Monday, May 13, 2024

1981: We almost lost Pope John Paul II

(My new American Thinker post)


Do you remember what you were doing when you got the news that John Paul II was shot? 

I was working for a US company in Mexico City and my desk phone rang:  It was my mother from Dallas telling me that John Paul II had been shot in Rome

It was an eerie feeling.  She had called me weeks before:  "Reagan was shot" said my mom.

I walked out of the office and saw people filling up churches to pray for the Pope.  I remember several nuns in tears praying the rosary.  The Spanish news reports were very grim.  I found the Voice of America and BBC in my little short wave radio and heard flashes from the Vatican. Several people in the office turned on the TV and we watched the video of the shooting for the first time.  

As with President Reagan, the early reports were confusing.  There were unconfirmed stories that the Pope had been killed. I remember turning to a senior partner in the office and asking the obvious question:  Has any Pope been killed before?  No one knew the answer.

Thankfully, Pope John Paul II survived and played a major role, along with President Reagan and PM Thatcher, in the fall of communism.

I always felt very close to John Paul II, from the moment that he was announced in 1978

I never felt that connection with Paul VI or John 23rd. (I'm growing very fond of Pope Francis.  I love his sincerity although we need to work on his views about wealth distribution.)

My connection with John Paul II was rooted in our mutual experience of having lived through communism and knowing its ugly side.  Of course, Pope John Paul II lived under the Nazis too.  I always told my friends that John Paul II saw the two great evils of the 20th century, the Nazis and the communists.

Over the next 24 years, or until his graceful death in 2005, I always looked at John Paul II on TV and asked myself several questions:  

What if he had died that day?  

How different would events in Poland had turned out?   Don't we all remember the reception that he got in Poland?

Who would have made all of those trips to every corner of the world?  No one did it better than John Paul II!   

Yes, we can see now that John Paul II made mistakes in how the "priest scandal" was solved.  It was a stain on his record.  However, he still stands in my mind as one of the great figures of the 20th century, a man admired and loved by more than just Cathoics.

It was 33 years ago but it still feels like yesterday when I heard my mom's emotional voice on the phone.


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