Enthusiasm
abounds amid security precautions in Seoul
(Vatican Radio) In Seoul, security leading up
to the Mass for the Beatification of the Korean martyrs led to road closures,
barricades, and disrupted public transportation. But Seán Patrick Lovett
reports the inconveniences haven’t dimmed people’s enthusiasm for Pope Francis:
“Thou shalt not cross the line” – that was the 11th commandment
in Seoul on Saturday. And no one dared disobey it.
The
security around this papal visit has been amongst the tightest ever seen – not
least of all because (as we know) Pope Francis refuses point-blank to wear
bullet-proof vests or to drive around in security vehicles that impede the
personal contact with the people that has become his trademark. He also has a
habit of deviating from predetermined itineraries and, basically, going
wherever he feels like going.
People
just love it. Security details just live with it.
Being
responsible for Pope Francis’ safety means coming up with creative solutions
that guarantee his personal protection while allowing him to engage in that
authentic one-on-one contact which is so much part of his communications
charisma.
It
also means coordinating an immensely complicated security machine that includes
the country’s armed forces, local police, anti-terrorist experts, the National
Intelligence Service, and the Presidential Security Service – along with the
Vatican’s own police force and the Pope’s personal security
escort.
Here
in Korea, security measures for the Pope’s open-air Mass in Seoul, included
roads closures, underground trains being rerouted, roofs and terraces in the
vicinity being declared off-limits, plus the deployment of sharpshooters and
some 30,000 police men and women in and around Gwanghwamun where the
Beatification ceremony took place.
Anywhere
else in the world, this kind of traffic disruption and urban inconvenience
would be met by cries of complaint from the general populace.
Not
so here.
Families
not attending the Pope’s Mass wandered gleefully around the traffic-free
streets, taking pictures and chatting to bored police officers manning the
temporary barricades. Street vendors enjoyed a roaring trade. As one Korean
teenager told me (proudly practicing his English and calling the Pope “Papà
Francisco” – as in “Daddy Francis”): “He makes everything beautiful. He makes
everybody happy. He makes me feel like I want to be a nice person”.
Making
people feel happy and nice… Isn’t that what Daddy’s do best?
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