Pope wants to simplify papal funeral rites, be buried outside Vatican

Pope Francis wants to be buried in the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, where he traditionally goes to pray before and after his trips. PHOTO: REUTERS

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis, who has shunned much of the Vatican’s pomp and privilege, has decided to vastly simplify the elaborate funeral rites for a pontiff by being the first one to be buried outside the Vatican in more than a century.

The Pope, who turns 87 on Dec 17, disclosed plans for his funeral in an interview with Mexico’s N+ TV on Dec 12 evening to mark the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

In the interview, taped before he presided a mass in St Peter’s Basilica, Pope Francis appeared to have recovered from a bout of bronchitis.

He laughed often while discussing subjects such as his health, migration, his relationship with the late Pope Benedict XVI and travel plans.

He said his health was good but asked for prayers as he deals with the limitations of old age.

Pope Francis disclosed that he has been working with the Vatican’s master of ceremonies, Archbishop Diego Ravelli, to simplify the elaborate, book-long funeral rites for a pope that have been used for his predecessors.

Since his election in 2013, Pope Francis has shunned the crimson, fur-trimmed “mozzetta”, or cape, and also does not wear a gold cross but has kept around his neck the same faded silver-plated one he used as archbishop of Buenos Aires.

He has also not used the plush red “shoes of the fisherman” used by his predecessors. He has kept the same simple black shoes he always used and wears a plastic watch, giving others away so they could be auctioned off for charity.

Pope Francis said that because of his devotion to Mary, the Mother of God, he has decided to be buried in Rome’s Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, where he traditionally goes to pray before and after each of his foreign trips.

Many popes are buried in the crypts beneath St Peter’s Basilica. The last pope to be buried outside the Vatican was Leo XIII, who died in 1903 and is buried in the Basilica of St John Lateran in Rome.

Pope Francis has said he would be ready to resign – as Pope Benedict did in 2013 – if his health became extremely bad, but also believes that papal resignations should not become the norm.

Asked about his health, he said: “I feel good, I feel improved. Sometimes I’m told I’m not prudent because I feel like doing things and moving around. I guess those are good signs, no? I am quite well.”

The bronchitis forced Pope Francis to cancel a trip to Dubai in December to attend the COP28 climate summit. He had surgery in June to repair an abdominal hernia and appears to have recovered completely from that operation.

He said he was hoping to make three trips in 2024, to somewhere in Polynesia, Belgium, as well as his first visit to his native Argentina since his election in 2013. REUTERS

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