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The 'Pope of the People' Is Remembered in Prayers

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  • The 'Pope of the People' Is Remembered in Prayers

    The 'Pope of the People' Is Remembered in Prayers
    BY ANTHONY DePALMA

    The New York Times
    April 3, 2005

    In thousands of churches and millions of homes throughout the world,
    the people for whom Pope John Paul II had knelt in prayer through
    a turbulent quarter-century as leader of the Roman Catholic Church
    quietly bent their heads yesterday and prayed for him.

    Some prayed for a miraculous recovery that Vatican doctors warned
    was unlikely; many accepted what seemed increasingly inevitable and
    simply prayed that the pope would be graced with a peaceful death.

    As the cardinals of the church began to assemble in Rome to prepare
    for the ancient process of selecting the next pontiff, the faithful,
    some too young to have known any other pope, others old enough to
    have appreciated how different this one was from his predecessors,
    gathered to pray and to remember.

    They remembered not the frail old man who struggled for breath at his
    last public appearance Wednesday, but the powerfully built figure
    in flowing white robes who was known in every country as the pope
    of the people. They talked of his goodness and of his greatness;
    of his remarkable life and what they saw as his courageous struggle
    with death.

    In the many parts of the world that he visited during his
    26-year-reign, people felt a special attachment, as though a friend
    or relative lay dying. And even in places where the pope had longed
    to be but never set foot, like Russia, his name was on the lips and
    in the hearts of many.

    Russia

    Stanislav Sobotta, whose last name, he says, "means Sabbath," could
    not stay away from church this weekend, especially because he lives
    in Moscow, far from his hometown of Lezhaisk, a beer-bottling town
    in Poland. He felt he needed to pray for the ailing pope.

    "Papa is a symbol, and of course I came to pray for him, it's just
    so, so sad," Mr. Sobotta, a businessman, said as he rushed in for
    the first 8:30 a.m. Mass on Saturday morning.

    "And besides, I am from Poland, and Poles built this church, you know,"
    he says proudly, striding into a red-brick Catholic cathedral that
    reopened after the Soviet Union collapsed and people openly practiced
    religion after decades of persecution.

    At the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Mowcow, Father Aleksandr
    had just finished the first of many mournful Masses. They will last all
    day in half a dozen languages-Russian, Spanish, Korean, Armenian. "We
    pray God will be with him in these last difficult moments," the priest
    says to the Russian-language service. "He lived a holy life."

    Outside after Mass, in the cold sun, Father Aleksandr buttoned his
    black coat and recalled the fervor with which the pope had pursued
    closer ties with Russia.

    "He always asked people who went to visit him from Russia, 'What are
    you hearing in Moscow? What's new there?' " he said. "He never was
    allowed to visit, although he always wanted to. He knew what it was
    like here under Communism and in Soviet times, to live without God."
    Erin E. Arvelund

    Jerusalem

    John Paul did get to see the Holy Land, and his visit to Jerusalem
    in March 2000 resonated not just among Catholics there but among all
    the faiths that mingle on that revered site.

    Josephine Apostol waited patiently in line on Saturday at the Church of
    the Holy Sepulcher, which Pope John Paul II called "the mother of all
    churches" on his historic visit there. Like the pope, she kissed the
    marble slab where tradition says Jesus's body was prepared for burial.

    Then she prayed for the soul of John Paul II, a man she said "had
    served the whole world."

    Ms. Apostol, 28, from the Philippines, works as a caregiver in Tel
    Aviv. "He seems a kind man," she said, as priests in long black robes,
    full of dust, moved around the worshippers and tourists to replace
    dead candles.

    "It's why all the people of the world sympathize with him and pray
    for him," she said.

    In the courtyard, Hussein Cordi, who works as a tour guide and scout
    for Dajani's Orient Bazaar, a souvenir shop in the Old City, said that
    Muslims were also praying for the pope. "Everyone knows about him,"
    said Mr. Cordi, who lives in Bethlehem.

    "Everyone remembers his visit to the D'heisha refugee camp, and when
    he went there, everyone cried." The pope's visit to the camp was
    unprecedented, and gave Palestinians a sense that he shared their
    difficulties, Mr. Cordi said.

    Pope John Paul II will be most remembered in Jerusalem for his effort
    to bind the three faiths of the riven city, considered holy to all
    of them, and to make a lasting reconciliation between Roman Catholics
    and Jews.

    Shimon Peres, deputy prime minister, told Israel Army radio that the
    pope "was a true spiritual leader who prayed everywhere for peace
    and love of others."

    "He impressed me at each of our meetings by his rare mixture of a
    sense of history and personal charm." Steven Erlanger

    London

    At Our Lady of the Victories church on busy Kensington High Street
    young worshippers came in the midst of shopping excursions, laden
    with bags from supermarkets and clothing stores, just to spend a few
    minutes reflecting on the pope and the efforts he made to reach out
    to young Catholics around the world.

    Patricia Nava, a 27-year-old student from Bolivia, said she admired
    the pope's perseverance in traveling outside of Italy, even through
    his illnesses and advancing old age. "He understood the values that we
    have to live by," she said, "the values that are important to follow."

    Teresa Chapman, a store clerk, said that the pope's greatest
    achievement was to "come out to the world and not stay in the Vatican,
    like all the others."

    In Rome, even as the pope lay weakening, he was said to have
    acknowledged the young people who had gathered in the plaza outside
    St. Peter's and those around the world who were praying for him:
    "I have looked for you. Now you have come." Sarah Lyall

    New York

    At St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York, the first Mass of a bleak
    and rainy day drew a small crowd of tourists and visitors along with
    a few people who work in the neighborhood. The police had set up
    barricades anticipating large crowds, but by midmorning the streets
    were empty. Those who came clearly had the pope in their thoughts.

    The French Club from the Wellsburg Middle School in Wellsburg, W.V.,
    had other plans for their last weekend in New York but detoured to
    the cathedral at the instigation of Robyn Heaton, a teacher from
    the school.

    Mrs. Heaton, a Baptist, said the momentousness of the pope's situation
    shifted their plans. "We came to show respect," she said.

    Sean O'Shaughnessy, a dental surgeon from Dublin who was passing
    through New York on his way to Washington, came to the early Mass as
    an act of communion.

    "Being here allows me to be with my friends at home in Ireland and
    indeed all over the world who are also at Mass today praying for the
    Holy Father," Mr. O'Shaughnessy said. "John Paul is the first pope of
    the media age to bring the word and image together - with the others
    you had the printed word but with him you had the whole package."
    Jim Dwyer

    Poland

    In Krakow, concerns about the pope brought a flood of memories about
    the places associated most intimately with his beginnings.

    Outside Father Adam Boniecki's office and around the corner is the
    stately, ocher colored residence of the Bishop of Krakow where John
    Paul lived when he held that position and where he used to stay on
    visits to the city. Over the past two days, the grassy space below
    the window was filled with people standing silently, just looking up
    at the window where the pope used to appear.

    At the edge of the square is the 13th-century Church of Saint Francis,
    where the pope used to celebrate Mass and where on Saturday a wedding
    celebration was taking place - life as usual on an unusual day.

    "For me it's very moving to see young people crying here in the
    square," said Father Andrzej Zajac, the principal priest at the
    church. "But you can see that on a day when the head of the church
    is dying, there was a baptism in the morning and a wedding in the
    afternoon, because the commonwealth of the church is a living thing."

    Father Zajac said that during the war, the pope was a factory worker
    and often visited the church. "On one of his visits here after he
    became pope, I remember him saying, 'Who could have imagined that
    this worker in wooden sandals would come back here as pope?'

    "He said, 'This is very important, because it shows that anyone,
    even someone from a poor background, can reach the top of human
    possibilities.' " Richard Bernstein

    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/international/europe/03react-web.html
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