Pope
Francis has asked forgiveness for all Christians who buy sex from women,
saying men who frequent prostitutes are criminals with a 'sick
mentality' who think that women exist to be exploited.
'This isn't making love. This is torturing a woman. Let's not confuse the terms,' Francis insisted.
The
pope made the comments during an intimate, four-hour-long listening
session with 300 young people who were invited by the Vatican to Rome.
The purpose of the session was to help church leaders learn about young people's attitudes towards the Catholic Church.
Blessing
Okoedion, who was forced into prostitution but escaped, asked Francis
how the church could allow Catholics to be clients for the many Nigerian
women in Italy who - like her - were victims of human trafficking.
'I ask
myself, and I ask you: Is the male chauvinistic church able to
truthfully ask itself about this high demand by clients?' she asked.
Francis,
who has made the fight against human trafficking and modern-day sex
slaves a priority of his pontificate, urged young people to take up the
fight against trafficking and forced prostitution.
'This is one of the battles that I ask you young people to do, for the dignity of women,' he said.
The
pontiff said forced prostitution was born of a 'sick mentality' that no
form of feminism has managed to rid from society, one that thinks that
'women are to be exploited.'
Speaking
directly to Okoedion, he concluded: 'I want to take advantage of this
moment, because you talked about baptized and Christians, to ask your
forgiveness, from society and all the Catholics who do this criminal
act.'
Monday's meeting was preparation for a big synod of bishops in October on helping young people find their vocations in life.
Francis
has insisted that young adults - Catholic and not - be integral in the
process informing the otherwise all-male, celibate and rather old church
hierarchy about the future of the church.
'Young people must be taken seriously,' he said.
He got
an earful when he opened the meeting by urging the young people to
speak with courage, without shame or 'anesthesia' to dull the truth.
Nicholas
Lopez, a college campus minister from Texas, told Francis that young
people today face racism, poverty and gang violence, as well as 'unjust
immigration laws that threaten to split children from families.'
AP
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