

If you check for possible trade routes and notice that you can gain science knowledge through trade, that also means you can send a spy to that civilization and improve yourself using more devious measures. 2-6.Īfter his visit to the camp, the Pope will return to Athens by plane to preside over a Mass in the afternoon at the Megaron Concert Hall in the Greek capital at 5pm.Instead of randomly selecting a successful looking civilization and sending spies on a whim, look to the intel that is provided more readily. Pope Francis' visit to the refugee camp occurred on the fourth day of his apostolic journey to Cyprus and Greece taking place Dec. “With the strength of prayer and the intercession of the Virgin Mary, Our Mother and Mother of the Church, I was able to overcome the difficulties I encountered in life as a refugee,” Mukaya said.


The refugee shared how his current Catholic parish in Lesbos has been a great support to him during this time of difficulty. He said that his other child and wife were not able to join him in Greece and he has not heard from them in over a year. Mukaya is the father of three children - two of whom have been with him since his arrival at the Lesbos camp in November 2020. “Problems are not resolved and coexistence improved by building walls higher, but by joining forces to care for others according to the concrete possibilities of each and in respect for the law, always giving primacy to the inalienable value of the life of every human being,” he said.ĭuring his visit to the camp, Pope Francis listened to a testimony from Christian Tango Mukaya, a Catholic refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Pope Francis said in Lesbos that he is distressed when he hears proposals that common funds be used to build walls. We complain when we see this and say, ‘but how did this happen?’ Brothers and sisters, it is happening today, on nearby shores,” the Pope said in Nicosia on Dec. “We complain when we read the stories of the camps of the last century, those of the Nazis, those of Stalin. In a meeting with migrants in Cyprus two days prior, Pope Francis also brought up Nazi concentration camps when discussing the suffering of migrants. “‘When human lives are endangered, when human dignity is in jeopardy, national borders become irrelevant,’” the Pope said, quoting Wiesel’s 1986 Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech. In his speech, Pope Francis repeatedly quoted Elie Wiesel, the Auschwitz survivor and author who died in 2016.
