Pope Leo to spend US July 4 holiday on Italy's Lampedusa, known for migrant arrivals


FILE PHOTO: Migrants standing on a fiberglass boat wave at NGO Open Arms rescue boat "Astral" as they assist them in international waters south of Lampedusa, in the Mediterranean Sea, July 24, 2025. REUTERS/Ana Beltran/File Photo

VATICAN CITY, Feb ⁠19 (Reuters) - Pope Leo, the first U.S. leader of the global Catholic ⁠Church, will spend the Independence Day holiday this year visiting an ‌Italian island known as the first port of call for migrants sailing from North Africa for Europe.

The pope will visit Lampedusa on July 4, the Vatican announced on Thursday, as part ​of a series of visits he will make ⁠this summer to cities across ⁠Italy.

Lampedusa sits in the Mediterranean between Tunisia, Malta and the larger Italian island ⁠of ‌Sicily. The Lampedusa visit will come on the day the U.S. celebrates the 250th anniversary of its independence.

Leo, originally from Chicago, has called ⁠for "deep reflection" about the way migrants are being treated ​in the U.S. under ‌President Donald Trump's administration.

The Vatican earlier this month refuted reports that ⁠the pope might ​travel to the U.S. for the celebrations this year, with the press office stating: "The pope will not go to the United States in 2026."

Lampedusa is a destination on ⁠what has become one of the world's ​deadliest migration routes, where many people land after crossing the Mediterranean often in simple fishing boats or makeshift dinghies.

The island was visited by the late Pope Francis ⁠in 2013 on his first visit as pope outside Rome.

In a video message sent to the island in September, Leo had mentioned a desire to visit and had thanked local organizations who offer assistance to arriving migrants.

He said volunteers ​on the island "have shown … the smile and the ⁠attention of a human face to people who have survived in a desperate journey ​of hope."

Among the other trips the Vatican announced ‌on Thursday, Leo will visit the cities ​of Pompei, Naples and Acerra in May, Pavia in June, and Assisi and Rimini in August.

(Reporting by Joshua McElweeEditing by Alexandra Hudson)

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