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Migrants Drowned Off Crete: Pope Leo Prayed for Them. Here Is Who They Were
Pope Leo XIV prayed specifically for migrants who drowned off Crete in recent days. Here is what happened, who the victims were, and the deadly route they were taking.
Pope Leo XIV prayed specifically for migrants who drowned off Crete in recent days. Here is what happened, who the victims were, and the deadly route they were taking.
- Pope Leo XIV prayed specifically for migrants who drowned off Crete in recent days.
- In the final moments of his Palm Sunday Angelus address on March 29, Pope Leo XIV made a specific prayer for 'all migrants who have died at sea, particularly for those who lost their lives in recent days off the island o...
- The incident off Crete that Leo referenced involved a wooden boat carrying approximately 90 migrants — predominantly from Syria, Afghanistan, and sub-Saharan African countries — that capsized approximately 40 nautical mi...
Pope Leo XIV prayed specifically for migrants who drowned off Crete in recent days.
In the final moments of his Palm Sunday Angelus address on March 29, Pope Leo XIV made a specific prayer for 'all migrants who have died at sea, particularly for those who lost their lives in recent days off the island of Crete.' The specificity of the mention — naming Crete, naming the recent days — transformed a general prayer for migrants into a marker of a particular tragedy that had occurred as the world was focused on the Iran war, the No Kings protests, and the World Cup playoffs.
The incident off Crete that Leo referenced involved a wooden boat carrying approximately 90 migrants — predominantly from Syria, Afghanistan, and sub-Saharan African countries — that capsized approximately 40 nautical miles southwest of the island in rough seas on March 26. Greek coast guard vessels recovered 31 survivors and 12 bodies. The remaining approximately 47 missing are presumed dead. It is the deadliest maritime migrant disaster in the central Mediterranean in 2026.
The survivors, interviewed by the Greek coast guard under the standard procedures for rescued migrants before their transfer to the island's reception facilities, described an overcrowded boat that left the coast of Libya carrying far more people than its structure was designed to hold, operated by traffickers who promised the Mediterranean crossing was safe and who had been paid between $2,000 and $5,000 per person for the passage.
The Crete crossing is not the most common central Mediterranean route — that is the Libya-to-Italy passage — but it has become more frequently attempted as smuggling networks adapt to the shifting deployment patterns of European coast guard assets. The stretch of water involved is notoriously difficult in late-winter weather conditions, with swells and wind patterns that can transform a manageable sea state into a life-threatening one in under an hour.
The EU's border management debate, dominated in 2026 by the Iran war's potential to generate new displacement from the region, has not yet found space for a serious policy response to the ongoing Mediterranean crisis. Pope Leo's prayer named the dead. The policy conversation has not yet found equivalent specificity.