Pope Francis denounces exploitation of immigrants, women and youth during trip to Turin

Pope Francis Pope Francis waves during as he meets with workers and businessmen during his visit to Turin, northern Italy, Sunday, June 21, 2015. Pope Francis earlier prayed in front of the Holy Shroud, the 14 foot-long linen revered by some as the burial cloth of Jesus, on display at the Cathedral of Turin. (AP Photo/Massimo Pinca)

Pope Francis paused in silent prayer before the Shroud of Turin Sunday, becoming the latest of hundreds of thousands of people who have come this year to Turin's cathedral to view the burial linen some believe covered the body of Jesus after crucifixion.

Francis sat for several minutes before the shroud, contained in a protective glass case. He lowered his head at times in apparent reflection and occasionally gazed up at the 4.3-meter (14-foot) long cloth. Then he took a few steps, placed his hand on the case, and walked away without comment.

Later, after celebrating Mass for faithful in a packed Turin square, Francis gave his impression of the cloth as he spoke of the love Jesus had for humanity when being crucified.

"Icon of this love is the Shroud, that, even this time, has attracted so many people here to Turin," Francis said. "The Shroud draws (people) to the tormented face and body of Jesus and, at the same time, directs (people) toward the face of every suffering and unjustly persecuted person," the pope said.

The shroud's display began April 19 and runs through June 24.

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Other pontiffs have made the journey to the northern city during previous displays of the shroud. When John Paul II saw the shroud in 1998, he said the mystery surrounding the cloth forces questions about faith and science and whether it really was Jesus' burial linen. He urged continuous study. Benedict XVI described the cloth as an icon "written with the blood" of a crucified man.

Skeptics say the cloth bearing the image of a crucified man is a medieval forgery.

Turin, the heartland of Italy's auto industry, is considered Italy's blue-collar labor capital, and Francis used his two-day visit to the city to denounce exploitation of workers, singling out women, young people and immigrants as frequent victims.

"Immigration increases competition, but migrants shouldn't be blamed because they themselves are victims of the injustice, of this throw-away economy and of wars," Francis said in a speech in a square outside the cathedral.

He then made an apparent reference to European countries as well as some northern Italian regions which are refusing or reluctant to take some of the tens of thousands of migrants who have landed at southern Italian ports after being rescued in the Mediterranean from overcrowded, unseaworthy smugglers' boats.

"It makes one cry to see the spectacle of these days in which human beings are treated as commercial goods," Francis said.

Turin is the Piedmont region's capital, and during Mass, the Argentine-born Francis quoted from a poem in local dialect that praises the qualities of those who emigrated from Piedmont — like some of his own ancestors — to seek work abroad.

"Our ancestors knew well what it meant to be rock-solid," Francis said. Quoting from the poem, the pope said these emigrants were "Proper and sincere, they appear to be what they are .... they speak little but they know what they are talking about, even if they walk with ease, they go far. They are people who don't spare time and sweat -- our free and stubborn race."

On Monday, before he heads back to Rome, Francis will lunch in Turin with some of his relatives who live in Piedmont.

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