Nancy Rivera will try to get a glimpse from the window of her 13th floor apartment in East Harlem. Margarita Ortiz will be watching on television from about 10 miles away, from a prime spot on her living room couch in Queens. Dozens of Catholic school students will get up close and personal.
“I’m going to have a birds-eye view,” said Rivera, pointing up to her apartment that sits high above the Our Lady Queen of Angels school in East Harlem, where the pope will greet well-wishers and meet with a hand-picked group of Catholic students from across the city on Friday.
“This is like the Puerto Rican Day parade but bigger,” Rivera said earlier this week as men in suits commiserated with clip boards and construction workers lugged barricades in preparation for the pope’s visit. “It’s a big deal. Everyone loves this pope. He’s like, a people’s pope.”
RELATED: Pope Francis wades deeper into death penalty abolition movement
Indeed, Pope Francis, described by some as “The People’s Pontiff,” has drawn the adoration of countless Catholics and non-Catholics alike with his humility, relatively progressive ideals and his outreach time and again to the world’s poor and most vulnerable.
On Friday, Pope Francis’s whirlwind tour of the United States comes to East Harlem, a storied neighborhood in upper Manhattan once known widely as Spanish Harlem. When the pope travels uptown to East Harlem, he’ll find a sea of open arms and hearts, throngs of the faithful squeezed behind barricades and poking their heads from windows all with the hopes of getting a glimpse of His Holiness.
%22He%20is%20an%20incredible%20example%20of%20how%20we%20should%20all%20lead.%22′
As the Holy See’s first Latino pope he’ll find a culture and community in East Harlem largely built on the vibrancy of generations of Hispanic immigrants. About 55% of the population of East Harlem is Hispanic and 21% of its residents are foreign born. But he’ll also find a population that has weathered as much economic and social malady as any other in the city.
Today, the neighborhood is perhaps as troubled as it is historic, with deep pockets of poverty, violence and unemployment.
According to the census 46.8% of residents living in ZIP code 10029 where Our Lady Queen of Angels is located live below the poverty line. An estimated 30% of children in the neighborhood suffer from asthma, with a rate of asthma hospitalization for children under 4 at 152.6 per 10,000, twice the city rate for children the same age. Health issues are exacerbated by deteriorating housing and poor air quality.
One long stretch of the neighborhood has been described by the epithet “Convict Alley,” a seven-block stretch along Lexington Avenue that in recent years has been home to the highest concentration of formerly incarcerated people in the city. A striking 1 in 20 men in East Harlem have been convicted of a felony.
Pope Francis has been an ardent defender of prisoner’s rights and has spoken out against the death penalty, the evils of human trafficking and environmental concerns. He’s also been vocal about offering compassion to immigrants.
%22The%20shooting.%20The%20drugs.%20They%20just%20killed%20a%20guy%20around%20here%20the%20other%20day.%20I%20hope%20he%20blesses%20this%20community%2C%20blesses%20us%20all.%22′
The pope’s visit this week, his first to the U.S., included a ceremony at the White House and a meeting with President Obama as well as midday prayer with a gathering of Bishops at St. Mathew’s Cathedral in Washington. On Thursday Pope Francis delivered remarks at a joint meeting of Congress, in which he called for Congress to make a “courageous and responsible effort” to “avert the most serious effects of the environmental deterioration caused by human activity.”
Pope Francis added that now is the time to foster a “culture of care and an integrated approach to combating poverty, restoring dignity to the excluded, and at the same time protecting nature.”
“The words ‘I too could be here’ are rarely heard in American society when referring to prison. In his visit to the United States, Pope Francis boldly calls all persons to join him in humbly reflecting on this reality,” said Julio Medina, executive director of Exodus Transitional Community, an East-Harlem based group that aides formerly incarcerated people. “For the Pontiff, mercy, forgiveness and reconciliation stand as foundational pillars for effective criminal justice reform … He is an incredible example of how we should all lead.”
RELATED: Pope Francis calls on Congress to bring ‘hope and healing’ to the world
Earlier this week, Margarita Ortiz sat on a bench in the courtyard of a housing project that sits next to the Our Lady Queen of Angels school and the shuttered church parish by the same name, which once fed the school with nuns and young student parishioners. The closing of the parish, amid a reorganization and consolidation of the dioceses amid shrinking numbers, sparked protests. Today, former parishioners hold services in the street in front of the old church.
Ortiz, who lives in Queens but spends most days shuttling between there and East Harlem to visit her daughter and her five grandchildren, said she hopes the pope’s visit will bring a bit of sunshine to a community often dimmed by the clouds of misfortune and violence.
“It’s like a blessing, especially for this neighborhood,” said Ortiz, who has three grandchildren who attend Our Lady Queen of Angels. “The shooting. The drugs. They just killed a guy around here the other day. I hope he blesses this community, blesses us all.”
Beyond any hopes for papal blessings and healing, there’s a giddiness and true sense of wonder, even disbelief that the pope is actually going to visit this neighborhood and this particular school.
“I’m just hoping I can see him, just a little bit,” said Mari Quinez, who has two children at Queen of Angels, a first and a fifth grader, who were playing in a park next to the school on a recent afternoon. “We live just two blocks from here. We just need his blessings. They keep raising the rents and pushing us out. We need him. We are so proud of him. He’s one of us. He’s Hispanic. He cares. He gets us.”
Twenty-four third and fourth graders from Catholic schools spread across the city, as well as a handful of area 12th graders, will get to personally meet Pope Francis when he visits Our Lady Queen of Angels after touring the Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum on Friday afternoon.
The younger students have been making signs and dioramas and preparing questions they hope to ask Pope Francis. The older students are reflecting on the Pope’s ideas about helping the poor, the political implications of his visit and how his guidance of the church is ushering in a new culture into the typically stodgy values.








