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Home Featured

My soul magnifies the Lord!’: Pope Leo marks anniversary of election at Marian shrine in Pompeii

OSV News by OSV News
May 11, 2026
in Featured, World/Nation
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Pope Leo XIV celebrates Mass in Piazza Bartolo Longo in Piazza Bartolo Longo in front of the Pontifical Shrine of the Blessed Virgin of the Rosary of Pompeii near Naples, Italy, May 8, 2026, on the first anniversary of his election as the first American pontiff. (OSV News photo/Simone Risolutii, Vatican Media)

By Courtney Mares, OSV News

POMPEII, Italy (OSV News) — Pope Leo XIV marked the anniversary of his May 8 election by making a pilgrimage to celebrate Mass at the Sanctuary of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary in Pompeii, one of Italy’s most beloved Marian shrines, placing his pontificate under the protection of the Virgin Mary.

“Exactly one year ago, when I was entrusted with the ministry of the Successor of Peter, it was precisely the day of the Supplication to the Virgin, this beautiful feast of the Supplication to the Virgin of the Holy Rosary of Pompeii,” the pope said in his homily before an estimated 20,000 people gathered in the piazza in front of the basilica.

“I therefore had to come here to place my ministry under the protection of the Blessed Virgin,” he said.

The pilgrimage brought Pope Leo XIV full circle: On May 8, 2025, moments after his election, the newly chosen pope led the crowd from the loggia in St. Peter’s Basilica in praying a Hail Mary on what happened to be the feast of Our Lady of Pompeii. Now, a year later, the pope began his homily with words echoing Mary’s Magnificat: “My soul magnifies the Lord!”

“Brothers and sisters, no earthly power will save the world, but only the divine power of love, this divine power of love that Jesus, the Lord, has revealed to us and given us. Let us believe in Him, let us hope in Him, and let us follow Him,” Pope Leo said in Pompeii.

The first pope born in the United States had a busy first year. The Augustinian pope presided over more than 65 public Masses, the canonization of nine saints, apostolic journeys across three continents, audiences with many world leaders, and led the Catholic Church in the celebration of the historic Jubilee of Hope.

On the morning of the May 8 anniversary, the pope traveled south by helicopter from the Vatican to the Sanctuary of the Blessed Virgin of the Holy Rosary in Pompeii, located near Naples. He began the day by meeting with hundreds of sick and disabled pilgrims inside the basilica before greeting thousands of people gathered in the piazza outside.

The Basilica of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary in Pompeii

The Marian shrine has its roots in a remarkable conversion story of a former Satanist who was canonized as a saint by Pope Leo in October as one of the first new saints of his pontificate. The basilica was founded by St. Bartolo Longo, an Italian lawyer and former Satanist who returned to the Catholic faith and dedicated his life to promoting the rosary.

Located near the ancient Roman ruins of Pompeii, the modern city of Pompei was founded after Bartolo Longo built the Marian sanctuary.

“One hundred and fifty years ago, as he laid the cornerstone of this Shrine — on the very spot where the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 A.D. had buried the vestiges of a great civilization under ash, preserving them for centuries — Saint Bartolo Longo, together with his wife, Countess Marianna Farnararo De Fusco, laid the foundations not only of a church, but of an entire Marian city,” Pope Leo said.

In addition to the basilica, Bartolo Longo also built up the extensive charity network around the shrine, welcoming orphans and the children of prisoners, and earning two nominations for the Nobel Peace Prize in the early 1900s.

“When Saint Bartolo first arrived in the valley of Pompeii, he found a land plagued by great poverty, inhabited by a few very poor farmers, and ravaged by malaria and bandits. He was able to see, however, the face of Christ in everyone: in the young and the old, and especially in the orphans and the children of prisoners, to whom he made the beating of God’s heart felt through his tenderness,” the pope said in a meeting with charity volunteers affiliated with the shrine before the Mass.

Pope Leo listened to testimonies from those aided by the shrine’s ongoing charitable works before the Eucharistic celebration. Among them was a mother named Serena, who told the pope: “When I arrived, I felt like a failure: a mother who hadn’t been able to protect herself and her children from an abusive relationship. But then I began to understand that falling to the ground doesn’t necessarily mean staying there.”

Today the Pompeii shrine dedicated to Our Lady of the Rosary draws approximately 3 million pilgrims annually. Popes John Paul II, Benedict XVI and Francis all made pilgrimages to the shrine, which was named a basilica by Pope Leo XIII in 1901.

Pope Leo XIII and the rosary

On his anniversary, Pope Leo XIV reflected on how his choice of the papal name Leo connects him to Pope Leo XIII, who championed devotion to the rosary.

“Having chosen the name Leo places me in the footsteps of Leo XIII, who, among his other merits, also developed an extensive Magisterium on the Holy Rosary,” the pope said.

In his homily, Pope Leo XIV reflected at length on the importance of praying the rosary.

“The Hail Mary is an invitation to joy,” he said. “It tells Mary — and through her, all of us — that upon the ruins of our humanity, tried by sin and therefore ever prone to oppression, abuse, and war, God’s caress has come, the caress of mercy, which takes on a human face in Jesus.”

He described the repetition of Hail Mary in the prayer of the rosary as an echo of the angel Gabriel’s greeting at the Annunciation, an echo “that spans the centuries and directs the believer’s gaze to Jesus, seen through the eyes and heart of his Mother.”

In the rosary, he said, “Jesus is adored, contemplated, and assimilated in each of his mysteries, so that with Saint Paul we may say: ‘It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me’ (Gal 2:20).”

A plea for peace

The pope closed his homily with an urgent appeal for peace, noting that “times have not improved” in the quarter century since St. John Paul II placed the Year of the Rosary under the patronage of Our Lady of Pompeii.

“The wars still being waged in so many regions of the world call for a renewed commitment, not only economic and political, but also spiritual and religious,” Pope Leo said. “Peace is born in the heart. … We cannot resign ourselves to the images of death that the news presents to us every day.”

Invoking the intercession of the Virgin Mary, the pope prayed that “the God of peace would pour out an overflowing abundance of mercy, touching hearts, soothing grudges and fratricidal hatred, and enlightening those who bear special responsibilities of governance.”

Following Mass, the pope led the crowd in praying the traditional Supplication to Our Lady of Pompeii, the prayer composed by St. Bartolo Longo himself that is prayed each year on May 8 and the first Sunday of October by Catholics in Italy and around the world.

Veneration and liquefaction of St. Januarius’ blood in Naples

From Pompeii, the pope traveled to the nearby city of Naples for the afternoon leg of his pastoral visit, where he was greeted with the kind of exuberant welcome the southern Italian city is known for with festive music, dancing, and a traditional Neapolitan pizza bearing his name.

At the Naples Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary, Pope Leo venerated and kissed the reliquary containing the blood of St. Januarius, the fourth-century bishop and patron saint of the city. As the pope held the reliquary, the saint’s preserved blood liquified — an occurrence Neapolitans have long regarded as a miracle and a favorable omen. The phenomenon has taken place in the presence of only two popes in modern history: during the visit of Pope Pius IX in 1848 and Pope Francis in 2015.

The pope then traveled by popemobile through Naples’ streets before addressing a crowd of some 50,000 people in the Piazza del Plebiscito, the city’s largest public square. There, he spoke frankly about the challenges facing Naples, including organized crime, poverty and inequality, warning of the dangers of “poor job prospects, a lack of adequate facilities and services, and pervasive crime.”

“Faced with these realities, which sometimes take on worrying dimensions, the presence and action of the State is more necessary than ever, to give security and confidence to citizens and take away space from organized crime,” he said.

“Peace starts from the heart of man, passes through relationships, takes root in neighborhoods and suburbs, and expands to embrace the entire city and the world,” Pope Leo said. “Peace is built by promoting an alternative culture to violence, through daily gestures, educational paths, and practical choices of justice.”

He closed his remarks to thunderous applause with an enthusiastic “Viva Napoli!” before departing by helicopter back to Rome in the evening.


Courtney Mares is Vatican editor for OSV News. Follow her on X @catholicourtney.

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