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The pope will be Italian, wherever he’s born

As the Catholic Church grows more global, what will become of its historic roots?

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Cardinals arrive to attend a mourning Mass for Pope Francis on the ninth day of Novendiali at St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on May 4.

Cardinals arriving to attend a mourning mass for the late Pope Francis on the ninth day of Novendiali at St Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on May 4.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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It’s been almost a half a century since questions could be shut down with the verity: “Is the pope Italian?” In that time, the Roman Catholic Church has been led by a Pole, a German and an Argentine – the longest consecutive line of non-Italians since seven Frenchmen occupied the throne of St Peter. And that was during the 67-year period in the 14th century when the papacy had relocated to Avignon, France. Until the 1978 election of John Paul II – born Karol Wojtyla and archbishop of Krakow – there had been 455 years of Italian popes.

As the Holy See

prepares for the May 7 conclave

to elect a successor to the

late Pope Francis

, an unofficial but authoritative list of 22 papabili (pope-ables) includes just five Italian cardinals. Indeed, the main standard-bearers for the liberal and conservative wings of the church are from South-east Asia and West Africa, respectively: Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of the Philippines and Cardinal Robert Sarah of Guinea. Even if an Italian is anointed, he’ll be leading one of the most diverse and globalised of organisations, religious or otherwise: The pope is the designated spiritual and moral head of the nearly 1.4 billion people across the world who identify as Catholic. Italy isn’t even the most populous of Catholic nations. That would be Brazil.

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