Vatican receives first LGBTQ pilgrimage

CHAMPIONING INCLUSIVITY. Pilgrims march to pass the holy door of St. Peter’s Basilica during the LGBT Jubilee, at the Vatican, on September 6, 2025. In a first for the Vatican, more than a thousand LGBTQ Catholics and their supporters are this weekend holding a pilgrimage, in what they are promoting as an important sign of diversity in the Church. (Photo courtesy: Filippo Monteforte / AFP)

By Agence France-Presse

In a first for the Vatican, more than a thousand LGBTQ Catholics and their supporters are holding a pilgrimage this weekend, in what they are promoting as an important sign of diversity in the Church.

The gathering of some 1,400 people from around 20 countries was part of the Catholic Church’s Jubilee holy year. It was organized by La Tenda di Gionata (The Tent of Jonathon), an Italian association lobbying for greater inclusivity among the faithful.

While those taking part did not have a private audience scheduled with Pope Leo XIV, this is the first time such a pilgrimage has featured on the official Jubilee program, although LGBTQ groups have gone to the Vatican before.

Yveline Behets, a 68-year-old transgender woman from Brussels, walked 130 kilometers (80 miles) with another 30 LGBTQ people along part of the ancient Via Francigena pilgrimage route to get to Rome.

She said she expected more “plurality” from the Church after experiencing difficulties with other Catholics, among whom, she said, she did “not always feel acknowledged.”

“One should not misuse the word ‘welcome.’ We are not just some outsiders who are welcomed sometimes, or more regularly—we are part of the same family,” she said, wearing a t-shirt with the rainbow of the LGBTQ community.

LOUD AND PROUD. A couple shows a rainbow flag and a figurine of the Pope as they march with other pilgrims to pass the holy door of St. Peter’s Basilica during the LGBT Jubilee, at the Vatican, on September 6, 2025. (Photo courtesy: Filippo Monteforte / AFP)

Into the Vatican

Just as millions of other pilgrims have done before, those taking part in Saturday’s LGBTQ pilgrimage walked up the main road to the Vatican. Carrying a cross in rainbow colors before them, they stepped through the Holy Door into Saint Peter’s Basilica.

Hugo, a 35-year-old from Quebec in Canada who declined to give his last name, said he believed the LGBTQ pilgrimage was “a really important signal for us to feel more included.”

He said he hoped it would “let people who are on the fence allow themselves to be more welcoming towards homosexuals in the Church.”

But, in a religious institution that for two millennia has viewed homosexual acts as going against its tenet of procreative sex and gay couples “intrinsically disordered,” the road to acceptance is still long.

“There are fears and a sort of misunderstanding when it comes to the life that homosexuals lead. If everybody got to know everyone else, I think a lot of barriers would come down,” Hugo told AFP.

Currently though, he said, “a lot of obstacles remain,” especially for couples who want the Church’s blessing for same-sex marriages.

Pope Francis, who died in April, had sought to make the Catholic Church open to all, and he made many overtures to the LGBTQ community—without changing the doctrine.

His 2023 decision to allow priests to bless same-sex couples triggered fierce opposition from conservative branches of the Church, particularly in Africa.

LEADING THE FAITHFUL. Pope Leo XIV speaks during a Jubilee audience at the Saint Peter’s Square, in The Vatican, on September 6, 2025. (Photo courtesy: Filippo Monteforte / AFP)

‘Needs to change’

His successor, Pope Leo, has said that marriage is a union between a man and a woman, but he will not change Francis’ decision.

Beatrice Sarti, an Italian accompanying her gay son on the weekend pilgrimage, said there “is still a long way to go,” starting with shifting mindsets among Catholics.

“Many of our children no longer go to church…because they are made to feel that they are wrong,” said the 60-year-old from Bologna, who is a member of La Tenda di Gionata. “That absolutely needs to change.

“The first thing to do is train educators, the seminarians, the priests and the bishops, starting at the grassroots,” she said, while admitting “it is a very long process.”

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