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One step closer to sainthood: Blessed John Paul II

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VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI bestowed the status of “blessed” on his predecessor John Paul II on Sunday in front of a cheering crowd of over a million people, putting the late pope on the path to sainthood.

A giant banner bearing a youthful portrait of the Polish pontiff was unveiled over the facade of Saint Peter’s Basilica after Benedict pronounced the formula of beatification just six years after John Paul’s death.

Eighty-six official delegations were also in attendance and pilgrims waved flags from around the world in the sun-drenched square, reprising the chant of “Santo Subito!” (Sainthood Now!) that they had shouted at his funeral.

The pope declared October 22 as a day for the veneration of John Paul II.

Sister Marie Simon-Pierre, the 50-year-old French nun who attributes her recovery from Parkison’s disease to the miraculous intercession of the late pope, could be seen smiling and applauding at the emotional ceremony.

Simon-Pierre’s recovery has been acknowledged as the miracle required to justify John Paul II’s beatification after years of research by the Vatican.

A second proven miracle is now required for John Paul to be declared saint, and the Vatican is already sifting through hundreds of reported miracles.

Benedict defended his decision to fast-track John Paul’s cause in his homily at the beatification mass and paid tribute to the late pope’s “strength of a titan” in defending Christianity and fighting off Marxist ideology.

On a personal note, the pope said he himself had been inspired by his predecessor, particularly for his forbearance during years of ill health.

“His example of prayer continually impressed and edified me,” he said.

“He remained deeply united to God even amid the many demands of his ministry. Then too, there was his witness in suffering. The Lord gradually stripped him of everything, yet he remained a rock,” Benedict added.

Experts said the beatification could help the Vatican burnish an image badly tarnished by multiple pedophile priest scandals, but others have been critical of the speeding-up of a procedure that usually takes decades if not centuries.

John Paul’s pontificate helped inspire youth groups and lay religious movements, but his critics have accused him of turning a blind eye to the child abuse scandals which first erupted in the United States in 2000.

Many agree however that it was a remarkable papacy in which John Paul survived an assassination attempt in 1981, built ties with Judaism and Islam and even apologized for the mistakes and sins of the Catholic Church.

John Paul was elected pope in 1978, becoming the first non-Italian pontiff in more than four centuries. He became known for his frequent trips and succeeded in giving new strength to the Church before illness sapped his energies.

He died on April 2, 2005, suffering from an acute case of Parkinson’s.

Among those attending the mass was Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, who arrived in Rome on Saturday under a special exemption from a European Union travel ban imposed in 2002 over extensive human rights abuses in his country.

Italy’s opposition has also been skeptical over the lavish praise for John Paul from twice-divorced Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, whose tumultuous private life has come under criticism from Church authorities.

Following the mass, Benedict will pay his respects before John Paul’s coffin, which was exhumed on Friday and placed inside Saint Peter’s basilica.

Pilgrims will then file past the simple wooden coffin, which will be laid to rest again on Monday in a chapel near Michelangelo’s famous Pieta sculpture.

A phial of John Paul’s blood, which was collected during one of his hospitalizations, will also be put on display for veneration by the pilgrims.

In a message to the world’s 1.1 billion Catholics ahead of Sunday’s grand ceremony, Benedict called the weekend of prayer “a feast of faith”.

The Vatican’s official daily said it was “an extraordinary event without precedent in the last 1,000 years of the Church’s history.”

A Polish woman in a cream-colored national dress with red flowers, 48-year-old Margerit Solik, said: “It’s a great day full of emotion!”

Stanislaw Motyka, 62, who also wore a traditional Polish costume, said the vigil before John Paul’s beatification had been “absolutely magical”.

“My only hope is to live to see him be made a saint,” he said.

Tens of thousands of faithful braved rain across Poland to fete the beatification, with crowds massing around huge video screens in the capital Warsaw that beamed the mass live from Saint Peter’s Square.

WORLDWIDE CELEBRATION

Catholics worldwide celebrated the planned beatification of the late Pope John Paul II, with the faithful turning out to pray, share treasured memories and watch Sunday’s Vatican ceremony on giant televisions.

In the Philippines, where many adore John Paul II with rock-star intensity, people flocked to see mementoes: a piece of his cassock believed to have healing powers and a set of plate, spoon and fork — still unwashed after he used them 16 years ago during a visit to the country.

The popular pontiff has a wide following in the Philippines, Asia’s largest predominantly Roman Catholic nation, where authorities foiled a terrorist plot to assassinate John Paul II during a visit in 1995. Nearly 10,000 babies were named after him after his visits as pope, according to a news report.

 Although John Paul II’s beatification has been criticized elsewhere by some as happening too fast and under a cloud over the clerical sex abuse scandal, it’s being celebrated by many Filipinos as rare good news at a time of depressing man-made and natural disasters in their impoverished homeland and beyond. —AFP and AP/NLQ (FREEMAN)

A POLISH

ALTHOUGH JOHN PAUL

BEATIFICATION

JOHN

JOHN PAUL

PAUL

POPE

SAINT PETER

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