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Pope Keeps Up Tradition of Spanish Steps

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  • Pope Keeps Up Tradition of Spanish Steps

    Pope Keeps Up Tradition of Spanish Steps

    AP Online
    Dec 08, 2004

    Waving from his white popemobile, Pope John Paul II blessed shoppers
    and tourists at the foot of the Spanish Steps on Wednesday as he
    began his busy holiday schedule with a traditional visit to the
    popular square in the heart of historic Rome.

    He rode in an open-sided vehicle down narrow Via Condotti, a street
    lined with some of Rome's swankiest shops. John Paul, dressed in a
    white robe and a red embroidered stole, sat in an upholstered chair
    on a wheeled platform, and in a hoarse voice read a prayer in honor
    of the Virgin Mary.

    Dec. 8 is the church and Italian national holiday of the Immaculate
    Conception, which marks the Roman Catholic dogma that the mother
    of Jesus was conceived without original sin. In the morning, he
    presided at a two-hour Mass in St. Peter's Basilica to mark the
    150th anniversary of the declaration of the dogma.

    The pope prayed that Mary would "help us to build a world where the
    life of man is always loved and defended, every form of violence is
    banned, peace is tenaciously sought by all."

    Thousands of Romans and out-of-towners took a break from gift-buying
    on the first official day of the city's Christmas shopping season to
    catch a glimpse of the pope in the square with its towering column
    topped by a statue of Mary.

    They cheered as the pontiff arrived during an afternoon break in the
    rain that had drenched Rome earlier. Mayor Walter Veltroni watched
    as John Paul blessed a basket brimming with pink roses that were then
    placed at the foot of the column.

    Ailing with Parkinson's disease and hip and knee problems, John Paul
    no longer walks or stands during his many public appearances. But
    the Vatican's official schedule of papal ceremonies indicates the
    84-year-old pontiff is sticking to the heavy Christmas season schedule
    of the last several years.

    On Christmas Eve, he will preside over a solemn midnight Mass in
    St. Peter's Basilica. Several years ago he stopped celebrating a late
    morning Mass on Christmas Day, but he is scheduled to deliver his
    traditional message "Urbi et Orbi" ("to the city and to the world")
    at noon on Dec. 25. He will also lead a service of thanksgiving for
    the blessing of 2004 on New Year's Eve in the basilica.

    Earlier Wednesday, the pope said he was praying for the Iraqi people
    after militants bombed two churches in Mosul, the latest anti-Christian
    violence in the country.

    "I express my spiritual closeness to the faithful, shocked by the
    attacks," John Paul said, speaking from his apartment window above
    St. Peter's Square.

    He said he was praying that Iraqis "may finally know a time of
    reconciliation and peace."

    In coordinated attacks Tuesday, militants bombed an Armenian Catholic
    and a Chaldean church in Mosul, injuring three people. Islamic
    militants have regularly targeted Iraq's various ethnic communities,
    including the minority Christians.
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