Pope Francis to beatify ‘Smiling’ John Paul I

Pope Francis gestures as he leaves on a wheelchair after his weekly general audience at the Paul-VI hall in the Vatican on August 31, 2022.
AFP / Alberto Pizzoli

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis will preside today over the beatification of John Paul I, the so-called “Smiling Pope” who led the Catholic Church for just 33 days before dying in contested circumstances.

Thousands of people are expected to attend the mass in St. Peter’s Square where the former pontiff will become “blessed” – the final step before becoming a saint.

John Paul I, the son of a bricklayer from the Dolomite mountains and a particularly warm and pastoral figure, was elected pope on Aug. 26, 1978, at the age of 65.

He died just 33 days later, on Sept. 28, 1978, of a heart attack, making him the shortest serving pontiff in modern church history.

His death sparked intense speculation as to the cause, from suicide – he seemed reluctant to take on the position of pope – to murder, allegedly by those who opposed his plans to reform the church, particularly the powerful Vatican bank.

Many have since discounted this and biographer Christophe Henning said the swirling rumors could be explained by the sudden nature of his death and the “calamitous communication” by the Vatican at the time.

No autopsy was conducted to determine the cause of death, and the Vatican issued inconsistent and false information about what happened.

For example, his lifeless body – sitting in bed, his reading glasses on his nose and typewritten documents in his hand – was found by a nun.

However, the Vatican did not want to acknowledge the presence of a woman in his bedroom, so said his secretary found him.

“For me it does not seem that there is really a doubt about his death by natural causes, particularly given we know that he was in fragile health,” Henning told AFP.

The Vatican announced in October 2021 that it had recognized a miracle attributed to John Paul I, allowing him to become beatified.

The miracle was the sudden healing of a gravely ill 11-year-old girl in Buenos Aires in 2011, after a local priest prayed to the late pontiff.

Under the rules of the Catholic Church, in most cases a second miracle should be recognized before someone can be made a saint.

Born on Oct. 17, 1912, in the northern Italian town of Canale d’Agordo, John Paul I rose to become Patriarch of Venice, Cardinal and then head of the Catholic Church.

The last Italian pope, he was seen as a man of consensus, of humility and simplicity and a strong sense of pastoral duty.

He defended the church’s opposition to abortion and contraception while also seeking to reform its governance.

Sister Margherita Marin, who helped John Paul I in the papal apartments, recalled a man who was “friendly to everyone.”

“He knew how to treat his colleagues with a lot of respect,” she told a Vatican press conference on Friday.

Among the most recent popes, John XXIII (1958-1963), Paul VI (1963-1978) and John Paul II (1978-2005) were proclaimed saints.

The predecessor of Pope Francis, Benedict XVI, is still alive and living in the Vatican after resigning in 2013.

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