Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Pope ends Philippines trip, as millions throng Mass

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Jan, 2015 11:56 AM
    Pope Francis wrapped up his trip to the Philippines Sunday, with a Mass in the capital Manila, which was attended by six to seven million people despite steady rain throughout the day.
     
    According to Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi, if the figures provided by the Filipino government were correct, Sunday's ceremony was the largest such event ever held in the history of papal travels.
     
    This would mean that the Filipino faithful would have broken the previous record set at a Mass offered by Pope John Paul II at the same site in Manila in 1995, where some five million people were present.
     
    Since Saturday, hundreds of thousands of people have been waiting in the vicinity of the Rizal Park and spent the night amid temperatures below 20 degree Celsius (70 degree Fahreinheit), which people were not accustomed to in the tropical Philippines.
     
    Shortly before the ceremony, both the park and the nearby streets were jammed with people wearing yellow raincoats, the same colour as the one Pope Francis wore at times during his trip.
     
    Also deployed in the area were 25,000 police officers to monitor the public and prevent stampedes, one of the great fears of the Manila authorities around the ceremony.
     
    "Where do these people get the energy? They're happy and enthusiastic," asked the pontiff Sunday after the Mass as millions of Filipinos continued chanting his name and waving and cheering, despite the rain, when he passed by along the capital's roadways in the locally-designed 'popemobile', Manila Archbishop Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle said.
     
    A 1,000-member chorus and an orchestra of 120 musicians provided music for the ceremony, which lasted two hours, and the singing was performed in several regional languages spoken in the Philippines with the aim of reflecting the country's diverse cultures.
     
    The fervour of Filipino Catholics was acknowledged by the Pope in his homily, as he recalled that the Philippines was the largest Catholic nation in Asia, saying "this is a special gift, a blessing, but also a vocation".
     
    He also urged Filipinos "to be the great missionaries of the faith in Asia".
     
    The Pope had been in the Philippines since Jan 15 and had earlier spent two days in Sri Lanka.
     
    On the last day of his activities in the Philippines, the Pope met young people at the St. Thomas University.
     
    The pontiff is scheduled to depart for Rome Monday.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Obama Announcing $1B In Public-private Money To Boost Early Access To Education

    Obama Announcing $1B In Public-private Money To Boost Early Access To Education
    WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is following up on his promise to expand early education opportunities for tens of thousands of children by announcing a $1 billion public-private investment in programs for the nation's youngest learners.

    Obama Announcing $1B In Public-private Money To Boost Early Access To Education

    After Delhi Ban, Uber Slapped With Cheating Case; Driver A Serial Offender

    After Delhi Ban, Uber Slapped With Cheating Case; Driver A Serial Offender
    US-based online global cab company Uber was in for more trouble Tuesday after Delhi Police slapped a case of cheating and violating lawful orders after one of its drivers was arrested for raping a 25-year-old woman business analyst. 

    After Delhi Ban, Uber Slapped With Cheating Case; Driver A Serial Offender

    Freed Of Murder Charge, British-indian Businessman Shrien Dewani To Return Home

    Freed Of Murder Charge, British-indian Businessman Shrien Dewani To Return Home
    An Indian-origin businessman from Britain, Shrien Dewani is preparing to leave South Africa after a judge cleared him of arranging the murder of his wife on their honeymoon, media reported Tuesday.

    Freed Of Murder Charge, British-indian Businessman Shrien Dewani To Return Home

    Kids were not food-deprived at Indian ashram in Australia: Doctor

    Kids were not food-deprived at Indian ashram in Australia: Doctor
    Children at an ashram of an Indian guru, who died 17 years ago, in Australia, were not deprived of food, the ashram's resident doctor has said.

    Kids were not food-deprived at Indian ashram in Australia: Doctor

    US Announce New Limits on Racial Profiling, South Asians Dismayed

    US Announce New Limits on Racial Profiling, South Asians Dismayed
    Sikh, Muslim and South Asian Communities have expressed dismay over new guidelines that ban racial profiling by federal law enforcement officers but do not apply to screeners at airports or border check points.

    US Announce New Limits on Racial Profiling, South Asians Dismayed

    Protests continue in US over killing of black men

    Protests continue in US over killing of black men
    Protests continued in the US over the death of several black men at the hands of the police and in New York preparations were being made for....

    Protests continue in US over killing of black men