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The Blind man had “a strong voice,” but the people around “rebuke him to keep quiet, as if he didn’t have the right to speak.”
“They don’t have compassion on him, but, rather, they are bothered by his cries,” the Pope said, asking: “How many times do we, when we see so many people in the street, needy people, sick and with nothing to eat, feel bothered?”
By Joyce StellusThe Blind man had “a strong voice,” but the people around “rebuke him to keep quiet, as if he didn’t have the right to speak.”
“They don’t have compassion on him, but, rather, they are bothered by his cries,” the Pope said, asking: “How many times do we, when we see so many people in the street, needy people, sick and with nothing to eat, feel bothered?”