LIFE-ACADEMY-AWARD-RECINELLA

Dale Recinella, a lay Catholic minister in Florida who works with prisoners on death row, is pictured with his wife, Susan, in Rome Sept. 28, 2021. The Pontifical Academy for Life gave its newly established Guardian of Life award to Recinella, who collaborates with his wife in the ministry. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

POPE-ACADEMY-LIFE

Pope Francis greets Dale Recinella, a lay Catholic minister in Florida who works with prisoners on death row, during a meeting with members of the Pontifical Academy for Life at the Vatican Sept. 27, 2021. Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, center, introduced Recinella to the pope. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

VATICAN CITY | Death row inmates in Florida's prisons refer to their 6-foot-by-9-foot cell as their "house," with some having lived in their "house" for 40 years -- longer than one Catholic lay chaplain said he has lived in his family home in Tallahassee.

So when Dale Recinella, the lay minister, goes from cell to cell to offer pastoral care, religious education and spiritual accompaniment, "we go house to house, cell to cell, and that's where we meet them." These are men and women who cannot come out, "they can't even come to the chapel," so the church must go to them.

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