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Syrian refugees join Pope in return to Vatican

<p>After Pope Francis' visit to Greece on Saturday, the pontiff took three Syrian refugee families back to Rome where the Vatican will take care of them.</p><p><a href="http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2016/april/documents/papa-francesco_20160416_lesvos-cittadinanza.html" target="_blank">The Pope said</a>, "We must never forget, however, that migrants, rather than simply being a statistic, are first of all persons who have faces, names and individual stories."</p><p><a href="http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2016/04/16/pope_takes_12_syrian_refugees_with_him_on_plane_back_to_rome/1223348" target="_blank">The Vatican said</a> the 12 refugees are Muslim and that the move was carried out through talks with officials from Italy, Greece and the Vatican.</p><p>The pope's six-hour visit was on the Greek island of Lesbos — a main passageway for refugees trying to get to Europe. The International Rescue Committee estimates <a href="https://www.rescue-uk.org/press-releases/pope-francis-visits-lesbos-meet-some-4000-refugees-living-limbo-island" target="_blank">4,000 refugees</a> are on the island.</p><p><a href="https://www.rescue-uk.org/press-releases/pope-francis-visits-lesbos-meet-some-4000-refugees-living-limbo-island" target="_blank">The organization said</a>: "These refugees were randomly selected and are the very few lucky ones. For the tens of thousands that remain in Greece, their life in limbo continues."</p><p>The pope has visited islands that house refugee and migrant camps before. ln 2013, Francis visited a small Italian island that was a main entry port for African refugees to get to Europe.</p><p><i>This video includes clips from the </i><i><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hEoS8s3hr6I" target="_blank">Vatican</a></i><i> and </i><i><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIMoqiNyQOI" target="_blank">United Nations</a></i><i>. </i></p>
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The Roman Catholic charity group Sant'Egidio has released some details about the 12 Syrian refugees who flew to Rome aboard Pope Francis' plane from Greece and who will get preliminary assistance from the group.

It says one family is made up of two engineers, Hasan and Nour, and their 2-year-old son. Originally from Damascus, they lived in Zabadani, a mountain area near the Lebanese border that has been heavily bombed. They fled to Turkey and took a boat to the Greek island of Lesbos, which the pope visited Saturday.

The family of Ramy and Suhila come from Deir el-Zour, a Syrian city close to the Iraqi border that has been bombed by the Islamic State group. The couple, in their 50s, arrived in Greece with their three children in February via Turkey. The father is a teacher, the mother a tailor.

Osama and Wafa hail from the Damascus suburb of Zamalka. The youngest of their two children still wakes each night — and even stopped speaking for a time.

The Vatican says all three families' homes were bombed in Syria. The charity did not release any of the Syrians' last names due to privacy concerns.

Pope Francis says his decision to bring 12 Syrian refugees to Italy from Greece aboard his plane was a "purely humanitarian" gesture and not a political act.

Francis told reporters Saturday as they flew home from Greece — with the refugees sitting in the aircraft behind him — that the idea came to him only a week ago from a Vatican official. He said he accepted it "immediately" because it was in keeping with the message of humanity that he wanted to send with his trip to the Greek island of Lesbos, a hotspot in Europe's migration crisis.

Francis said all 12 refugees had their documents in order and that the Vatican would take full responsibility for them. The Vatican earlier said they consisted of three families, with six children among them, whose homes had been bombed in Syria