After a day spent hearing Pope Francis and mayors from across the world speak at the Vatican on climate change and human trafficking, Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges said she's been inspired to focus more on the links between sustainability and poverty.
"I really, profoundly understand in a new way that environmental justice is not just a sidebar to climate change action," she said in a phone call from the Vatican on Tuesday. "And that it's not just a sidebar to social justice work."
Hodges was one of about 60 local leaders from around the world invited to see the pope and participate in a summit on climate change and human trafficking, which was scheduled to continue Wednesday. The pope spoke for about 15 minutes Tuesday to the group, telling them that humans are causing "destruction" by "not taking care of human ecology and not having an ecological conscience."
"Individual countries might be able to make nice speeches at the United Nations, but if the work doesn't come from the periphery, moving to the center, there is no effect," he said.
After he concluded his remarks, the pope signed a declaration that states that "human-induced climate change is a scientific reality and its effective control is a moral imperative for humanity." Hodges and the other mayors posed for a group photo with the pope before lining up to add their signatures to the letter.
Hodges said the meeting came with far less pomp and circumstance than she'd expected, but added that the pope was a powerful presence during his time with the mayors.
"I can see why he inspires people, but it's in part because he's very human, he's very relatable and he also cares a great, great deal about human beings," she said.
Hodges, whose trip was paid for by conference organizers, documented the meeting on Twitter, posting selfies with the mayors of Portland, Ore., and Oslo, Norway, and snapping a photo of the pope's seating location: "That's the chair they just set out for @Pontifex #MayorsCare #surreal."