"There are many
children neglected by their own parents," Glyzelle said Sunday at a
ceremony at a 400-year-old Catholic university in Manila. "There are
also many who became victims and many terrible things happened to them
like drugs or prostitution."
"Why is
God allowing such things to happen, even if it is not the fault of the
children?" she asked the Pope, breaking down into tears as she spoke.
Living off 'what I can find in the garbage'
Another former street child, Jun Chura, told Pope Francis about his struggle to survive without a home.
"I
was feeding myself with what I can find in the garbage," said Jun, 14.
"I did not know where to go, and I was sleeping on the sidewalk."
"When I was in the street, I witness also
things I don't like, terrible things that happened to my companions in
the street," Jun said. "I saw that they were taught how to steal, to
kill also, and they have no respect anymore for the adults."
Pope Francis responded to Glyzelle's question and Jun's testimony by giving the two children a big hug.
"She
is the only one who has put a question for which there is no answer and
she wasn't even able to express it in words but in tears," the
78-year-old Pope told the crowd.
'The terrible things that can happen in the street'
Glyzelle and Jun are both in the care of Tulay ng Kabataan Foundation, a non-governmental organization that looks after Manila's street children.
The
foundation came across Glyzelle and her older sister a few years ago,
said Alexandra Chapeleau, the group's communication manager.
The girls had left home -- where their
impoverished parents were unable to support them or get them an
education -- and were fending for themselves on the street, she said.
They
first attended one of the foundation's drop-in centers before moving
into a residential facility and starting to attend school. In November,
their younger brother joined them at the foundation.
Glyzelle is still in touch with her mother and goes home to see her at Christmas, Chapeleau said.
The foundation's center where Glyzelle lives is home to about 40 other former street children.
"Most
of them are victims of the terrible things that can happen in the
street," including physical and sexual abuse, Chapeleau said.
'We need to see each child as a gift'
But
Glyzelle's tears in front of the Pope on Sunday were apparently
prompted by the intensity of the moment, not because of her own
experiences.
She asked the question "on
behalf of all the children we take care of," not because of "something
personal regarding her own story," Chapeleau said.
The Pope touched on the street children theme again later Sunday when he celebrated Mass in a Manila park with millions of people, despite the soaking rain.
"We
need to see each child as a gift to be welcomed, cherished and
protected," he told the enormous crowd. "And we need to care for our
young, not allowing them to be condemned to a life on the streets."
'I realized that not all people have no heart'
The
Pope had visited the center where Glyzelle and others live on Friday
after celebrating Mass at Manila Cathedral, and reportedly said he was
"very moved" by what he saw.
There are
estimated to be more than 1.5 million street children in the
Philippines, about 70,000 of them in the Manila metropolitan area,
according to the He Cares Foundation, another group that cares for them.
In
his account, Jun described seeing some of his friends sniffing glue and
taking other drugs. He said he learned to be wary of adults offering
money or help because it was often a trap to exploit the children.
He
initially declined an offer of support from Tulay ng Kabataan
Foundation but later found out that the organization was genuinely
trying to help him.
"I realized that not all people have no heart," he said.
Storm shortens Tacloban visit
The
Pope left the Philippines on Monday, waving as he boarded his plane at
the end of an Asia trip that also included time in Sri Lanka.
In
the first visit by a Pope to the predominantly Catholic Philippines in
20 years, Francis paid a visit to Tacloban, the city ravaged by Super
Typhoon Haiyan in November 2013.
Francis had to cut short his time there at the weekend because of the approach of another typhoon.
But
it didn't stop him from donning a slicker to celebrate Mass in Tacloban
on Saturday for hundreds of thousands who gathered despite the stormy
weather.
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