Fratelli tutti' is the title Pope Francis has chosen for his encyclical letter dedicated to "human fraternity" and "social friendship".
In English, it can be read as ‘All Brothers’, ‘Brethren all’ or ‘Brothers and sisters all’.
The first words of the new ‘circular letter’, or encyclical as we know it, come from St Francis of Assisi – whose name Pope Francis chose when he was elected in 2013.
It takes its inspiration from St Francis’ Admonitions 6 – Of the Imitation of the Lord.
“Let us all, brothers, consider the Good Shepherd who to save His sheep bore the suffering of the Cross.”
Fratelli tutti' - On Fraternity and Social Friendship - is Pope Francis' third Encyclical Letter.
Fraternity and social friendship are the ways the Pontiff indicates to build a better, more just and peaceful world, with the contribution of all: people and institutions. With an emphatic confirmation of a ‘no’ to war and to globalized indifference.
Fraternity and social friendship are the ways the Pontiff indicates to build a better, more just and peaceful world, with the contribution of all: people and institutions. With an emphatic confirmation of a ‘no’ to war and to globalized indifference.
The Encyclical Letter Fratelli tutti' is about love and attention – the kind of attention that brings a broken and bleeding world back to health.
The Right Reverend Richard Moth, Bishop of Arundel and Brighton and chair of the Department for Social Justice at the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales offers his reflection on the Papal Encyclical Fratelli tutti'.
Christine Allen Director of the Church's aid and development agency, CAFOD, describes Fratelli tutti' as "a radical blueprint for a post-coronavirus world."