<p>Weeks after a health scare, Pope Francis heads to Hungary Friday to meet Ukrainian refugees and nationalist leader Viktor Orban, with whom he has not always seen eye to eye.</p>.<p>The 86-year-old pontiff spent three nights in hospital with bronchitis at the end of last month, a stay that fuelled concerns about his long-term health and future as head of the worldwide Catholic Church.</p>.<p>While in Budapest, he will as usual be accompanied by his doctor. His trip had already been adapted to account for his increasing use of a wheelchair, due to knee pain.</p>.<p>The war in neighbouring Ukraine is likely to dominate the visit to the central European nation, of whom 39 per cent are Catholic, according to 2011 figures.</p>.<p>More than a million Ukrainians have crossed the border into Hungary since Russia's February 2022 invasion, and 35,000 have asked for temporary protection status, according to United Nations figures.</p>.<p>During an audience with Orban a year ago at the Vatican, the pope thanked the Hungarian leader -- who comes from a Calvinist background -- for the welcome accorded to refugees.</p>.<p>But Orban's anti-migration rhetoric, couched in terms of defending "Christian Europe", is at odds with the pope's repeated calls for European nations to welcome those fleeing poverty or conflict.</p>.<p>It is the pope's second visit to Budapest after a short stop-over in September 2021 for an international religious event.</p>.<p>On Sunday, Francis said he would be visiting "as a pilgrim, friend and brother of all".</p>.<p>He described it as a "journey to the centre of Europe, over which the icy winds of war continue to blow, while the displacement of so many people puts urgent humanitarian questions on the agenda".</p>.<p>The Argentine pope has repeatedly called for peace in Ukraine, although Vatican efforts to mediate have so far failed to yield results.</p>.<p>Orban was close to Russian President Vladimir Putin before the war and has drawn criticism from EU allies for refusing to send weapons to Kyiv and opposing sanctions against Russia.</p>.<p>His government said it "welcomed with joy" the visit of the pope, calling him an "ambassador of peace".</p>.<p>Eduard Habsburg, Hungary's ambassador to the Holy See, said that on Ukraine, "our position is close to that of the Vatican -- (we want) an immediate ceasefire and peace talks".</p>.<p>"We have called for peace since the beginning... and we have always strongly condemned Russian aggression," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>In taking in so many refugees, "my country is carrying out the largest humanitarian action in its history," providing housing, schooling and work for those who want to stay, he said.</p>.<p>"But they are refugees from war -- it's a completely different situation from illegal migrants," he said.</p>.<p>In what will be his 41st trip abroad since becoming pope in 2013, Francis is scheduled to speak six times and lead an open-air mass on Sunday before heading home.</p>.<p>He will meet refugees from Ukraine and other countries, as well as young people and representatives from the academic and cultural sectors.</p>.<p>In a society where family and gender rights are live political issues, pro-Orban media has criticised the pope in the past for being too favourable to migrants and the LGBTQ community.</p>.<p>But Zoltan Kiszelly, the head of pro-government think tank Szazadveg, says Orban will use the pope's visit to emphasise shared "traditional values, around family and God".</p>.<p>"There are plenty of differences (between the men) but he will stress the fact that they are like-minded people, and say 'we are not alone with our position, the pope is supporting us'."</p>.<p>Francis is the second pope to visit Hungary, after John Paul II made trips in 1991 and in 1996.</p>.<p>Despite his health issues and advancing age, Francis continues to travel widely, including a visit to South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo earlier this year.</p>
<p>Weeks after a health scare, Pope Francis heads to Hungary Friday to meet Ukrainian refugees and nationalist leader Viktor Orban, with whom he has not always seen eye to eye.</p>.<p>The 86-year-old pontiff spent three nights in hospital with bronchitis at the end of last month, a stay that fuelled concerns about his long-term health and future as head of the worldwide Catholic Church.</p>.<p>While in Budapest, he will as usual be accompanied by his doctor. His trip had already been adapted to account for his increasing use of a wheelchair, due to knee pain.</p>.<p>The war in neighbouring Ukraine is likely to dominate the visit to the central European nation, of whom 39 per cent are Catholic, according to 2011 figures.</p>.<p>More than a million Ukrainians have crossed the border into Hungary since Russia's February 2022 invasion, and 35,000 have asked for temporary protection status, according to United Nations figures.</p>.<p>During an audience with Orban a year ago at the Vatican, the pope thanked the Hungarian leader -- who comes from a Calvinist background -- for the welcome accorded to refugees.</p>.<p>But Orban's anti-migration rhetoric, couched in terms of defending "Christian Europe", is at odds with the pope's repeated calls for European nations to welcome those fleeing poverty or conflict.</p>.<p>It is the pope's second visit to Budapest after a short stop-over in September 2021 for an international religious event.</p>.<p>On Sunday, Francis said he would be visiting "as a pilgrim, friend and brother of all".</p>.<p>He described it as a "journey to the centre of Europe, over which the icy winds of war continue to blow, while the displacement of so many people puts urgent humanitarian questions on the agenda".</p>.<p>The Argentine pope has repeatedly called for peace in Ukraine, although Vatican efforts to mediate have so far failed to yield results.</p>.<p>Orban was close to Russian President Vladimir Putin before the war and has drawn criticism from EU allies for refusing to send weapons to Kyiv and opposing sanctions against Russia.</p>.<p>His government said it "welcomed with joy" the visit of the pope, calling him an "ambassador of peace".</p>.<p>Eduard Habsburg, Hungary's ambassador to the Holy See, said that on Ukraine, "our position is close to that of the Vatican -- (we want) an immediate ceasefire and peace talks".</p>.<p>"We have called for peace since the beginning... and we have always strongly condemned Russian aggression," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>In taking in so many refugees, "my country is carrying out the largest humanitarian action in its history," providing housing, schooling and work for those who want to stay, he said.</p>.<p>"But they are refugees from war -- it's a completely different situation from illegal migrants," he said.</p>.<p>In what will be his 41st trip abroad since becoming pope in 2013, Francis is scheduled to speak six times and lead an open-air mass on Sunday before heading home.</p>.<p>He will meet refugees from Ukraine and other countries, as well as young people and representatives from the academic and cultural sectors.</p>.<p>In a society where family and gender rights are live political issues, pro-Orban media has criticised the pope in the past for being too favourable to migrants and the LGBTQ community.</p>.<p>But Zoltan Kiszelly, the head of pro-government think tank Szazadveg, says Orban will use the pope's visit to emphasise shared "traditional values, around family and God".</p>.<p>"There are plenty of differences (between the men) but he will stress the fact that they are like-minded people, and say 'we are not alone with our position, the pope is supporting us'."</p>.<p>Francis is the second pope to visit Hungary, after John Paul II made trips in 1991 and in 1996.</p>.<p>Despite his health issues and advancing age, Francis continues to travel widely, including a visit to South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo earlier this year.</p>