between two of the world's most influential Americans has forced Giorgia Meloni to choose sides, potentially pushing the Italian prime minister to align herself with Europe's center-right. Grouped from 2 articles across 2 sources.