MANILA, Philippines – A storm threatened rain and the night was made colder by a strong wind, but inclement weather did not stop early birds from camping out last night in Rizal Park to wait for the mass to be celebrated this afternoon by Pope Francis.
Up to six million people are expected to attend the mass that will cap Pope Francis’ historic visit in the Philippines.
Last Friday during their one-on-one meeting at Malacañang, President Aquino told Pope Francis that the crowd at today’s mass is expected to be bigger than the record five million that turned out for Pope John Paul II’s mass in the same venue during the World Youth Day celebration on Jan. 15, 1995.
Deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte said yesterday that Aquino showed the pope photographs of the World Youth Day mass.
During the 1995 gathering, the crowd packed streets several kilometers away from the park. Many were perched atop cars and climbed trees for a view of John Paul II. So dense was the crowd that the pope abandoned plans to travel from his residence by car and was flown instead by helicopter.
Projections of six million people today may be hard to match. Rizal Park covers an area of only 143 acres or six million square feet (560,000 square meters), which will mean one person per square foot.
To encourage people to come to the Quirino Grandstand and participate in the papal mass, Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle issued a circular canceling all afternoon masses scheduled today in Catholic churches under the Archdiocese of Manila.
Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines president and Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas also reminded those who would be trooping to the Quirino Grandstand to bring their families and images of the Sto. Niño because the papal mass would coincide with the Feast of the Sto. Niño.
Pope’s ‘Michael Jackson entrance’ in 1995
With all the joy and cheers of the Filipino crowd every time Pope Francis passes by, the cardinals who elected him in 2013 observed that he has turned out to be a “rock star” pope.
But will there be a unique entrance for Pope Francis during his concluding mass this afternoon at Quirino Grandstand?
During the World Youth Day in 1995, organizers of the papal mass thought of preparing a “Michael Jackson-like entrance” for Pope John Paul II when he appeared before the crowd.
Jimmy Policarpio, chief operating officer during the 1995 World Youth Day, said organizers considered the health of Pope John Paul II, who at that time was 74 years old and still recovering from an accident.
“Pope John Paul II had an accident. He had a total hip replacement a year before the event, so what we did was to make sure that all his movements would require less physical effort for him,” Policarpio recounted.
To bring Pope John Paul II up the stage, carpenters cut a rectangular hole on the floor of the Quirino Grandstand, just enough for the Holy Father to pass through. A seesaw elevator was used to raise the pope. The stage floor opened up and out came Pope John Paul II.
“I got this idea when I watched the Michael Jackson concert in Russia,” Policarpio said.
Public advised to come early
Meanwhile, Interior and Local Government Secretary Manuel Roxas II advised people attending the mass of Francis this afternoon to come early.
“Please come early for the 6 a.m. opening of the gates (of Rizal Park) because everything will be slower,” Roxas said.
The gates of the park will be closed at 1:30 p.m. There will be “express lanes” for people without bags, Roxas added.
However, Tropical Storm Amang is threatening the concluding mass, the biggest event of the papal visit. Roxas advised people to bring raincoats, jackets and extra shirts, but not umbrellas. With Cecille Suerte Felipe, Non Alquitran, Rhodina Villanueva, Jose Rodel Clapano, AP