Pope Leo has met Italian families whose loved ones have died or have cancer as a result of illegal toxic dumping linked to a multi-billion-euro criminal racket run by the mafia.
Leo’s visit to the Terra dei Fuochi, or Land of Fires, near Naples, came on the eve of the 11th anniversary of Pope Francis’ big ecological encyclical, Laudato Si (Praised Be), and indicates Leo’s commitment to carry on his predecessor’s environmental agenda.
“I have come first of all to gather the tears of those who have lost loved ones, killed by environmental pollution caused by unscrupulous people and organisations who for too long were able to act with impunity,” Leo said in remarks to family members and clergy inside Acerra’s cathedral.
The pontiff recalled that the area was once called “Campania felix”, Latin for blessed or fruitful countryside, “capable of enchanting for its fertility, its produce and its culture, like a hymn to life. And yet – here is death, of the land and of men.”
The European court of human rights last year validated a generation of residents’ complaints that mafia dumping, burial and burning of toxic waste led to an increased rate of cancer and other ailments in the area of 90 municipalities around Caserta and Naples, encompassing a population of 2.9 million people.
The court found Italian authorities had known since 1988 about the pollution, blamed on the Camorra crime syndicate that controls waste disposal, but failed to take steps to protect the residents. The binding ruling gave Italy two years to set up a database about the toxic waste and the verified health risks associated with living there.
In opening remarks, the local bishop Antonio Di Donna estimated 150 young people had died in the city of about 58,000 over the past three decades – emphasising that the number did not include adults or victims from other municipalities.
He urged the pope to admonish those who continue to pollute, noting that the dumping of tonnes of toxic waste was reported a day earlier near Caserta. Di Donna said Italian officials had identified dozens more similar sites throughout the country, including the Venetian port of Marghera, and the leaching of forever chemicals (Pfas) into groundwater near Vicenza.
“We say to those brothers of ours ensnared in evil and seized by a mirage of fabulous earnings: convert, change your ways, because what you are doing is not only a crime, it is a sin that cries out to God for vengeance,’’ the bishop said.
The pope later greeted the mayors of the 90 communities affected by the toxic dumping, and thousands of people waving yellow flags and chanting “Papa Leone” along the route of his popemobile and in a central piazza.

Angelo Venturato, whose daughter Maria died of cancer in 2016 at the age of 25, said the day before the pope’s visit that he hoped to speak to him to explain their reality, “not for me … for the next generation”.
“I’d like to give these young people a future, so I’m asking for the pope’s help with this. I’m making a strong appeal to him to go to those in power and say: ‘Look, let’s heal this land of fires,’” he said.
Inside the cathedral, Filomena Carolla presented the pope with a book containing memories from the life of her daughter, Tina De Angelis, who died of cancer at the age of 24.
“I’m just angry at the people who poisoned the soil, because what did our children have to do with it? What did they have to do with it, so young?” Carolla said on Friday.
Francis’s plans to visit the area in 2020 were cancelled because of the Covid pandemic.

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