Pope's fading health unites faithful in prayer
Around the world, Catholics pray for pontiff
![]() Chaiwat Subprasom / Reuters Thai children light candles for Pope John Paul II during a mass at the Assumption church in Phuket province, about 536 miles south of Bangkok, Thailand, on Saturday. |
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Americans wait, watch April 1: Americans have been watching and waiting, ever since word came Thursday night that the pope's health had taken a dramatic turn for the worse. NBC's Peter Alexander reports. Nightly News |
WADOWICE, Poland - The faithful lit candles, prayed and reflected on Pope John Paul II’s legacy Saturday as he neared death. Protestants, Muslims, Jews and even atheists praised a man whose work for peace and unity made few religious distinctions.
Italy suspended all weekend sport events — including Serie A soccer, a playoff for the Italian ice hockey title, basketball and volleyball league matches, and amateur sports — as a sign of respect for the critically ill pontiff.
In his weekly radio address, President Bush said the pope has been “a faithful servant of God and a champion of human dignity and freedom.”
“Laura and I join millions of Americans and so many around the world who are praying for the Holy Father,” he said.
At Notre Dame cathedral in Paris, worshippers and tourists lit candles beneath a photo of a hale John Paul taken in 1997, a reminder of the pontiff’s vigor before sickness took its toll.
“It’s a time of sadness and a real time of reflection on what the pope has done in his 26 years as pope,” said Mike Miller, an American visitor.
Around the world, at shrines, churches and cathedrals, special Masses celebrated the pope for his youthful vigor that transformed the church and for his recent courage in confronting death.
“He taught us how to bear suffering and illness,” Bishop Robert Brucato told several hundred worshippers at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York on Friday. “Now he is teaching us to die.”
“I hope he goes peacefully,” said Andy Vucinich, attending Mass in Louisville, Ky. “I’m not even a Catholic. I came over to the church when I heard he was dying.”
Prayers in native country
In his native Poland, a dozen elderly women prayed for John Paul through the night in St. Mary’s church in Wadowice, the southern Polish town where he was born. As the sun rose, townspeople and foreigners joined them, including Croats who made a detour from a trip to Prague to pray for the pontiff in the church where he was baptized.
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“This has been the longest morning for me in my entire life,” said Jadwiga Byrska, 42, a retiree who had been at the square for hours. “I am waiting for news from the Vatican. The news from yesterday was very bad. But everything is in God’s hands now.”
The first non-Italian pope in centuries, John Paul had a manner that made people around the world think of him as their own. Mexicans chanted during his five visits: “Juan Pablo, brother, you are already Mexican!” Brazilians reacted with delight when John Paul declared himself “carioca,” a term for people from Rio de Janeiro. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick of Washington said Friday that “in a certain sense, he was American.”
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