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Europe Mourns The Pope Who Helped Reunite A Continent

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  • Europe Mourns The Pope Who Helped Reunite A Continent

    EUROPE MOURNS THE POPE WHO HELPED REUNITE A CONTINENT

    Agence France Press
    Friday, 8 April 2005

    ZAGREB, April 8 (AFP) - Europeans Friday took time out to remember
    Pope John Paul II, credited with setting in motion a chain of events
    which led to the collapse of communism and the reunification of a
    continent torn apart by war.

    Around Europe, almost a year since 10 mostly communist countries
    joined the European Union swelling the EU family to 25 nations,
    people were remembering the role played by the pope in modern post-war
    European history.

    In Zagreb, the flag was flying at half-mast above the city's imposing
    cathedral, where dozens of candles were lit inside in remembrance of
    the pontiff.

    "When I learnt of his death, I felt as if I had lost someone very
    close," said businessman Miljenko Berislavic, watching the pope's
    funeral in Rome on a television screen in one of the city's cafes.

    Croatians, like many peoples in the region, felt overwhelming gratitude
    towards Pope John Paul II, for his support as it struggled for its
    independence from Yugoslavia in the bloody 1991-95 conflict.

    Pope John Paul II, who was born in Poland, was the first eastern
    European to be appointed at the head of the Roman Catholic church.

    He was never to forget his roots, and during his first visit to Poland
    in 1979 just after being appointed, he appeared before the crowds
    and said: "May the spirit come down and renew the face of this land."

    His words were interpreted by many as an exhortation to stand up to
    the oppressive communist regime.

    The fledgling Solidarity union movement took strength from the pope's
    words, and a decade later the Berlin Wall fell, leading to the collapse
    of the Soviet Union and its grip on eastern Europe.

    In mostly Orthodox Ukraine, churches in the Catholic west of the
    country were packed to mark the funeral of the man revered for leading
    a revival of Catholicism after the breakup of the Soviet Union.

    "This day is the hardest in my life," Ganna Kovalets, a 76-year-old
    Greco Catholic worshipper said at one of the churches, with tears in
    her eyes. "There is an emptiness in my soul."

    In Russia hundreds were watching the funeral in silence on a giant
    screen in the cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in the centre
    of Moscow.

    Some were crying, others had their heads bent in prayer, in front of
    a large photo of John Paul II, after Russian television refused to
    broadcast the ceremony live.

    "The pope for me was a moral voice and it is a great misfortune and
    injustice that he could not come to Russia," said museum employee
    Yevgenia.

    The Russian Orthodox church had refused to allow the pope to visit
    the country, judging the time was not right.

    In France, thousands of people applauded outside the Notre Dame
    cathedral when the pope's coffin was shown on giant screens inside
    and outside the church being borne aloft in Rome.

    A few hundred people also gathered at the Sacre Coeur which towers
    above the French capital. There were similar gatherings across France,
    and in churches in parts of Germany, particularly the Catholic
    strongholds in the south.

    Despite reluctance from the Serbian authorities, the funeral was
    broadcast live in Belgrade as it was in Bulgaria.

    Church bells also tolled across the Czech Republic at midday, with
    flags on public buildings, including the building of the Czech Senate,
    flying at half-mast as the country, like Hungary, observed a day of
    national mourning.

    Meanwhile, gypsies in Romania announced they were postponing for a day
    an international festival as a mark of respect for the late pontiff.

    "John Paul II worked a lot for multi-cultural respect. For us his
    26-year pontificate was historic. The Roma people of all religions
    in Romania loved him a lot," said Roma leader Aven Amentza.

    In largely Roman Catholic countries, such as Spain and Portugal,
    bells tolled and special masses were held, although most people
    appeared to have chosen to watch the pope's funeral in their own homes.

    In Lisbon, a giant television screen was set up outside a Roman
    Catholic church in the heart of the Portuguese capital, and the
    small crowd stood in silence or quietly prayed as they listened to
    the proceedings.

    And in a small orphanage in northern Armenia built with the pope's
    help after the 1988 earthquake, the pope's death was being felt as
    a very personal loss.

    "We prayed for the peace of the pope's soul. It is a great loss for
    all the Catholics in the whole world. He was an exceptional spiritual
    leader with his humanism and courage," said Sister Aruciak.

    In Brussels, the heart of the European Union, the bells tolled and
    all the flags on the European institutions were flying at half-mast.

    But in the Netherlands and Britain, ceremonies were more low-key with
    only a few hundred people turning out for special masses.

    http://www.adetocqueville.com/200504081613.j38gd2k29903.htm

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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