Pope says he has lung inflammation, aide reads Sunday message for him
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Pope Francis blesses the faithful as he appears on a screen in St. Peter's Square while leading the Angelus prayer from Santa Marta chapel.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis, suffering from a “lung inflammation”, appeared seated at the chapel of his residence instead of in St. Peter’s Square while an aide read the Pontiff’s Sunday message.
The 86-year-old Pope, wearing his traditional white robes and with a bandage on his right hand, remained seated next to the aide during the reading.
“Dear brothers and sisters. Happy Sunday. Today, I cannot appear at the window because I have this problem of an inflammation in the lungs,” Pope Francis said.
The Pontiff went to a Rome hospital on Nov 25 for a scan that the Vatican said had ruled out lung complications after a bout of flu forced him to cancel activities.
The Vatican provided no explanation for the apparent difference between its statement on Nov 25 and what the Pope said on Nov 26.
One part of one of the Pope’s lungs was removed when he was a young man in his native Argentina.
Pope Francis introduced Father Paolo Braida, who went on to read the Pope’s Sunday message based on the Gospel.
The Pontiff coughed several times during the reading.
The pope delivered a blessing and Father Braida read the rest of the message, including appeals for peace in Ukraine, thanks for the release of some hostages in Gaza and confirmation of the Pope’s intention to travel to Dubai on Friday to attend the United Nations climate change conference.
Pope Francis ended with his traditional closing remarks: “I wish everyone a good Sunday. Please do not forget to pray for me. Have a good lunch and see you next time.”
The event was broadcast on giant screens to crowds gathered in the square.
“We were under the window where he was supposed to appear, but then he didn’t show up,” said tourist Francesco Sinisgalli from Potenza in southern Italy. “I am a bit (disappointed) but in my soul he is always there.”
Staying in the residence spared the Pope from going outside for the short journey to the Apostolic Palace on what was a particularly cold Rome morning for the end of November.
He would have had to get in a car, be driven to a courtyard and take an elevator to the top floor of the palace to reach the window overlooking St. Peter’s Square.
Earlier in November, Pope Francis skipped reading a prepared speech for a meeting with European rabbis because he had a cold, but he appeared to be in good health during a meeting with children hours later that day.
In June, he had surgery on an abdominal hernia, spending nine days in hospital. He appears to have recovered fully from that operation. REUTERS

