Pope Francis appears with bruised chin at ceremony for new cardinals
Pope Francis installed 21 new Catholic cardinals during a ceremony at St. Peter's Basilica on Saturday, appearing with a chin bruise caused by a minor fall, the Vatican confirmed.
- Middle East
- Reuters
- Published Date: 09:23 | 07 December 2024
- Modified Date: 09:23 | 07 December 2024
Pope Francis led a ceremony in St. Peter's Basilica on Saturday to install 21 new Catholic cardinals with a large bruise on his chin, which the Vatican said was the result of a minor fall the previous morning.
Francis, who turns 88 this month, appeared otherwise on good form, leading a ritual-filled ceremony to elevate churchmen from 17 countries to the College of Cardinals, the elite group that will one day elect his successor.
A purplish blotch could be seen on the right side of the pope's face, around his lower chin and upper neck. The Vatican's press office said Francis had hit his chin on his bedside table on Friday morning.
Francis, pope since 2013, has suffered occasional bouts of ill health in recent years, and now uses a wheelchair due to knee and back pain.
Cardinals are the highest-ranking officials in the 1.4-billion-member Catholic Church beside the pope. At the pontiff's death or resignation, cardinals under the age of 80 are tasked with entering a conclave and choosing the next pope.
Francis has now installed about 80% of the prelates who will elect the next pope, increasing the likelihood that the next pontiff might share his vision for a Church that is more inclusive and engaged with the wider world.
MORE GEOGRAPHIC DIVERSITY
Francis, originally from Argentina and the first pope from the Americas, has focused on strengthening geographic diversity among the cardinals.
At least 67 countries now have cardinals who can vote in a conclave, according to Vatican statistics, compared to fewer than 50 when Francis was elected.
The newest appointees come from countries including Peru, Argentina, Japan, the Philippines, Algeria, India and Serbia.
In his homily for Saturday's service, Francis said the new cardinals "come from different backgrounds and cultures", urging them to be "witnesses of fraternity, artisans of communion and builders of unity".
Archbishop Ignace Bessi Dogbo, one of the new cardinals, praised the pope's efforts to boost geographical diversity.
"Having cardinals from every part of the world truly translates the universality of the Church," Bessi Dogbo, from Abidjan in the Ivory Coast, told Reuters.
Italy remains the country with the most cardinals, counting 17 under the age of 80. Four of those were installed on Saturday, including the archbishops of Turin, a northern business hub, and Naples, the country's third-largest city.
Among the other new cardinals, one is a Belgian friar serving as archbishop of the Tehran-Isfahan archdiocese in Iran. Another is a Ukrainian Greek Catholic ministering in Australia.