Story of Pope’s Desire to Visit Sicily Emerges

Pope Francis, like John Paul II, invites guests to attend Mass in his private chapel and then invites them for breakfast.

Pope Francis greets people after celebrating Mass at St. Anne's parish on March 17.
Pope Francis greets people after celebrating Mass at St. Anne's parish on March 17. (photo: L'Osservatore Romano)

ROME — Some might call it fate, but through a series of Providential connections, Bishop Michele Pennisi discovered that Pope Francis wants to visit Sicily “as soon as possible.”

The story begins with Father Pasquale Di Dio waiting for Pope Francis outside the Vatican parish of Sant’Anna on March 17, standing next to an Argentinian priest.

“The Pope,” Father Di Dio related in an April 2 interview with Catholic News Agency, “recognized and called by name the Argentinian priest, telling him to come into the church. I followed him. This is how I could have access to the Mass in Sant’Anna.”

After the Mass, Father Di Dio gave the Pope’s secretary, Msgr. Alfred Xuereb, a letter for Pope Francis.

“In the letter,” he explained, “I asked for special blessings for my family.”

But Father Di Dio was surprised to receive a phone call at 9pm on April 1 from Msgr. Xuereb, who told him, “The Pope would be pleased to have you and your family at the morning Mass at the Domus Sanctae Martae on April the 2nd.”

So, he quickly looked for a flight from Sicily to get his family to Rome in time for the Pope’s 7:30am Mass the next morning.

After the Mass, the Pope invited the priest and his family to have breakfast with him.

“During the breakfast, Father Di Dio told the Pope that he is my secretary,” Bishop Michele Pennisi explained in an April 2 conversation.

Then “Pope Francis asked Father Di Dio to call me. When I answered, he just told me that the Pope was on the line.”

Bishop Pennisi is currently the administrator of the Piazza Armerina Diocese, but he has already been appointed archbishop of Monreale, where he will be installed on April 27.

Bishop Pennisi recounts: “I also was at Sant’Anna on March 17. I did not attend the celebration, but I was in Rome, and so Father Di Dio called me, inviting me to go.”

Bishop Pennisi arrived in time to see the Pope exit the parish and was able to greet him. He gave the Pope a letter asking for prayers for his diocese, and “the Pope assured me his prayers for the Diocese of Piazza Armerina, which I will be leaving in a few days, and for the Archdiocese of Monreale.

“He also told me that he wishes to visit Sicily as soon as possible.”

“It seems like John Paul II’s times are back,” Bishop Pennisi remarked.

John Paul II used to invite people to attend the Mass he held in his private chapel in the early morning and then for breakfast or lunch.

It was such a common habit that Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Holy See Press Office and Vatican Radio, encouraged the Italian journalist Angela Ambrogetti to write a book about John Paul II’s “informal” lunch conversations.
In the end, she authored two books in Italian on the press conferences Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI held as they flew to visit the Church overseas.