BEIJING, Aug. 18 -- Amid the furor of the ongoing
Beijing Games, an Italian couple searched for a quiet spot to pray for their son
taking part in the sporting event.
Yesterday, they found the place and time to do so - near a
fountain on the grounds of the Catholic Church of Xuanwumen, in southern
Beijing.
"We pray for a best performance from our son during the
Games and hope that he can win gold during his match tomorrow," Carlo Cassina
said.
His son, Igor Cassina, is a household name in Italy. The
31-year-old clinched the gold medal for the horizontal bar in the 2004 Athens
Games.
"We are satisfied with the religious services being
offered here," said the father.
The Cassina couple are some of the visitors to the capital
who are making use of the religious venues and services offered by the
authorities.
Churches in Beijing have reportedly been preparing
services for the more than 400,000 overseas tourists who are expected in the
city during the Games, including masses in foreign languages.
As one of the 20 Catholic churches in Beijing, the
Xuanwumen Catholic Church celebrates two masses in English and one in Latin
every Sunday, Father Matthew Zhen Xuebin, secretary-general of the Catholic
Church of the Beijing diocese, told China Daily yesterday.
Other churches will also hold masses in German, Italian,
Spanish and French at the request of overseas organizations, Zhen said.
"We have sufficient information on religious services
being extended in the city, through media reports, brochures handed out by the
churches and our friends living here. It's pleasant to pray here, just like
everywhere else in the world," said a visitor from the United States, surnamed
Nicholas.
The churches also have foreign language-speaking
volunteers on hand to assist visitors and to distribute free travel brochures.
"Judging from the current situation, all religious demands
by overseas Catholic visitors can be met in Beijing," Zhen said.
As a special arrangement for the Games, priests from the
churches have also added the Games and the athletes in their prayers, Zhen said.
"Holding the Olympics is building a beautiful world, and
this is in line with Catholic values of love, justice and peace," Zhen said.
There are now more than 100,000 Catholics in Beijing, Zhen
added.
The diocese has 20 parishes, 55 priests and one convent,
as well as a seminary with 20 seminarians, he said.
The number of Catholics has also been booming in recent
years, with the diocese now having to train more fathers and build more churches
to meet the demand, Zhen added.
(Source: China Daily)