Stanislaw Barszczak, John Paul II Personal History, part second…
Part 3
The door opened off a corridor and there was Pope John Paul II, sitting next to a window, reading his worn-out breviary. With a rigid neck, he had to turn his whole body standing up. And when Dr. Vincent Fortanasce put out his hand to kiss his ring, he shook it with both of his hands, smiling. After a half-hour medical exam with questions to the Holy Father about his growing symptoms, it became “very, very apparent” to the California neurologist, whose specialty is nerve degenerative diseases, that the pope had Parkinson’s disease. He was also suffering cervical arthritis so badly that his stooped neck was nearly locked in one position. The physician figured it was probably from bending over reading the Litany of the Hours in that breviary every day. “But when I talked to him, he asked me why I was there in Rome,” Fortanasce, who shares a medical specialty practice in Arcadia, recalled. “And I told him I was there to work a few weeks at a clinic run by the Order of Malta. ‘But the real reason that I’m here is because I fight for life issues.’” The 70-year-old bioethicist, psychiatrist and board-certified neurologist told the pope how he had been involved in defeating California’s so-called “aid-in-dying” euthanasia proposition in 1992. Now eight years later, his big concern was with biotechnology and the burgeoning stem cell issue, using human embryo cells and cloning to do research. But his medical colleagues and others weren’t listening, which made him feel both utterly frustrated and depressed. Pope John Paul II shook his head as much as he could, observing in Italian that he thought the matter boiled down to eugenics. “He looked at me and he said, ‘Remember one thing. Give without expecting to get anything back,’” Fortanasce recently told The Tidings. “And then he said, ‘Preach without expecting people to necessarily listen.’ And then he followed up and said, ‘The greatest prophets were those who were persecuted because they said what people did not want to hear.’” The pontiff continued in English, speaking in a slow but thoughtful cadence: “To be human, we can expect suffering. And God gave us that suffering for a purpose. Suffering and hardship brings forth character in man. It brings out the best in man’s humanity. It makes an empathetic person. It makes us realistic and less self-centered and helps us because of our experience to want to help others. “Those who never suffered cannot understand human suffering and cannot understand the human person. Nor can they really understand the suffering of the poor or the ill or the old. And they especially cannot understand the place of the unborn. So the unborn are without a voice.” Fortanasce recalls the pope stressing there wasn’t – or shouldn’t be – any conflict between science and the laws of man. In fact, they work together, he pointed out. But humans must realize their limitations and live within them. Because some new scientific advancement is possible, doesn’t mean it has to be carried out. “What he said to me just completely changed my life in that it reinforced what I had believed,” said the Renaissance man, who was a star athlete at Seton Hall University and Yale Medical School and has coauthored more than half-a-dozen books. “I had started to become very, very despondent, you know, because it was so apparent that no matter who I would talk to about these life issues would really listen. They would smile at me and that was about it. They wouldn’t believe that we were actually going to be making clones and we were going to use human embryos and we were going to be experimenting on them.” He also remembers the “tremendous pain” in the pope’s face during the physical examination. At one point, he simply referred to his failing body the same way St. Francis supposedly did as “the poor one.” But there were lots of little grins, too. “He seemed to give me those smiles when I was telling him how severely depressed I was,” the physician confided. “Here I am going to treat him, and he’s treating me, noticing that I am suffering. He’s paying attention to my suffering, and this poor man has cervical radiculopathy [nerve damage], severe Parkinsonism, and he’s worried about me because I’m depressed that nobody will listen to me.” Fortanasce broke up laughing at the memory, still fresh 13 1/2 years later. “You could see the small smiles on either side of his face looking up at me,” he said. “And what I was getting when he was smiling was, ‘Hey, join the club. Nobody listens to me, either.’” After a pontificate lasting 25 years, Pope John Paul II died on April 2, 2005, at the age of 84. The first of two miracles needed for canonization happened to Sister Marie Simon-Pierre in Paris. Upon praying to the popular pontiff, her Parkinson’s disease miraculously disappeared in 2005. We see the paper paper of the Vatican City, Sunday, April 3 – Pope John Paul II died Saturday night, succumbing finally to years of illness endured painfully and publicly, ending an extraordinary, if sometimes polarizing, 26-year reign that remade the papacy. He died at 9:37 p.m. in his apartment three stories above St. Peter’s Square, as tens of thousands of the faithful gathered within sight of his lighted window for a second night of vigils, amid millions of prayers for him from Roman Catholics around the world as his health declined rapidly. People wept and knelt on cobblestones as the news of his death spread across the square, bowing their heads to a man whose long and down-to-earth papacy was the only one that many young and middle-aged Catholics around the world remembered. For more than 10 minutes, not long after his death was announced, the largely Roman crowd simply applauded him. “I have looked up to this man as a guide, and now it is like a star that has suddenly disappeared,” said Caeser Aturi, 38, a priest from Ghana, which the widely traveled pope visited in 1980, on a continent where the Roman Catholic church grew sizably under his reign. He was born Karol Wojtyla on May 18, 1920 in Wadowice, Poland. He was 84 years old. Beauty will save the world, John Paul spoke in Vienna. Hospitalized twice since Feb.1 and suffering for a decade from Parkinson’s disease, John Paul’s health hit its last crisis on Thursday, when the Vatican announced that a urinary tract infection had caused a high fever and unstable blood pressure. In the next day, his kidneys and cardio-respiratory system began to fail. On Saturday morning, his chief spokesman, Dr. Joaquín Navarro-Valls, announced grimly that the Pope had begun to fade from consciousness. His last hours were spent, Dr. Navarro-Valls said in a statement early on Sunday, by “the uninterrupted prayer of all those who surrounded him.” At 8 p.m. Mass was celebrated in his room, the statement said, and he was administered the final Catholic rite for the sick and dying for the second time, having already received it on Thursday. He was surrounded at his death by a close circle of aides from Poland: his two personal secretaries, Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz and Monsignor Mieczyslaw Mokrzycki; Cardinal Marian Jaworski, Archbishop Stanislaw Rylko; the Rev. Tadeusz Styczen, as well as three Polish nuns who have long worked in his residence. His personal doctor, Renato Buzzonetti, two other doctors and two nurses were also there. After a doctor certifies his death, tradition calls for the Vatican camerlengo, Cardinal Eduardo Martinez Somalo, who will run the Vatican until a new pope is chosen, to call out his baptismal name three times. He then strikes the pope’s forehead with a silver hammer to ensure he is dead. The hammer is then used to destroy the papal ring, the symbol of his authority. The Vatican said the body of John Paul II would lie in state at St. Peter’s Basilica no sooner than Monday. The Italian news agency ANSA reported that his funeral – to be attended by leaders from all over the world – was expected no sooner than Thursday. In the last few weeks before his death, he deteriorated to the point where he seemed, as his spokesman once said, to be “a soul pulling a body” – an example, his supporters said, of the dignity of old age and the value of suffering. Some critics said it was a symbol of a papacy in need of rejuvenation. In his last public appearance, from his window on Wednesday, he looked weak and gaunt, unable to pronounce a blessing to the crowd. Still recovering from a tracheotomy on Feb. 24, a pope known for his great ability as a communicator could hardly speak. From his home country of Poland, to Africa, Asia and Latin America, world leaders and ordinary people alike reacted both in sorrow and some relief that the pope’s long suffering had finally ended. There are more than a billion Roman Catholics worldwide. “The world has lost a champion of human freedom and a good and faithful servant of God has been called home,” President Bush said at the White House. “Pope John Paul II was himself an inspiration to millions of Americans and to so many more throughout the world.” In 1978, he came to office as a fit and handsome 58-year-old, blessed with a charisma, intellectual vigor and energy that took him to 129 foreign countries as the pulse of the Catholic Church moved away from an increasingly secular Europe to Africa, Asia and Latin America. He served either the second or third longest of any pope, depending who did the counting, in the nearly 2,000-year history of the papacy. A Pole chosen as the first non-Italian pope in 455 years, he transformed the papacy into a television-ready voice for peace, war and life, from the womb to the wheelchair. He also reached beyond religion into human rights and politics, encouraging his fellow Poles and other Europeans to reject Communism. Many historians say he deserves part of the credit for the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union. Even as his own voice faded away, his views on the sanctity of all human life echoed unambiguously among Catholics and Christian evangelicals in the United States on issues from abortion to the end of life. He died just two days after Terri Ann Schiavo, the brain-damaged Florida woman whose supporters cited the pope’s teachings in long court battles with her husband, who won the right to remove her feeding tube. On Wednesday, the pope was himself fitted with a nasal feeding tube. “This pope will have a place in history,” Giancarlo Zizola, an Italian Vatican expert, said Saturday after his death. “Not just for what he is glorified for now, for attracting the great masses, as a sporty pope — this won’t last. Not even the fall of Berlin Wall, the defeat of communism, because he himself said it would destroy itself. “But he will be remembered for the seeds he laid,” he added. “He will be remembered for his great favoring of dialogue between different religions, for the culture of peace, and the courage to speak against wars. For having saved the values of the West from the West itself. And the human form he gave to the papacy. It is not negative or positive: it is a complete pontificate.” John Paul’s detractors were often as passionate as his supporters, criticizing him for what they said was tradition-bound papacy in need of a bolder connection with modern life if the church wanted to bring back to the faith people in more secular Western nations. “The situation in the Catholic Church is serious,” Hans Kung, the eminent Swiss theologian, who was barred by the pope from teaching in Catholic schools because of his liberal views, wrote last week in an open letter to several European newspapers. “The pope is gravely ill and deserves every compassion. But the church has to live.” “In my opinion, he is not the greatest pope but the most contradictory of the 20th century,” he added. “A pope of many, great gifts, and of many bad decisions.” Among liberal Catholics, he was criticized for his strong opposition to abortion, homosexuality and contraception, as well as the ordination of women and married men. Though he was never known as a strong administrator of the dense Vatican bureaucracy, he kept a centralizing hand on the selection of bishops around the world and enforced a rigid adherence to many basic church teachings among the clergy and Catholic theologians like Dr. Kung. But he defied easy definition: For all his conservatism on social and theological issues, he was decidedly forward looking – too much so even for some cardinals – on the delicate question of other religions.
While never veering from his belief that Jesus Christ alone was capable saving the souls of human beings, he reached out tirelessly to other faiths, becoming the first pope to set foot in a synagogue, in Rome in 1986, as well as in a mosque, in Damascus, Syria, in 2001. And, as attention turned to who might be the next the pope – would he be old or young; conservative or liberal; Italian, South American or African? -most experts said John Paul-like charisma would no longer be optional. He was a most public man: traveling, bear-hugging, chatting and preaching the value of love with a warmth that belied his often-doctrinaire positions on church issues. “He came across in some ways as a regular guy,” said Michael Walsh, a British biographer of the pope and a former Jesuit priest. “Famous for looking at his watch. What pope looks at his watch? In Britain we’re proud that he used to wear Doc Martin boots. He would watch football, drink a glass of wine.” Though the next nine days will be devoted to praising and burying John Paul II – he will likely be interred aside other popes inside the subterranean grottoes at St. Peter’s Basilica – the ancient institution of the Roman Catholic Church will soon turn toward the future and the selection of the next pope. No sooner than 15 days after his death, and no later than 20, most of the 117 voting members of the College of Cardinals will meet in secrecy below the frescoes of Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel to decide who will inherit the seat of St. Peter. So, Elvis Presley musician was drafted into the Army. He was never the same. It was a dark period during which he lost his mother and began the journey to drug addiction that likely ended his life. Scientists now know why people with autism don’t like to be touched. An Italian medical professor argues that Pope John Paul II didn’t just simply slip away as his weakness and illness overtook him in April 2005. Intensive care specialist Dr. Lina Pavanelli has concluded that the ailing Pope’s April 2 death was caused by what the Catholic Church itself would consider euthanasia. She bases this conclusion on her medical expertise and her own observations of the ailing pontiff on television, as well as press reports and a subsequent book by John Paul’s personal physician. The failure to insert a feeding tube into the patient until just a few days before he died accelerated John Paul’s death, Pavanelli concludes. Moreover, Pavanelli says she believes that the Pope’s doctors dutifully explained the situation to him, and thus she surmises that it was the pontiff himself who likely refused the feeding tube after he’d been twice rushed to the hospital in February and March. Catholics are enjoined to pursue all means to prolong life…
Conclusion
The medical aspects of the Pope’s final days are clearly difficult to verify from afar, and the Vatican is convinced that the actions of the both its doctors and its Pope were in absolute good faith. Of course, medical opinions can often vary. So too can those on bioethics. Not least, the long illness of John Paul II – and the realities of modern medicine – may force the cardinals to confront an uncomfortable and historic change: whether the next pope should be forced to retire after a certain age. But what did Karol Wojtyla leave in his will? The spiritual work is enormous, but the world goes its way. We see, once again, the rise of openly expressed white supremacy in America. We see growing anti-migrant sentiment in Europe, growing anti-Muslim sentiment in India, growing chauvinism in China, Turkey, Myanmar. And in Pakistan, quite literally the “land of the pure”, we see a murderous attachment to purity so pronounced that no human being is pure enough to be safe… “Bonanza” is an American western television series that ran for 14 seasons from 1959 to 1973, making it the second longest running western series of all-time. The shows title, “Bonanza” refers to a term used by miners meaning a large vein or deposit of ore. The series is sometimes called “Ponderosa”, because of the show following the life of the Cartwrights who live on a 600,000-acre piece of land called the Ponderosa. I’m calling here a few quotes from this series for a better human memory. Adam Cartwright: Let’s go back to the Ponderosa, Pa. This isn’t any of our affair. Ben Cartwright: We can’t ignore the rest of the world. We’re the only stabilizing influence in the country. Deputy Sheriff: I’ll swear you in. Do you?Eric ‘Hoss’ Cartwright: I do. Deputy Sheriff: You are. Ben Cartwright: Feast thine eyes on a sight that approacheth heaven itself.
Adam Cartwright: You been to a lotta places and you’ve seen a lotta things, Pa, but you never seen or been to heaven. Ben Cartwright: Well, maybe I never been to heaven… but heaven is gonna have to go some to beat the thousand square miles of the Ponderosa. Adam Cartwright: As long as it’s ours, as long as we keep it in Cartwright hands…Ben Cartwright: Know anyone that could take it away from us, son? Ben Cartwright: You and your education. Adam Cartwright: Education is progress! Now what have you got against it?Ben Cartwright: I don’t have anything against education – as long as it doesn’t interfere with your thinking! Ben Cartwright: Hey, Joe, do you know the difference between a table and an ottoman? Joseph ‘Little Joe’ Cartwright: Sure I do. Ben Cartwright: Then take your feet off the table! (Hoss rolls his eyes) Eric ‘Hoss’ Cartwright: He’ll never learn to do that…So, history, and a love also, is so apt to surround her heroes with an atmosphere of imaginary brightness. Because they are authorities, it seems sometimes that the world is not moving forward. So, I still imagine a bloodbath. I imagine fleeing. I imagine leaving loved ones behind. This is because I continually do writing ‘Brexit West’, like the last Mohican, who’s dragging the limits of Rome’s ‘limes’ far to the east. I am a priest and a catholic father, and so hope is no longer a luxury for me, it is the most fundamental requirement of my job. As a traveler and observer of the modern world, I’m not a drug smuggler. I’m clean of of it. I am still singing to you about this era of humanity, in order to support the number of people, including anonymous ones, that we have to support. So, come in the boy’s way …Here am I counting on the eyes of readers who are a camera … they can see more details of the world. Where are the flowers from those years, where tombs from those years. I have sown flowers for these years, and the boys went on a soldier’s fate. One day I personally saw the main characters of this world. Strength before reason. I saw a radical man. he wants the sun to run around the earth. Then I saw an humanist who wants simplicity of man. After that one’s like a Dionysian hero, he wants coarseness and joy for the world. …It should be remembered that men always prize that most which is least enjoyed.
Though, for the world and mankind it has been given the only sign, namely – the sign of hearing human…Jesus Christ. Europe is fattening now. But the history of the world is still human Asia with. I live live in Europe. And see I the rise of the West. So, I am still singing to you about this era, and show you the cross of Christ, the symbol of the resurrection of man and the mercy of God. You imagine Polish highlanders, every day at 9.37 pm they make a light on top of the mountain above the city. This is a cross over Polish Zakopane City, which illuminates any darkness of the history of the homeland of John Paul the Great a strong light with. The sleeping knight rests firmly there, on the ridge rock from millions of years ago. And in this era of history no longer anonymous. ‘The powerful knight of Asia’ could be called. From a visible distance he’s being seen, on the entire land in the third millennium of the new era.
how the king of this land prepared for the funeral, and simultaneously as the king carced from the granite of the human body and ‘the bloody’ spirit that is circling over this land, he remains about the virtues of this land always. ‘People, I am with you forever,’ as if the knight spoke at last. A sleeping knight, already for a hundred years, he is with a cross on his face, that was made by the inhabitants of this land. ‘Do not hesitate, open the door to Christ.’ Every trail has its end, and every calamity brings its lesson! Hence the white cross on top of Giewont mountain will resemble the history of the beginning of the third millennium of the new era for all times. So,the white cross on the Tatra mountains and
on the top of Giewont, he will certify the history of man, the beginning of the third millennium of the new era. So, the John Paul evidently injured some people during his pontificate, but he did more good. He became for believers saint. I’ve heard it said that there are men who read in books to convince themselves there is a God. But met I the Holy Father personally and at the time of my life I saw God. That’s enough. Then, I would say, my day has been too long. In the morning I saw the sons of Poland happy and strong; and yet, before the sun has come, have I lived to see the last warrior of the wise race of the People. He said to me: – No! You stay alive! Submit, do you hear? You’re strong, you survive. You stay alive, no matter what occurs! I will find you. No matter how long it takes, no matter how far, I will find you…You are young, and rich, and have friends, and at such an age I know it is hard to die! The gifts of our colors may be different, but God has so placed us as to journey in the same path. So, my boy you imagine, when the world suddenly blazed, they were walking pathless tracts, through sleeping woods. With steady rhythm of young hearts, turbulent days were measured by time. Smoke of bonfires was left somewhere behind, as was dust of traveled roads, As was shadow of grey fog. Only white cross in the fields, doesn’t remember anymore, who sleeps beneath it. Like a thought from a past, Like a trace of memories, today comes back a memory of those, that are no more. Evening darkness bid them farewell When they were moving into battle, When the song was fading. They were walking to fight for your home, Among the green fields, to fight for new day. Like a thought from a past, Like a trace of memories, today comes back a memory of those, that are no more. Because fate helped not everyone to return from forest paths, when lilacs were blooming. White cross in the middle of nowhere, doesn’t remember anymore, who sleeps beneath it. White cross in the middle of nowhere, doesn’t remember anymore, who sleeps beneath it. So, you must believe in an even better time, as if he continued to talk to me. (We would love to hear from you)