Pope Francis Announces that his General Audiences will Now be Translated into Chinese


Pope Francis announces that on December 4th, the weekly papal General Audiences (summary and greeting) will be translated into  Mandarin Chinese.
"Next week, with the beginning of Advent, the summary of the catechesis at the General Audience will also be translated into Chinese."
Starting December 4, the greetings and summary of the Pope's catechesis will be read in Mandarin Chinese, along with French, English, German, Spanish, Portughese, Arabic, and Polish.
The Pope's decision to include Mandarin highlights the care he has often expressed for the Chinese people.
In September 2018, in a message, he described China as "a land rich in great opportunities" and the "Chinese people as the architects and guardians of an invaluable heritage of culture and wisdom, refined through adversity and the integration of diversity, which, not coincidentally, has encountered the Christian message since ancient times."
In 2023, as he presided at Mass in Ulaanbaatar on September 3, 2023, during his Apostolic Journey to Mongolia, Pope Francis extended "a warm greeting to the noble Chinese people," urging Chinese Catholics to "be good Christians and good citizens."
The Pope has expressed a desire to visit China on several occasions. On September 13, 2024, during the inflight press conference as he returned to Rome from Singapore, the Pope referred to the Chinese nation as "a promise and a hope for the Church."
Today, the Vatican News website offers information in both traditional and simplified Chinese, and the Chinese-language program of Vatican Radio was launched in 1950.
Chinese characters first appeared in L’Osservatore Romano in February 1981, when Pope St. John Paul II unexpectedly delivered part of his speech in that language in front of the Peace Monument in Hiroshima.
In 2009, Chinese became one of the languages available on the Holy See's official website, vatican.va. Additionally, the Vatican's Fides News Agency's newsletter has been published in simplified Chinese since 1998.
Source: Vatican News

Comments