By Lisa Zengarini
July 28 2022
Following the Mass in the Commonwealth Stadium of Edmonton, on Tuesday, Pope Francis celebrates a Liturgy of the Word at Lac Ste. Anne, one of the most sacred sites for Indigenous peoples of North America, long known as a place of healing. In his homily he says that Indigenous Peoples and grandparents are a precious treasure of the Church.
Thousands of pilgrims welcomed Pope Francis as he joined their annual pilgrimage to the sacred shores of Lac Ste. Anne, on Tuesday afternoon, local time. The lake called Wakamne (“Lake of God”) by the Nakota Sioux and “Lake of the Spirit” by the Cree people, is renowned for its healing waters and for its spiritual significance both to Catholics and Indigenous Peoples in Canada and Northwestern United States.
It was named after St. Anne, the mother of Mary and grandmother of Jesus, by a Quebecois Catholic missionary, who launched the pilgrimage in the late 19th century, celebrating the week of her Feast Day, on 26 July.
Returning to the sources of our faith
After blessing the water of the lake and the faithful present with it, Pope Francis presided over a Liturgy of the Word. The Holy Father started his homily, noting that the beating of drums introducing the celebration “seems to echo the beating of the hearts” of the many pilgrims who for generations have walked together to reach this “lake of God”, seeking healing from its waters.
The Pope further remarked that silently contemplating these waters where “the maternal heartbeat of the earth” can be sensed, inspires us to return to the sources of life and of our faith. “Indeed – he said – it allows us, in spirit, to visit the holy places, to imagine Jesus, who carried out much of his ministry on the shores of a lake: the Sea of Galilee”.
Fraternity in diversity
God chose the richly diverse context of this peripheral area where various peoples converged, to announce to the world his “revolutionary” message of fraternity. That message, the Pope said, resounds today in the sound of drums spanning the centuries and uniting different peoples. “It reminds us that fraternity is genuine if it unites those who are far apart, that the message of unity that heaven sends down to earth does not fear differences, but invites us to fellowship, in order to start afresh together, because we are all pilgrims on a journey.”
Water gives life
Focusing on the readings of the Liturgy drawn from the Book of Ezechiel (Ez 47, 1-2. 8-9. 12), Pope Francis reiterated the crucial role of grandmothers, specifically in indigenous communities, in transmitting the “living water of faith”. “Faith rarely comes from reading a book alone in a corner”, said the Pope, “instead, it spreads within families, transmitted in the language of mothers, in the sweetly lyrical accents of grandmothers”. While thanking them for their precious role, he reiterated his call on families to cherish and take care of their elders.