
SAN CRISTÓBAL DE LA LAGUNA, Spain — Wrapping up a historic, emotionally charged week-long apostolic journey to Spain, Pope Leo XIV issued a scathing rebuke to human traffickers and a profound appeal to European leaders on Friday, declaring that the West “cannot claim to uphold human dignity” while turning its oceans into unmarked graves.
The final leg of the pontiff’s trip brought him to the Canary Islands—an Atlantic archipelago that has become one of the primary, and deadliest, entry points for tens of thousands of African migrants seeking a better life in Europe. The visit marks the first time a reigning pope has ever set foot in the Canary Islands, transforming a regional border crisis into the focal point of global Catholic ministry.
’All of Us Are Migrants’
Speaking to hundreds of displaced people at Las Raíces, a former military barracks in Tenerife repurposed into a migrant reception center, the American-born Pope Leo XIV sought to reframe the politically polarized debate around human movement.
”In a sense, all of us are migrants, for we are all pilgrims on our way to our heavenly homeland,” the Pope told the gathered crowd at the facility, which had previously faced severe criticism for overcrowding. “Let us help make this journey more humane for everyone by contributing in whatever way we can.”
However, the pontiff emphasized that dignity requires a dual commitment, calling integration a “reciprocal journey.” He gently urged the newcomers to actively participate in their host societies, learn the local languages, respect domestic laws, and embrace the customs of the communities welcoming them.
Confronting the ‘Monsters’ of the Sea
The Tenerife visit followed a deeply symbolic Thursday on the neighboring island of Gran Canaria. Standing on the dockside at the port of Arguineguín—gloomily remembered by locals as the “dock of shame” after thousands of arrivals were stranded there in years past—the Pope threw a floral wreath into the Atlantic waters to honor the victims of the crossing.
According to data from the International Organization for Migration, nearly 1,200 people died or went missing last year alone on the West African Atlantic route.
”Human dignity has no passport,” the Pope asserted before blessing a faded blue cross constructed from the wooden planks of a salvaged migrant vessel. “Monsters lurk in these seas… traffickers who enslave women and children, and those whose indifference allows the poor to be swallowed up by exploitation or forgetfulness.”
In an explicit warning delivered on Friday morning to humanitarian groups, the Pope departed from standard diplomatic language to threaten the criminal syndicates engineering the dangerous crossings: “Break those chains and free those you hold in bondage,” he demanded, warning smugglers to stop and repent or face “God’s wrath.”
A High-Stakes Tour Comes to a Close
The Atlantic border crisis has served as the bookend to an ambitious, politically resonant Spanish tour that began on June 6. Earlier in the week, Pope Leo XIV conducted high-level state diplomacy in Madrid, becoming the first pope in history to address a joint session of the Spanish Parliament, where he urged lawmakers to reject political polarization. He later traveled to Barcelona to bless the newly finished, 172.5-meter Tower of Jesus Christ at the Sagrada Família, making the iconic basilica officially the tallest church in the world.
Yet, it is his fierce defense of “welcoming the stranger”—offered at a time when many European governments are tightening border policies under immense pressure from far-right factions—that will likely define the legacy of this journey. The Pope explicitly warned that Western nations cannot grow accustomed to the Mediterranean and Atlantic becoming mass graveyards.
The papal visit drew immense gratitude from local volunteers and the migrant community alike. “We really value this visit. It’s very important for us at such a critical moment,” said Mohamed Amjahdi, a Moroccan migrant who survived the boat journey to Arguineguín at just 17 years old.
Following an open-air afternoon Mass at the port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife expected to draw tens of thousands of faithful, the Pope is scheduled to depart Tenerife North Airport to return to Rome. The pontiff has already signaled that his focus on the global migration crisis will continue unabated; he is scheduled to visit the Italian border island of Lampedusa on July 4.
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