'Popemania'
hits the Philippines ahead of papal trip
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis will set out for the Philippines on
Wednesday, for the second leg of his apostolic journey in Asia.
Sean Patrick Lovett is already in Manila, ahead of the Pope’s
arrival. He said the Philippines’ capital is buzzing with excitement.
“Popemania sweeps the Philippines” – no, it’s not my headline,
it’s the front-page header, in Manila’s leading daily newspaper, The Philippine Star. And that says it all.
Anticipation for the
Pope’s arrival here is at such fever pitch that newspapers, TV shows and just
about everyone you meet, don’t really seem interested in discussing anything
else. In Manila, where the Pope will be spending three days out of his four-day
pilgrimage, the inevitable question is: “Where are you going to see him?”.
That’s because Filipinos are tactile, experiential, and wonderfully expressive
people who believe it would be simply discourteous not to greet their guest in
person. And they have every intention of doing so.
Which is why the only
other topic of conversation is – security.
This is not just the
kind of security we associate with regular terrorist alerts and a massive
police presence either. It’s true the Armed Forces are deploying 17,000 troops
while 25,000 policemen are already making their presence felt as the whole law
enforcement machine kicks into gear. Concrete “crowd control” barriers topped
with wire-mesh gratings have been set up along the routes to be taken by the
papal motorcade and the Presidential Palace has sent out several appeals for
the public’s cooperation to prevent stampedes during the large gatherings
involving the Pope.
Here in the
Philippines, the term “large gathering” usually implies numbers of above one
million people. And, rather than “stampede”, they have coined the euphemism
“crowd surge” to warn against what authorities fear could turn out to be the
greatest threat to the Pope’s security: an excess of popular affection and
enthusiasm.
But there’s something
else in the air that’s causing concern: an atmospheric threat called “Storm
Amang”. Weather forecasters describe it as a low-pressure area intensifying
into a tropical depression that could bring heavy rains and gusty winds to
precisely the locations to be visited by Pope Francis later this week. Local
Church leaders are calling on the faithful to pray a well-known invocation for
delivery from calamities, something with which Filipinos are, unfortunately,
only too familiar.
On a brighter note,
the President of the Philippine Bishops Conference, has asked that every church
bell in the country should ring out in welcome on Thursday at 10:45 p.m. when
the Pope’s plane touches down at Villamore Air Base in Manila. Since there are
some 600,000 churches and about 2 million chapel (many with bells), that should
make quite a lot of joyful noise.

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