
Funeral of Pope Francis
The pontiff’s body was carried in an open casket to St. Peter’s Basilica, where he will lie
in state for three days
ERIC REGULY
THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Pope Francis’s next-to-last journey began early on a warm, sunny Wednesday in Rome, when his body was carried in an open casket from his Vatican residence to St. Peter’s Basilica, where he will lie in state for three days before his final jour- ney for his Saturday burial.
The Vatican News said that more than 20,000 worshippers packed St. Peter’s Square to watch the procession and pay their respects to Francis, who died at age 88 on Monday morning from stroke and heart failure after an illness had kept him in hospital for five weeks.
The atmosphere in the square was so- lemn and restrained as the basilica bells rang and hymns in Latin were played over loudspeakers. When the casket was car- ried up the steps of the basilica, the crowd broke into sustained but subdued ap- plause.
Worshippers stood solemnly in the square. Only three days earlier, Francis, from his wheelchair, celebrated Easter mass from the loggia of the basilica, though he had the energy to speak only a few words.
“He taught people to be kind and lov- ing above anything else,” said Maureen Austin, an elementary school counsellor who was visiting Rome from Massachu- setts with her husband. “It’s not about the church or the hierarchy. It’s about your relationship with Christ.”
The ceremony began just before 9 a.m., when Francis’s body was blessed in the chapel of the Casa Santa Marta, his simple residence behind the basilica, in the pres- ence of many of the cardinals who, in two weeks or less, will elect a new pope. The unadorned event was led by Cardinal Ke- vin Farrell, the Irish-born American prelate who, as camerlengo, or chamber- lain, oversees the transition to the new pope.
Cardinal Farrell thanked God for Fran- cis’s 12-year ministry. “Let us ask Him, in His mercy and kindness, to grant to the
Pope Francis is carried into the Basilica at St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City on Wednesday. The wooden coffin, lined with red cloth, was tilted slightly forward, allowing Francis’s body to be seen. FABRIZIO TROCCOLI/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
late Pope an eternal home in the kingdom of heaven, and to comfort with the celes- tial hope the papal family, the church in Rome and the faithful throughout the world,” he said.
Francis’s coffin was then taken outside for the procession to the basilica. The wooden coffin, lined with red cloth, was tilted slightly forward, allowing Francis’s body to be seen. His arms were crossed, a rosary between his fingers. At the front of the procession were dozens of priests dressed in white, followed by bishops and cardinals in resplendent red and white robes.
Among them was Canada’s Cardinal Michael Czerny, who, as the prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, reported directly to Francis. Another Canadian cardinal was Thomas Collins, the former archbishop of Toronto, who will join the voting conclave. “It was
the most profound moment,” he told a Guardian reporter. “But from the simple prayers to the incense, it was no different to a funeral that any baptized person would have.”
Francis’s funeral at St. Peter’s will be attended by many world leaders, includ- ing U.S. President Donald Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Javier Milei, President of Argentina, Francis’s home country.
His body will be taken into the heart of Rome, to Santa Maria Maggiore, one of the city’s four main basilicas and the fa- vourite church of the late Pope. Invariably, he visited the church after each of his for- eign trips. His wish was to be buried in the church, breaking more than a century of tradition. Popes are usually interred in elaborate coffins in the crypts below St. Peter’s.
The 135 elector cardinals – those under age 80 who are eligible to vote for a new pope in a secret ceremony in the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel – are either in Rome or en route. Selecting the winner usually re- quires several rounds of voting over sever- al days, and a two-thirds majority is re- quired. Francis was elected after five rounds over two days in 2013 after the sur- prise resignation of his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI.
Some of the faithful who watched the procession hope the new pope will share the traits of Francis. “It would be nice to see a younger pope who will build on Francis’s inclusivity theme,” said Irish visitor Naoimh Kelly, who lives in En- gland.
Ms. Austin’s wish was for a progressive pope who would open the church more fully to women. “I want to see the day when women become priests,” she said.
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