Signed "Respectfully yours," the boy wrote from a Jesuit- run school for refugee children in Syria and was treated to a long and personal answer from the pope himself. So were 29 other children who posed questions to Francis in letters from around the globe for a new book poignantly illustrated with their own artwork.
The book, "Dear Pope Francis," is out March 1 from Loyola Press in Chicago. It's a project that likely wouldn't have materialized without the help of Father Antonio Spadaro, a Jesuit like the pope and the director of La Civilta Cattolica, a Roman Catholic journal published in Rome.
"He knows Pope Francis very well," McGrath said of Spadaro. "We tried to make it as easy for the pope as possible." The pope's response to Mohammed spoke in part of suffering and the people who inflict it.
"There are those who manufacture weapons so that people fight each other and wage war. There are people who have hate in their hearts. There are people who are interested only in money and would sell everything for it. They would even sell other people," he wrote.
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The 30 kids in the book range in age from 6 to 13. In all, about 250 letters were received in 14 languages from 26 countries around the globe. The pope wound up with about 50 letters from which to choose.
Spadaro said via email that the pope truly pondered when answering the children.
"Often he looked off into space and tried to imagine the child in front of him," he said. "And in his gaze I saw care, love."
"The pope is eager to meet them," McGrath said. "He was quick to say he would like to make that happen." They'll be traveling with their parents from China, Ireland, Argentina, India, Canada, Kenya, Singapore, Australia, the United States and the Philippines.