In November it will be
the 40th anniversary that President John F. Kennedy was assassinated
in Dallas. Since then most over 45 remember exactly where they were
and what they were doing when they heard the breaking news that
stunned the world.
Next week, October 16 to be exact, another anniversary will be
celebrated even though the news at the time was not as dramatic as
when the President died.
Few will remember what they were doing 25 years ago on October 16
when news came from Rome that the College of Cardinals had elected
Karol Józef Wojtyla as the 263rd Pope to follow in the footsteps of
St. Peter.
When his name was first read from a balcony at St. Peter's Basilica
to thousands eagerly awaiting in St. Peter's Square many looked at
each other as if to say: Who?
It was understandable because Wojtyla, who was 58 when elected, was
from Poland and he was the first non Italian Pope in more than 450
years. He chose to be known as John Paul 11 and since then has
become one of the most admired and instantly recognizable people in
the world.
John Paul 11's papacy is the longest reign in modern times. In the
same period the United States has had five presidents. He is also
the most traveled Pope making more than 90 international trips and
more than 140 within Italy. As the Bishop of Rome, he has also been
to 301 of the 334 parishes in the Eternal City.
Now the Vatican will celebrate the pontificate of the frail Pope,
who is also one of the most popular figures in the world.
As a Cardinal, John Paul 11 enjoyed skiing and walking and for a
member of the clergy he was considered fit and young to be chosen to
the papacy, but this highly educated man quickly took charge of the
Vatican.
He stood up to communism and played a behind the scenes role when
Lech Walesa led Poland through Solidarity, a move that captured the
world as this predominantly Catholic nation refused to be pushed
around any longer by communist rule.
In a book called "Pontiff," which detailed the final days of Paul
V1, the month long papacy of John Paul 1 and election of John Paul
11, the authors claimed that the Pope sent a letter to Soviet leader
Brezhnev that if his regime did not loosen their grip on Poland he
would resign as Pope and take up arms to defend his country.
John Paul 11 survived an attempt on his life while he was with
pilgrims in St. Peter's Square. But this did not deter him from
continuing his role as leader of the world's Catholics. A few weeks
after he was shot, he visited the assassin in jail and forgave him.
As a young man he also had to weave his way past dictatorships. John
Paul 11, who was born in Wadowice, a small city about 40 miles from
Cracow, worked in a quarry and then a chemical factory to earn his
living so he would not be deported to Germany when Nazi forces
occupied Poland during World War 11.
John Paul 11 faced personal challenges. The second of two sons, he
was just nine when his mother died, then his brother, Edmund, a
doctor passed away three years later. And at 21 he lost his father,
a non-commissioned army officer.
As an 18-year-old he enrolled in Cracow's Jagiellonian University in
a school for drama, four years later he began courses in the
clandestine seminary run by Cardinal Adam Stefan Sapieha, Archbishop
of Cracow, while the world was still at war.
At the same time, the young Wojtyla was a pioneer of the "Rhapsodic
Theater," which also was clandestine.
He quickly rose up the ranks in Poland catholic hierarchy. At 43 he
was Archbishop of Crakow and at 47 he was made a Cardinal by Paul
V1.
It was a solid foundation for what lay ahead of him.
During his pontificate, his principal documents include 14
encyclicals , 13 apostolic exhortations , 11 apostolic constitutions
and 42 apostolic letters. The Pope has also published three books :
"Crossing the Threshold of Hope" (October 1994); "Gift and Mystery:
On the 50th Anniversary of My Priestly Ordination" (November 1996)
and "Roman Tryptych - Meditations", a book of poems (March 2003).
He has presided at 138 beatification ceremonies ( 1,310 Blesseds
proclaimed ) and 48 canonization ceremonies ( 469 Saints ). He has
held nine consistories in which he created more than 200 cardinals .
He has also convened six plenary meetings of the College of
Cardinals and presided at 15 Synods of Bishops.
According to the Vatican, John Paul 11 has encountered more than
16,700,000 pilgrims who have participated in the general audiences
held on Wednesdays. This does not include all other special
audiences and religious ceremonies held at the Vatican and the
millions of faithful met during pastoral visits made in Italy and
throughout the world.
John Paul 11, acknowledged as one of the greatest people in the 20th
century, deserves a big celebration, not just in Rome but throughout
the world.