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Monday, May 2, 2011

POPE JOHN PAUL OFFICIALLY BEATIFIED


Pope John Paul officially beatified



       The late Pope John Paul was officially beatified on Sunday 1st May, 2011, at a ceremony attended by hundreds of thousands of people in Vatican  St Peter's Square. Pope Benedict read a Latin formula proclaiming his Polish predecessor, who died in 2005, a "blessed" of the Roman Catholic Church, the last step before sainthood.  Hundreds of thousands of people converged on St Peter's Square in one of the biggest crowds ever seen at the Vatican on Sunday to participate in the beatification of Pope John Paul II.

      Streams of people some 30 wide moved towards the Vatican area from all directions from before dawn to get a spot for the Mass where Pope Benedict was to move his predecessor a step closer to sainthood. The crowd of devotees, many carrying national flags and singing songs, was the largest seen in the capital since millions turned out for his funeral six years ago.Many camped out during the night. The entire Vatican area was sealed off as stewards marshalled the huge crowd in groups of 6,000 at a time towards St Peter's Square, which was bedecked with posters and photos of the late pope.

         Many were from the late pope's native Poland. Dozens of red and white Polish flags bobbed above the crowd and a cheer went up when a group of Poles released a large banner reading "Thank You, God" held aloft by balloons."We were at the funeral and we just had to be here to see him beatified," said Janusc Skibinski, 40, who drove 29 hours with his family from thier home near the border with Belarus.Up to 200,000 people attended a prayer vigil on Saturday evening in the Circus Maximus, the huge oval once used by the ancient Romans for chariot races. Some Rome churches threw their doors open all night to give pilgrims a space to pray. At the mass due to start at 0800 GMT Benedict will pronounce a Latin formula proclaiming one of the most popular popes in history a "blessed" of the Church.

    A place of honour is reserved for Sister Marie Simon-Pierre Normand, a French nun who suffered from Parkinson's disease but whose inexplicable cure has been attributed to John Paul's intercession with God to perform a miracle, thus permitting the beatification to go ahead. The Vatican will have to attribute another miracle to John Paul's intercession after the beatification in order for him to be declared a saint. Some 90 official delegations from around the world, including members of five European royal families and 16 heads of state, will attend the beatification.They include Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, who has been widely criticised for human rights abuses in his country.


       Pope John Paul's coffin was exhumed on Friday,29th April,2011, from the crypts below St Peter's Basilica and will be placed in front of the main altar. After Sunday's beatification mass, it will remain there and the basilica will remain open until all visitors who want to view it havedone so.It will then be moved to a new crypt under an altar in a side chapel near Michelangelo's statue of the Pieta. The marble slab that covered his first burial place will be sent to Poland. John Paul's beatification has set a new speed record for modern times, taking place six years and one month after his death on April 2, 2005.The pope is being beatified on the day the Church celebrates the movable Feast of Divine Mercy, which this year happens to fall on May 1, the most important feast in the communist world.The coincidence is ironic, given that many believe the pope played a key role in the fall of communism in Eastern Europe. (Ref: Manorama)


                                                      Prof. John Kurakar

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