Medias broadcast from St Peter’s square following the death of Pope Francis in the Vatican on April 21, 2025. Pope Francis died on April 21, 2025 aged 88, a day after making a much hoped-for appearance at Saint Peter’s Square on Easter Sunday, the Vatican said in a statement. Agence France-Presse
VATICAN CITY — A hush reigned over the normally boisterous St. Peter’s Square on Monday as the faithful and the curious alike gathered at the seat of Catholicism to mark the death of Pope Francis.
Catholic priests and nuns in groups of threes of fours bowed their heads to pray, twirling their rosaries under the midday sun just hours after the Vatican announced the 88-year-old pontiff’s passing.
Even the groups of tourists, who continued to enter the massive St Peter’s Basilica, appeared quiet and downcast.
READ: LIVE UPDATES: Pope Francis dies at age 88
“He was the voice of the smallest, the weakest. And up until yesterday he was asking for peace in the world,” Venezuelan seminarian Riccardo Vielma, 31, told AFP.
In the grand, pillar-lined plaza, the yellow and red tulips remained as did the rows of the seats set up for Sunday’s Easter mass, where Francis had saluted the public for the last time.
READ: 12 years of Pope Francis: Reform, social justice and tackling abuse
‘I had to come’
“We’re really all stunned because yesterday he was here, he did a full tour of the square (in his popemobile),” said Royben Noris, also from Venezuela.
“It was such a great joy for everyone to see him again at St. Peter’s Square,” Noris added.
The joyful atmosphere from the previous day has turned sombre, as people made the sign of the cross, wiped tears from their eyes or huddled with their loved ones.
A group of Franciscan friars, recognizable in their brown robes and sandals, leaned against a railing staring at the basilica while a group of young people stood in a circle nearby, reciting an audible prayer.
Photographers and television cameras began setting up at the back of the square, in a preview of the heavy media interest to come as the Church embarks on the process to choose a new pope.
‘He was a real humanitarian’
Irish tourist Naoimh Kelly, 44, said she and her son headed directly for St Peter’s after hearing the news in their hotel.
“He was the same as everyone else, he was always about the people, he wasn’t fancy. He was a real humanitarian,” she said.
“I’m from Ireland and the Church has a bad name. But he changed the way people thought. It’s a shame.”
An Italian woman, who gave her name as Nunzia, 63, said she often came to St Peter’s on Sunday to watch the pope preside over mass and give his traditional Angelus prayer.
“People really loved him. Catholics and non-Catholics alike,” she said.
“Mamma mia, it’s really hit me,” she told AFP. “The only thing I could do was to come by here for a moment of reflection.”
The Argentine pontiff, leader of the Catholic Church since March 2013, spent 38 days being treated for double pneumonia at Rome’s Gemelli hospital before seeming to recover, leaving the facility on March 23.
Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.
Read Next
“He shouldn’t have killed my mom” — teen speaks out after mom’s murder
Disclaimer: The comments uploaded on this site do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of management and owner of Cebudailynews. We reserve the right to exclude comments that we deem to be inconsistent with our editorial standards.