Wife of Ukrainian prisoner of war gives pope names of more POWs December 22, 2022By Catholic News Service Catholic News Service Filed Under: Feature, News, Vatican, War in Ukraine, World News VATICAN CITY (CNS) — A Ukrainian woman with her young son presented Pope Francis with several gifts and the names of Ukrainian prisoners of war, including her husband’s. Larysa and her son, Serhii, met the pope at the end of his general audience at the Vatican Dec. 21. The names of the prisoners were given in the hope that the pope “may be able to facilitate their liberation or at least an improvement in their conditions of detention,” the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, reported. Pope Francis already has helped facilitate hundreds of prisoner exchanges with Ukraine and Russia. It is not known the exact number of people on this new POW list, the newspaper reported. Larysa also gave the pope a calendar titled, “Azovstal,” the name of the large steel plant in Mariupol that sheltered the city’s last group of organized defense against the Russian siege and eventual takeover of the city. The pope leafed through each of the full-color pages of the calendar. She also gave the pope a Marian icon and a traditional-styled Ukrainian shawl. Serhii gave the pope a pair of white boxing gloves that belonged to his father and a spiral bound notebook, which, according to the Vatican newspaper, had a map of Europe and Ukrainian soil affixed to the cover. Diana Yurash, the wife of Andrii Yurash, Ukraine’s ambassador to the Holy See, gave the pope a didukh — a traditional Christmas decoration made from sheaves of wheat from the year’s harvest. “They are the last sheaves harvested in fields where now there are bombs and mines,” Iryna Skab, embassy assistant, told the Vatican newspaper. Read More Crisis in Ukraine Papal charity point man driving to Ukraine for Christmas Pope says there’s no religious justification for Russia’s war on Ukraine Nuns, children almost killed in Russia’s St. Nicholas Day attack on Zaporizhzhia Gudziak: Russia’s war on Ukraine undermines global, nuclear security Broglio: Ukraine’s 1994 nuclear disarmament a ‘truly prophetic gesture’ marred by war Ukrainian art therapist helps people traumatized by the war that took her son Copyright © 2022 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Print