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		The F-word appears at a papal audience, but for a good cause
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  [June 08, 2022] 
		By Philip Pullella 
 VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The F-word made 
		its debut at a papal general audience on Wednesday but there was no 
		alarm and those who were brandishing it were given VIP treatment.
 
 About 30 Italians wearing red T-shirts bearing the words "Fuck Cancer 
		Choir" sat in a front section of Pope Francis' general audience in St. 
		Peter's Square, within sight of the pontiff, who was sitting about 40 
		metres away.
 
 Below the phrase on the T-shirts was a clenched first punching through a 
		background of musical notes.
 
 The choir, from the northern Italian province of Alessandria, is led by 
		two doctors, biologist Stefania Crivellari and onocologist Federica 
		Grosso.
 
 "We know what the word means in English but it was chosen by our 
		patients to show that there is a possibility of living with cancer in a 
		human way, all together," Grosso told Reuters.
 
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			 She said the group, which has been 
			on Italian television to push for more acceptance of people living 
			with cancer, is preparing a musical based on individual stories of 
			survivors. It will debut this autumn. They sang at the beginning and the end of the 
			audience and Grosso said they got good seats through the help of a 
			nun from Alessandria who works with the group.
 It was not clear if the pope, who was driven past the group, noticed 
			the T-shirts they were wearing.
 
 The Alessandria area has had a higher-than normal rate of 
			mesothelioma, a type of cancer caused by exposure to asbestos in the 
			past from a now-closed factory in the town of Casale Monferrato.
 
 (Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Kim Coghill)
 
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