vatican
Final Mourners Get Last View
of Pope
By Chris Mitchell
Middle East Bureau Chief
CBN.com
THE VATICAN - The longest viewing procession in modern
times will soon come to a solemn end. But the final thousands
are still in line to honor the people's pope.
President Bush joined an estimated one million people at the
vigil Wednesday, along with a very high-level delegation. He will
be first U.S. president ever to attend a papal funeral.
For many who stood in line for 12 or 13 hours, the ordeal was
exhausting. And some who came from many miles did not get in.
One person in line remarked, “It is a pity that everyone
who came here couldn't get the chance to go in. Everybody tried
hard, but unfortunately not everyone can go in to see him."
With so many dignitaries in attendance, Italy's security force
is a massive one. Authorities plan to shut down Rome's air space,
and NATO will back them up.
Helicopters hovered over the Vatican, and boats patrolled the
historic river Tiber, in the city's heart.
But it is the heart of Pope John Paul II that grips both the
residents of Rome and their foreign visitors.
Soon, the attention will turn to the College of Cardinals, who
will choose John Paul's successor. But many of the cardinals who
met Wednesday made it clear that, for now, they would rather not
be in the limelight.
Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, Archbishop of Vienna, said, “It's
not the time to give interviews. It's the time to pray and say
thanks to the great Holy Father for this great pope, and what
he has given to us and to the whole world.”
For at least one more momentous day, that will be the prevailing
sentiment in Rome.
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