Pope Praises Press Freedom in Message to Italian Newspaper

| 01/16/2026

By: Vatican News

Pope Leo XIV recalled La Repubblica‘s 50 years of recounting the history of Italy, the world, and the Church, a constant relationship with readers, freedom of inquiry, and dialogue as the privileged path for peace-building

Pope Leo XIV delivers the homily as he celebrates an early morning Mass in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on January 8.
Pope Leo XIV delivers the homily as he celebrates an early morning Mass in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on January 8. (OSV News photo/Simone Risoluti, Vatican Media)

Pope Leo XIV sent his best wishes for the 50th anniversary of the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, expressing his hope that the press will “always promote communication that is free and dialogical, animated by the search for truth and without prejudice.”

Those are among the themes discussed by Pope Leo XIV in a message for the 50th anniversary of the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, addressed to its editor, Mario Orfeo.

In his letter, the Pope extends his good wishes to the journalists who have recounted half a century of history, “cultivating the relationship with your readers that has brought you this far.”

“Yours is a newspaper,” the Pope wrote, “rooted in many cities, but which has in Rome, the Diocese of the Pope, its main headquarters and a privileged vantage point from which to observe events in Italy and around the world. You have read the pages of these 50 years and recounted the history of the Church, with freedom.”

Freedom of the press

Freedom, storytelling, and a distinctive point of view on the world are at the heart of freedom of the press, the Pope said.

“Even amid diversity of opinions, points of view, and cultures,” he wrote, the press must “always act with transparency and integrity.”

Pope Leo added that the press must offer “that opportunity for dialogue which, when it is not hostile, contributes to the common good and to the unity of the human family. In this way, dialogue overcomes conflict and builds peace.”

Bringing his message to a close, the Pope expressed his hope that the newspaper would “always build a communication that is free and dialogical, animated by the search for truth and without prejudice. Happy 50th anniversary!”

Exhibition in Rome

To celebrate its 50th anniversary, the newspaper has organized an exhibition at Rome’s Mattatoio entitled La Repubblica: A History of the Future.

The multimedia exhibit, running until March 15, features photographs and newspaper pages from key moments in the paper’s history.

The group is named for two patrons with causes for canonization underway: Staten Island's Dorothy Day, co-founder of the Catholic Worker Movement, and Sister Thea Bowman.

By:

OSV News

| 03/03/2026

El Mes de la Historia de la Mujer es una ocasión providencial para contemplar con gratitud la huella imborrable que tantas mujeres hispanas han dejado en la Iglesia y en el mundo.

By:

Buenas Noticias

| 03/03/2026

Archbishop Hicks explains the remedy for hypocrisy in today’s Gospel.

By:

Archbishop Ronald Hicks

| 03/03/2026