One year to go: Krakow prepares for World Youth Day 2016

While Pope Francis registered for World Youth Day 2016 — to be held in Krakow, Poland, exactly a year from this week — Krakow came alive as the local organizing committee and young people launched the year-long countdown.

Sep 04, 2015

KRAKOW, Poland: While Pope Francis registered for World Youth Day 2016 — to be held in Krakow, Poland, exactly a year from this week — Krakow came alive as the local organizing committee and young people launched the year-long countdown.

Earlier in the week, I had a chance to visit the World Youth Day offices and to interview Ms Ewa Korbut, from the World Youth Day 2016 press office.

CWR: At the closing Mass of World Youth Day 2013, Pope Francis made the announcement that the next World Youth Day will be in Krakow. How did young people in Poland receive this announcement?
Ms. Korbut: I specifically remember the moment. We were having a festival named “Rio in Krakow.” It was in the Sanctuary of God’s Mercy in Lagiewniki and there was a big gathering of young people there, watching the closing Mass of World Youth Day in Rio from a big screen. So when Pope Francis made the announcement, ‘Let’s meet next time in Krakow,’ there were loud cheers and celebrations in the Church that I have never experienced before.

Everyone was happy, there was applause for another five minutes and people were waving flags of different countries, including the Brazilian one. We could see on the screen that the Pope was saying something more, but we were so happy and were still cheering and applauding all the time. Then we started to imagine how we were going to do it, but no one thought about the entire preparations yet…we were just so happy. We could see on the screen young people from Krakow, from Poland — some who were in Rio — we could see how happy they were too. They later told us that all the people gathered in Rio wanted to swap Polish-t-shirts, flags, every little souvenir from Poland, and how much they looked forward to going to Poland for World Youth Day.

Later, with the leadership of Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, the official preparations started, slowly but surely, and we started preparing ourselves. The committee gathered and started planning. As you know, it’s going to be a big meeting, a big event, and there are so many things to prepare.

Excellent! It sounds like you are all up to the challenge. This being the home of St John Paul II, how significant is it that WYD is coming to Krakow?
Straight away after we were chosen to organize, all the people said we should present Krakow as the place where St John Paul II lived. He was a Bishop here, but he also studied here and had his priestly formation here. He also worked not too far away from here in a fabric factory. So all the tourists connect Krakow with St John Paul II. Now we want to present him, not simply as the Pope we knew—head of the Church who travelled all over the world—but we want to present him as the normal boy who lived here, just next to the Vistula river and then as a student, and then as a young priest who worked first in a small parish, about 40 kilometres from here. As the world knows him from the 27 years he was Pope, we know him from many years before as a young boy, who grew into a young man, who became a priest and then as our Bishop who was already involved in working with young people, but also with older people in the parishes. He’s known here also as the Bishop who travelled a lot to the small parishes all over the diocese of Krakow, so then we can see he did the same but in a bigger way as the Pope, meeting more and more people.

St John Paul II was from Krakow, but the entire Church in Poland is also full of expectation. How is the Church (in Poland) getting ready?
As you know, the World Youth Day is the week in Krakow, but also, the week before, with the days in the dioceses. All the other dioceses in Poland are preparing to host people from all across the world. Each and every diocese is preparing a programme for the period 20th to 25th July. They are preparing both the spiritual and cultural aspects of the programme. They already have centres of preparation, and Polish pilgrims are able to sign up with their local dioceses starting next week.

We know that Krakow is the host diocese, but each and every Polish person is a host. Bishop Muskus, who is the head of the organizing committee, emphasizes this point and he always says “we are organizing”. Not only the local team in Krakow, or citizens of Krakow, but the whole of Poland, especially the youth, are hosting. So we can see many Facebook accounts of each parish, each diocese, each region of Poland showcasing how they are preparing and tweets expressing how eagerly they are waiting for World Youth Day.

There are so many initiatives at the moment. For example, I am not sure if you have heard, but there is a bus, a small one, of young people from Kalwaria Zebrzydowska. They got it from the parents of one of the girls, and they painted it with the logo and colours of World Youth Day, pictures from Krakow and St John Paul II; now they are going all across Europe, inviting people to World Youth Day next year. They have been to the Czech Republic, Austria, and Italy and the day before yesterday, they took the ferry to Greece. They will then go to the Balkans, then Romania, Slovakia and back to Poland. They already arranged meetings with young people and parishes, inviting them to come to Poland, and if they cannot, then to pray for the success of the event.

The second interesting initiative is a group of guys from Torun. They have bicycles and they are going to Zakopane in the mountains, in the south of Poland, and then the most northern point in Poland, at the seaside called Hel, covering a total of about 800 kilometres. They have World Youth Day t-shirts and are getting people excited about next year, reminding them we have only one year left to prepare ourselves, to host other people. -- CWR

-- To be continued in the next week

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