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Pope Francis presides over virus prayer in hint normalcy returning

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ROME — Pope Francis prayed on Saturday for an end to the coronaviru­s pandemic and the developmen­t of a vaccine as he presided over an outdoor gathering that signaled a semblance of normalcy returning to the Vatican after a coronaviru­s lockdown lasting more than two months.

Francis was joined in the Vatican Gardens by a representa­tive sampling of people on the front lines of the emergency: a doctor, a nurse, a hospital chaplain, a pharmacist, a journalist and a civil protection official.

A recovered Covid-19 patient, a person with a relative who died during Italy’s outbreak, and the parents of a baby born during the emergency also were among the pope’s more than 100 guests for the prayer at the grotto dedicated to the Virgin Mary.

They sat spaced far apart, and most wore protective masks; Francis didn't.

In his prayer, Francis urged Mary to comfort those who lost a love one to the virus. He noted that many virus victims died alone due to hospitals needing to prohibit visitors and that the dead were “buried sometimes in a way that wounds the soul.”

He prayed that doctors and nurses are protected from becoming infected themselves and for God to “illuminate the minds of the men and women of science, so that they find the right solutions to beat this illness.”

He begged world leaders to act wisely and generously to provide social and economic relief for the many workers who have lost jobs. And he called for the “enormous sums of money used to grow and perfect armaments be instead used to fund research to prevent similar catastroph­es in the future.”

The prayer service, held on a cool evening in the verdant Vatican Gardens, marked Francis’ biggest gathering to date since the Vatican followed Italy in locking down in March to prevent virus infections.

During the peak of the outbreak, when churches were closed for services, Francis livestream­ed his morning Masses each day and presided over Holy Week and Easter services without any faithful present. One of the most stirring moments of the outbreak in Italy was his solitary March 27 nighttime prayer for an end to the pandemic in a rain-slicked and empty St. Peter’s Square.

Italy is now opening back up. Francis is due to celebrate a Pentecost Mass in St. Peter's Basilica on Sunday, albeit without members of the public in attendance. He will then go to his studio window to recite his blessing at noon to the crowds below.

The Vatican says police will ensure the faithful gathered in the piazza keep an appropriat­e distance apart. AP

THE highest-prof ile US rocket launch in decades captured interest around the globe, coming at a time when people are clamoring for good news amid the Covid-19 pandemic, surging unemployme­nt and growing US protests against police violence.

President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence were among those who gathered with Musk to watch the spectacle. Trump spoke with the two astronauts prior to the launch and, in a brief exchange with reporters, referred to Musk as one of the “great brains,” according to a pool report.

The rooftop shook as the rocket rumbled to orbit, according to the report. Within seconds, Elton John’s “Rocket Man”—a Trump rally classic—began to play over speakers, the report said.

“They have a long way to go but that’s a very dangerous part of it there,” Trump said. “I’m so proud of the people, of NASA, public and private. When you see a sight like that, it’s incredible. When you hear that sound—the roar—you can imagine how dangerous it is.”

The launch and the initial phases of the journey proceeded smoothly. The main rocket booster flew back to Earth and stuck the landing on a drone ship—a once-remarkable feat that has become routine for Spacex.

When the astronauts arrive at the space station, they will meet with the Expedition 63 crew members already in residence. Their voyage, known as Demo-2, is the final major test of Spacex’s human spacefligh­t system before the national Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion certifies it to fly working missions to the space station.

AT LEAST that’s the dream for Bridenstin­e, the nasa administra­tor. The US space agency is seeking to change the notion that government must create both demand and supply for spacefligh­t. He said at a post-launch briefing that nasa is seeking a business model where it’s not the only customer.

“We want to have numerous providers competing on cost, innovation and safety,” he said in an interview on Bloomberg TV on May 27.

Commercial spacefligh­t has taken a long time to evolve since 2001, when engineer and entreprene­ur Dennis Tito, founder and CEO of Wilshire Associates, became the first private individual to buy a seat to space aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket.

Bloomberg News

 ?? PHOTO/ALESSANDRA TARANTINO AP ?? Pope Francis waves as he leaves after a rosary in Vatican gardens on saturday, May 30, 2020. Pope Francis is reciting a special prayer for the end of the coronaviru­s pandemic surrounded by a representa­tive sampling of people on the frontlines in his biggest post-lockdown gathering to date.
PHOTO/ALESSANDRA TARANTINO AP Pope Francis waves as he leaves after a rosary in Vatican gardens on saturday, May 30, 2020. Pope Francis is reciting a special prayer for the end of the coronaviru­s pandemic surrounded by a representa­tive sampling of people on the frontlines in his biggest post-lockdown gathering to date.

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