Pope’s breathing
difficulties persist for 6th day
I.Media - published
on 02/10/25
ALBERTO PIZZOLI | AFP
Pope Francis leaves
after celebrating the mass for the Jubilee of the Armed Forces at St. Peter's
square in the Vatican on February 9, 2025.
While the 88-year-old Holy Father is asking collaborators
to read his addresses and keeping appointments in his residence, he hasn't
cancelled anything yet.
For at least the past six days, Pope Francis has been
suffering from a case of bronchitis, preventing him from reading his speeches
normally and forcing him to receive his guests at his residence rather than at
the Apostolic Palace. Despite this latest episode of respiratory ailment -
which tend to plague him in winter - the 88-year-old Pontiff is continuing his
audiences normally for the time being, as he did on the morning of this
February 10, 2025, during which he kept six official appointments on his
agenda.
“I'd like to apologize, because with this bad cold, it's
difficult for me to speak,” confided Francis at the general audience on
February 5, before delegating the reading of his catechesis to a
collaborator.
The following day, the Holy See Press Office reported that
the Pope had contracted bronchitis, forcing him to continue his activities from
his residence.
Since then, his appointments have continued as normal at
Casa Santa Marta, with no cancellations, in contrast to previous episodes of
winter respiratory ailments which forced him to lighten his schedule.
In March 2023, Pope Francis was hospitalized with infectious
bronchitis. “'We caught it in time,' they told me, and if we had waited a few
more hours, it would have been more serious,” he recounted a few weeks later on
Mexican television.
Follow updates on the Pope's health here.
The Pope shows fatigue
On Sunday, February 9, the Pope went out into the cold to
celebrate Mass for the Armed Forces Jubilee in St. Peter's Square. However,
some observers thought he looked very tired and, with a weakened voice,
apologized to the crowd for not being able to continue reading his homily due
to “breathing difficulties.”
The Pope's entourage noted his “tired” face and his weight
gain, which some explained as the result of corticosteroid treatments -
although officially there is no information on this subject, as the Pope is
reluctant to publish bulletins about his personal health issues.
The Holy Father's respiratory situation is particularly
delicate since in 1957, when he was in his early 20s, he had a severe
respiratory infection that led to the removal of part of one lung. He would
later say that a nurse saved his life on that occasion.
In addition to his vulnerability to respiratory infections,
the Pope has suffered two falls in
recent weeks.
Very tired ... very attentive
“He's not in good shape,” worries a Vatican source,
considering that his stationary state over the last few days is not reassuring.
“The Pope was very tired,” agrees Chems-eddine Hafiz, rector
of the Great Mosque of Paris, whom the Argentine pontiff received on Monday
morning. “He was supposed to receive us in his private library, but he received
us [at Santa Marta] and apologized. I was a little worried about him,” he
told I.MEDIA.
“You could see from his face that he was suffering, he was
short of breath, it was quite difficult,” adds the Franco-Algerian lawyer, who
acknowledges that the head of the Catholic Church carries heavy burdens on his
shoulders for his advanced age.
During the roughly half-hour audience, however, adds the
Muslim rector, Pope Francis was “very affable, very smiling, very friendly” and
also “very attentive.”
“He's extremely agile intellectually,” says Chems-eddine
Hafiz. Before slipping in: “At the end, given his state of health, he took my
hands and asked me to pray for him.”
On February 8, a Spanish delegation from the Congress of
Confraternities in Seville found the Pope very available, and willing to talk
during a 45-minute audience, instead of the scheduled 20 minutes, a
well-informed source told I.MEDIA.
“As long as he doesn't cancel an audience, there's nothing
to worry about. Obviously, he's 88 years old; anything can happen ...” the
source added.
Upcoming schedule
On Wednesday as usual, the Pontiff is due to preside over
the general audience in Paul VI Hall. And next Monday, he is due to leave the
Vatican to visit the Cinecittà film studios in southeast Rome, on the occasion
of the Jubilee of Artists.
Whatever the case, the 266th Pope has already confided that
he has no intention of giving up as long as he is in control of his
intellectual faculties. “You govern with your head, not your knee,” he asserted
in an interview with ABCtelevision in December 2022.
https://aleteia.org/2025/02/10/popes-breathing-difficulties-persist-for-6th-day


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