‘Welcome!’ Pope Leo begins summer holidays in Castel Gandolfo
Pope Leo XIV arrives at Castel Gandolfo on Sunday afternoon
at the start of his summer holidays, and he was welcomed by a large group of
the faithful, including several religious sisters.
By Salvatore Cernuzio
The sign the Pope was arriving came with the opening of the
gate and the exit of two Swiss Guards. Then the roar of motorcycle engines and
the dark car appeared from the bottom of the hill before pausing for the Pope
to get out to greet the long line of people standing in the sun, who had been
waiting for at least a couple of hours behind the barriers that even the mayor
had helped to set up this morning. At around 5 p.m., Pope Leo XIV arrived at
Castel Gandolfo, the summer residence of the Popes 25 km from Rome, where he
will spend a period of summer rest until 20 July and then again for a few days
in August.
Crowds welcoming the
Pope's arrival to Castel Gandolfo (@Vatican Media)
Crowds await the Pope
In the main square where the Apostolic Palace stands, opened
to the public by Pope Francis when it was transformed it into a museum, life
passed by quietly for a few hours: tourists were sitting in coffee bars and
restaurants, visitig shops, and coming and going from the museum complex. All
this until 4.30 p.m., the time when it became known that the Pope would be
leaving Rome for Castel Gandolfo. Then people began to move towards the entrance
of Villa Barberini, the ancient building where Pope Leo will be staying,
joining the already large crowd of people gathered on both sides of the street:
police, journalists, local residents, other tourists, families and various
groups of nuns.
Other groups waited for the motorcade to pass at the foot of
Salita di Sant'Antonio, the road leading to the historic centre. At Bar Etto,
overlooking Lake Albano, a black banner with white lettering read: “Welcome
Pope Leo”. There, a group of nuns waited for his arrival, praying the Rosary.
Meanwhile, a woman on the other side of the street shouted to an acquaintance:
“Is he coming here or not?” “Yes, yes, he will be arriving.”
The Pope's arrival and welcome of the faithful
Applause and chants accompanied the passage of the papal
vehicle. A few metres from the entrance to Villa Barberini, as noted above,
Pope Leo stopped the car and immediately made his way to the people, who called
from one side and the other: “Pope Leo!” “Your Holiness!” “Holy Father!” His first
gesture was to bless some children in their parents' arms, then he greeted some
elderly ladies. Among them was Conchita, a Spanish woman from Zaragoza, on
holiday in Rome: “I shook his hand and said: Pope Leo, te quiero mucho” (Pope
Leo, I love you very much).
The nuns of the Congregation of the Presentation of Mary,
originally from Cameroon, called out to the Pope in French, hoping he would
come closer. Leo XIV shook as many hands as possible, then headed inside the
Villa where Sister Raffaella Petrini, president of the Vatican Governorate;
Bishop Vincenzo Viva, director of the Pontifical Villas; Andrea Tamburelli; and
Mayor Alberto De Angelis were waiting for him.
Pope Leo greeting the faithful upon
arriving at Castel Gandolfo (@Vatican Media)
Greetings
Also present was Don Tadeusz Rozmus, Polish parish priest of
the pontifical parish of Saint Thomas of Villanova, where the Pope will
celebrate Mass on Sunday 13 July, his first public engagement in the Lazio
municipality. A well-known biker, the parish priest joked with journalists
outside Villa Barberini, saying that he had offered to accompany the Pope on
his motorbike around Castel Gandolfo. “It was a formal/informal meeting, in the
sense that the Holy Father greeted us but also stopped to talk to us for a
while, offering words of encouragement and thanks for the preparation of all
this. He was very open, very kind, smiling.”
A surprise appearance
Once the gate was closed and the crowd began to disperse
towards the square and the lake area, a woman's cry caught everyone's
attention: Pope Leo suddenly appeared on the balcony of the Villa. Behind the
yellow and white flag of Vatican City and behind the ivy-covered wooden panels,
the Pope waved to the people on the street. A few moments of great enthusiasm,
immortalised by smartphones and cameras.
Pope Leo thanking all
those preparing for his arrival to the Villa Barberini in Castel Gandolfo
(@Vatican Media)
The nuns: ‘We are close to you in prayer’
Directly below the balcony was a group of four nuns,
Daughters of the Sagrada Familia, a congregation founded in Colombia and based
in Rome. And from Rome, Maria Deleite de los Santos, Maria Regina Pacis, Maria
José (Peruvian from Piura) and Maria Maestra Orante left immediately after the
Angelus to come and greet the Pope up close. “How kind of him to get out of the
car to greet us!” they exclaimed. They even managed to shake hands with the
Pontiff: “We have been to many audiences, but this is the first time we have
seen him so close.” To Leo XIV, who begins his holidays this afternoon, the
nuns offered a greeting and a wish: “Holy Father, we welcome you to Castel
Gandolfo. We pray hard for your intentions and for this well-deserved rest. We
accompany your work with prayer.”
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-07/welcome-pope-leo-arrives-in-castel-gandolfo.html




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