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9780670037483

John Paul the Great: Remembering a Spiritual Father

John Paul the Great: Remembering a Spiritual Father
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  • ISBN-13: 9780670037483
  • ISBN: 0670037486
  • Edition: Large Print Ed.
  • Publication Date: 2005
  • Publisher: Viking Adult

AUTHOR

Peggy Noonan

SUMMARY

Chapter One I Saw a Saint at Sunset It was early morning in the Vatican, July 2, 2003, a brilliant morning in the middle of the worst Roman heat wave in a century. The city was quiet, the streets soft with the heat. It was the summer of the dress code battle between the tourists and the guards at St. Peter's Basilica. The tourists wanted to wear shorts and halter tops; this was in violation of the Vatican dress code (slacks, shirts with sleeves), and the guards wouldn't let them in. There were arguments at the entrance, and angry words. Soon a Roman compromise was achieved: No one lost face; everyone got what they needed. The vendors in St. Peter's Square were allowed to sell paper shirts and pants for a euro apiece. The tourists would put them on over their clothes, walk past the guards, and tear the paper off as they entered the dark cool of the church. By 7:45 a.m., hundreds of us had gathered in the Piazza del Sant?Uffizio, in the shadow of Bernini's colonnade, the marble columns that curve outward to embrace St. Peter's Square. Already the heat was gathering, and we fanned ourselves with thin green papal audience tickets. The crowd was happy'chirping nuns, clicking tourists. We were about to see the pope. We were about to see John Paul.We are a mix of tourists, the curious, and the faithful: a group of deaf Italian adults in white baseball caps, with silk Vatican flags tied around their necks; members of a choir from the Archdiocese of St. Louis, Missouri; a group of nuns from the Little Mission for the Deaf in Bologna. There was a man from Monterey, Mexico, with his wife and two children. As the crowd grew, we were pressed so close I could smell the spray starch on his green cotton shirt. ?Why are you here? I asked. ?To see the pope,? he said. ?He is the most important Christian in the world. He is the follower of Christ.' When, a few minutes later, I read the quote back to him from my notebook, he edited it. ?He is the most important person in the whole world.' I talked to a woman in a hat made of hay. Spiky yellow straw, actually, the brim down to shade her face. She was forty-five or fifty years old and looked like pictures of the older, weathered Greta Garbo. She told me she was on a pilgrimage. She had walked hundreds of kilometers in a circuitous tour of Marian sites. She and her husband? bearish, gray bearded'had departed upper Austria in May and had arrived here yesterday, on July 1st. They had walked on highways and small roads. She showed me her diary of the pilgrimage: In neat precise script she had documented every church they had seen along the way. Her husband had drawn pictures of cathedrals in blue ballpoint ink. He had taken snapshots of little chapels and pasted them in the diary. ?Here,? she said to me, indicating a page on which she had made comic line drawings. They showed angular feet bruised by exaggerated calluses. Next to them she had drawn the lotions and bandages she had put upon her wounds. They had gone to mass every day of their six- week journey, she said. Why had they come here? ?Why? To see Il Papa!? She gestured as if to say: This is the culmination. We filed through metal detectors that did not seem to work, no beeping or bopping, no one watching things closely. It is surprising to see metal detectors here, for a crowd like this, but the last time someone planned to kill the pope, in the Philippines, the would-be assassin meant to dress as a priest. Soon we were directed through a paved area just off St. Peter's Square. (Later, when I would return to it, a young priest would tell me, ?We think he may have been crucified under here.' I shook my head. ?Saint Peter. It may have been just about here, down there.' And he pointed at the pavement.) We entered the Paul VI Audience Hall, an enormous concrete structure, cavernous and modern, like a big suburban church, or an evangelicalPeggy Noonan is the author of 'John Paul the Great: Remembering a Spiritual Father', published 2005 under ISBN 9780670037483 and ISBN 0670037486.

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