Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - March 25, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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NEWS I LOCAL / WORLD
HOLI
CELEBRATIONS
Left: Tarish (from left), Riya
and Keshav take part in Holi
celebrations at the Hindu
Society of Manitoba Temple
on St. Anne’s Road Sunday.
Holi marks the end of winter
and honours the triumph of
good over evil. Participants
throw colourful powder
called gulal, eat sweets and
dance to traditional music.
Below left: Tarish (from left),
Riya and Keshav after being
covered in colours.
Below right: Hindu Society
of Manitoba Pandit Venkat
Machiraju talks to people as
they worship and make of-
ferings at the Hindu temple.
PHOTOS BY JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
Pope skips Palm Sunday
homily at start of Holy Week
that will test his health
R
OME — Pope Francis decided at the last
minute to skip his homily during Palm Sun-
day mass in St. Peter’s Square, avoiding a
strenuous speech at the start of a busy Holy Week
that will test his increasingly frail health.
Hobbled by bad knees and persistent respira-
tory problems, Francis also didn’t participate in
the procession of cardinals around the obelisk in
the piazza at the start of the mass. Instead, the
87-year-old pontiff blessed the palm fronds and
olive branches carried by the faithful from the
altar.
Francis had been expected to deliver a homily
halfway through the service and a prepared text
had been distributed to journalists. But when an
aide presented Francis with his glasses to begin
reading, the Pope made clear he wouldn’t deliver
the remarks, leaving the crowd waiting in silence.
Vatican officials didn’t immediately explain
why. The Vatican press office later said the hom-
ily was replaced by “a moment of silence and
prayer.”
Francis though did pronounce prayers through-
out the service and offered a long appeal for peace
at the end of the mass. He said he was praying for
the families of those killed in what he called an
“inhuman” attack at a suburban Moscow concert
hall and also asked for prayers for “the martyred
Ukraine” and people of Gaza.
Vatican officials estimated some 60,000 people
attended the mass, held under a sunny, breezy
spring sky. Francis spent several minutes greet-
ing them from the Popemobile, making several
loops around the piazza at the end of the service.
Palm Sunday kicks off a busy week for Fran-
cis leading up to Easter Sunday when the faith-
ful commemorate the resurrection of Christ.
On Thursday, Francis is due to travel to a Rome
women’s prison for the traditional washing of the
feet ritual. On Friday he is scheduled to preside
over the torchlit Way of the Cross procession at
Rome’s Colosseum re-enacting Christ’s crucifix-
ion.
The following day marks the Easter Vigil, dur-
ing which Francis presides over a solemn night-
time service in the basilica, followed by Easter
Sunday mass in St. Peter’s Square and his noon-
time blessing from the loggia above.
The Holy Week schedule is challenging for
popes even under the best of circumstances.
But that is especially true this year for Francis,
who has been battling on and off all winter what
he and the Vatican have described as a case of
the flu, bronchitis or a cold. For the last several
weeks he has occasionally asked an aide to read
aloud his speeches and catechism lessons to spare
him the effort.
On Sunday, there was no substitute called in,
and the homily was skipped. Vatican officials said
the prepared text was to be considered as never
having existed. Usually, the Pope doesn’t deliver
a homily at Easter, but he traditionally offers re-
flections on Palm Sunday.
Even when he isn’t sick, Francis often speaks in
a whisper and seems to run out of breath easily.
He had part of one lung removed when he was a
young man because of a respiratory infection.
At this time last year, he was hospitalized for
three days with an acute case of bronchitis, but
then rallied to get through Holy Week. He has
been hospitalized two other times during his
pontificate for abdominal surgery, including one
10-day stay in 2021 to remove a part of his large
intestine.
At the end of the mass, Francis offered a long
prayer for peace for all those suffering from war,
and for the Lord to comfort the victims of the
“vile terrorist attack” in Moscow.
“May he convert the hearts of those who pro-
tect, organize and carry out these inhuman acts
that offend God, who commanded us not to kill,”
Francis said.
Without citing Moscow, Francis also asked the
faithful not to forget Ukraine’s suffering. He noted
many Ukrainians are now without electricity as
a result of “intense attacks on infrastructure,
which not only bring death and suffering, but also
the risk of a humanitarian catastrophe of even
bigger dimensions.”
“Please don’t forget the martyred Ukraine,”
he said. “And let us also think of Gaza, which is
suffering so much, and so many other places of
war.”
— The Associated Press
NICOLE WINFIELD
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Pope Francis celebrates the Palm Sunday Mass in St.
Peter's Square at the Vatican, Sunday.
;