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The shrine of Fatima: Attracts millions of people a year |
They have waited 20 long days for their little girl to come home. Now they will
pray for a miracle.
The parents of Madeleine McCann are making a pilgrimage to one of Europe's holiest shrines today in the hope that she will
be found safe and well.
Kate and Gerry McCann are expected to say prayers and light a candle for their
four-year-old daughter at Fatima in central Portugal.
They will then resume the search for her in the town she disappeared from.
Nearly three weeks after Madeleine vanished from the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz,
there are still no clues as to what happened, where she might be or even
whether she is still alive.
A reported sighting of a little blonde girl in Morocco has led to no
breakthroughs.
Her parents are clinging to the hope they and their two-year-old twins will be
reunited with Madeleine and be allowed to go home - as Mr McCann put it
yesterday - as a family of five.
Their poignant pilgrimage was announced after he returned to Portugal
following a flying visit to Rothley in Leicestershire, where the family live.
There, he stopped at the village war memorial which wellwishers have decked in
thousands of yellow ribbons, cards, flowers and cuddly toys.
On his return to Portugal
he said: "It was extremely difficult to leave here without Kate and when I
went to Rothley I knew we should have been coming home as a family of five -
there's no doubt about that."
He also appealed for the police's only suspect in the case, Robert Murat, to be
treated fairly.
Mr Murat has reportedly collapsed twice through stress since he was identified
by police as the main suspect on Monday of last week.
Publicist Max Clifford made clear last night that he is advising Mr Murat's
mother and aunt in handling press inquiries but will not personally represent
Robert Murat unless he is cleared to do so by Portuguese police.
Mr McCann said yesterday that he and his wife were "nowhere near
ready" to leave Portugal
and vowed to "travel wherever is necessary" in their quest to get
their daughter back.
Fatima - a four-hour drive north of Praia da
Luz - is the site where the Virgin Mary is said to have appeared to three
peasant children in 1917.
Mr McCann said: "Both of us have taken a great deal of strength from our
faith. We want to visit the shrine of Fatima
to pray for Madeleine's return to us."
He is said by friends to have found renewed faith in recent days. He and his
wife are both Roman Catholics. |