ROME — The pained faces of children with serious medical conditions and the suffering of their families should inspire doctors and nurses to serve with passion and enthusiasm, Pope Francis said.

Commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Vatican-owned Bambino Gesu children’s hospital Nov. 16, the pope encouraged medical professionals “never to lose the ability to see the suffering face of a child even behind a simple sample to be analyzed, and to hear the cry of parents even within your laboratories.”

“I am reminded of that question, to which it is difficult to find an answer, from the great (Fyodor) Dostoevsky: ‘Why do children suffer?’ Always keep this question alive: ‘Why does a child suffer?'”

Francis said there is no answer to the question, but it must lead to greater care for a suffering child and more prayers to God to intervene.

Founded in 1869 by Duchess Arabella and Duke Scipione Salviati, Bambino Gesu children’s hospital became the first pediatric hospital on the Italian peninsula.

In an effort to guarantee the hospital would have a secure future, in 1924, the Salviati family donated it to Pope Pius XI.

Over time, the hospital added new pavilions, new operating rooms and new outpatient departments. Today, with two branches outside Rome, Bambino Gesu children’s hospital is one of the most modern and well-equipped pediatric facilities in the country.

Bambino Gesu’s truest identity, he said, comes from the “moral authority of sick and suffering children,” and the awareness of that authority “should be the driving force behind your action together, in agreement and with a community spirit, in overcoming obstacles and differences.”

A cornerstone of the hospital’s mission, he continued, is medical research into the diagnoses and cures for rare diseases. The pope expressed his admiration for “the passion and enthusiasm that you put into your work of care and research.”

“There is no cure without research and there is no future in medicine without research,” he said.

“I like to bless the hands of doctors and nurses,” the pope told the group, adding that he would pause his talk to bless the hands of all the medical professionals in the audience and all those who work at the hospital.

“Lord, bless the hands of the doctors and nurses so that they can help the children throughout the course of their illness and recovery,” the pope prayed.

Thanking the hospital’s doctors, surgeons and nurses, he told them, “Always be aware of God’s blessing of your hands. Your ability to heal in this way is a gift to you and to the people entrusted to you.”


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