Gulf Today

Pope skips Lent retreat for first time over ‘cold’

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VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis announced on Sunday that a cold he is suffering from has forced him to skip a Lenten spiritual retreat with senior Vatican officials near Rome for the first time in his papacy.

The surprise announceme­nt, which will keep him from attending a gathering he holds dear, marked the first health scare for the 83-year-old pontiff since his election in 2013.

As of late Saturday night, the Vatican said that the pope would be taking part in the retreat, indicating that the decision to skip it was a last-minute one. The retreat was due to start on Sunday afternoon.

The pope made the announceme­nt to thousands of people in St. Peter’s Square during his first public appearance since last Wednesday, when he was seen coughing and sneezing.

“Unfortunat­ely a cold will force me not take part this year (in the retreat). I will follow the meditation­s from here,” he said, departing from his prepared address.

Francis coughed several times while making his brief address on Sunday and sounded like he had a stuffy nose.

Francis is missing a part of one lung. It was removed when he was in his early 20s in his native Buenos Aires after an illness.

The Vatican had previously said only that Francis was suffering from a “slight indisposit­ion” that forced him to cancel most audiences in the past three days.

“I will unite myself spirituall­y with the (participan­ts) and all people who are living moments of prayer. I will do the spiritual exercises from home,” he said.

The respected website Il Sismografo, which follows Church affairs, said it was the first time since 1950 that a pope has missed a Lenten retreat.

Home for the pope is Santa Marta, the Vatican guest house where he lives in simple quarters after opting not to use the spacious papal apartments in the Apostolic Palace.

The pope has been taken ill at a time when Italy is battling a surging outbreak of the potentiall­y deadly coronaviru­s. His spokesman Matteo Bruni dismissed on Friday speculatio­n that Francis was anything more than slightly unwell.

“There is no evidence that would lead to diagnosing anything but a mild indisposit­ion,” he said.

A number of people in St. Peter’s Square to hear the pope wore surgical face masks.

Italy has registered more than 1,100 confirmed cases of coronaviru­s since Feb.20 and at least 29 deaths - the worst such contagion in Europe.

After his election, Francis broke with the tradition of his predecesso­rs, who held the retreats in the Vatican, and moved them to a Church property in the town of Arricia, south of Rome.

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