Pope visits Fatima shrine in Portugal; skips key address
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[August 05, 2023]
By Philip Pullella and Catarina Demony
FATIMA, Portugal (Reuters) -Pope Francis visited the revered Catholic
shrine of Fatima in Portugal on Saturday, praying the rosary with about
200,000 people at the site where the Church says the Virgin Mary
appeared to three shepherd children in 1917.
The 86-year-old pope skipped reading a key speech that was on the
programme of his two-hour visit to the world-famous shrine north of
Lisbon.
The omission did not appear to indicate that the pope was experiencing
any health issues. He later greeted dozens of people individually as an
aide slowly pushed his wheelchair through the crowd.
He stopped often to often to kiss babies and comfort the sick as he made
his way back to a helicopter transporting him to the next event on his
five-day trip to Portugal.
Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said the pope's apparently last-minute
decision to skip the speech, which was expected to have been the
centrepiece of the day, did not appear to have anything to do with
Francis' eyesight.
He has shortened several speeches or has chosen to speak instead
off-script since the trip started on Wednesday. He said on one occasion
that he was having trouble with his glasses.
"The pope always addresses firstly the people he meets, as a shepherd,
and speaks accordingly," Bruni said in response to questions from
reporters.
Francis flew in from Lisbon - the venue of a Catholic youth festival -
to make his second visit as pope to the shrine that draws millions of
pilgrims a year.
At the start of his visit a smoke cloud caused by a wild fire at Castelo
Branco, about 100 km (60 miles) east of Fatima, hovered over one side of
the sanctuary and tiny specks of ash fell. It later mostly dissipated.
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Pope Francis waves as he meets with
people at the Chapel of Apparitions of the Shrine of Our Lady of
Fatima, during his apostolic journey to Portugal on the occasion of
the XXXVII World Youth Day, in Fatima, Portugal, August 5, 2023.
Vatican Media/Handout via REUTERS
SECRETS OF FATIMA
Fatima has captivated Catholics since the children's first reported
vision of the Virgin Mary on May 13, 1917.
Siblings Francisco and Jacinta Marto died several years later and
were declared saints in 2017. The third, Lucia Dos Santos, became a
nun and died in 2005 at the age of 97. Efforts are underway to make
her a saint too.
The children said the Madonna gave them three messages, the
so-called Secrets of Fatima.
The first two were revealed soon after and concerned a vision of
hell, seen by believers as a prediction of the outbreak of World War
Two, a warning that Russia would "spread her errors" in the world,
and a need for general conversion to God and prayer.
The third was known only to Sister Lucia and popes and it intrigued
the world for more than three-quarters of a century, inspiring books
and cults convinced it was the timing of the end of the world.
In 2000, the Vatican said it was a prediction of the 1981
assassination attempt on Pope John Paul on May 13, the same day of
the first reported apparition in 1917.
(Reporting by Catarina Demony, Philip Pullella, Michael Gore and
Pedro Nunes;Editing by Andrew Cawthorne and Frances Kerry)
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