http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-03-31T221848Z_01_CHA180298_RTRUKOC_0_POPE-PROFILE.xml

http://tinyurl.com/66qc5

Pope a giant bent by illness
Thu Mar 31, 2005 11:19 PM GMT

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Adored by some, attacked by
others, Pope John Paul is the most prominent religious
leader and perhaps the most widely recognised person
in the world.

In over a quarter century on the global stage, he has
been both a champion of the downtrodden and an often
contested defender of orthodoxy within his own church.

In recent years, the world has watched the decline in
the health of the 84-year-old Pope, who suffers from
Parkinson's disease and severe arthritis. He has been
unable to complete his prepared speeches and has
difficulty pronouncing his words.

The Pope was rushed to hospital in Rome twice in
February 2005 with severe breathing problems,
requiring a tracheotomy the second time around that
temporarily robbed him of his voice.

John Paul dramatically failed in his efforts to speak
in public for the second time in four days on
Wednesday, and shortly afterwards doctors inserted a
feeding tube to try to boost his strength.

The Vatican said on Thursday the pontiff was suffering
from a very high fever caused by a urinary infection.

This revived fears among the world's 1.1 billion
Catholics that one of the most historic pontificates
was nearing an end. The massive media coverage around
the world showed his appeal went far beyond the ranks
of his own church.

The Polish Pope burst on the scene on October 16,
1978, when cardinals in a secret conclave chose him as
the first non-Italian pontiff in four and a half
centuries.

The third longest-serving pope in Roman Catholic
history, the steely willed John Paul ushered his
church into the new millennium despite his sapped
stamina.

Historians say one of the pope's most lasting legacies
will be his role in the fall of communism in Eastern
Europe in 1989.

Poles believe his unflagging support for the banned
Solidarity trade union while communists tried to crush
it was a potent force keeping the movement alive.

Solidarity formed the East Bloc's first non-communist
government in 1989, marking the start of a wave of
freedom which saw Marxist regimes fall like dominoes
across Europe.

"Behold the night is over, day has dawned anew," the
Pope said during a triumphant visit to Czechoslovakia
in 1990.

A decade after witnessing the fall of communism, he
fulfilled another of his dreams. He visited the Holy
Land in March 2000, and, praying at Jerusalem's
Western Wall, he asked forgiveness for Catholic sins
against Jews over the centuries.

A GLOBAL PULPIT

A tireless traveller who has clocked up some 1.25
million kilometres (775,000 miles) in 104 foreign
trips to some 130 countries, the Pope is a familiar
figure across the globe. He has drawn crowds of up to
four million people.

He has been determined to use his office to draw
attention to the plight of the world's neediest and
oppressed while at the same time keeping a firm and
conservative grip on his Church.

"I speak in the name of those who have no voice," he
said on a trip to Africa in 1980.

For the Pope, those with no voice could mean the
unborn child or the dissident rotting in jail.

He has felt just as much at ease lecturing dictators
of the left and the right as he has telling leaders of
world democracies that unbridled capitalism and
globalisation are no panacea to the world's post-Cold
War problems.

A strong defender of human rights and religious
freedom, his calls for a "new world economic order"
and defence of workers' rights have led some to call
him "the socialist pope".

An untiring advocate of peace and nuclear disarmament,
he has often warned that mankind was heading for
Armageddon and in 2003 led the Vatican's campaign
against the war in Iraq.

A former actor who wrote several plays, Pope John Paul
has used his mastery of timing, levity and languages
to communicate like few other world figures of modern
times.

CHRISTIAN UNITY

An untiring advocate of Christian unity and
inter-religious dialogue, he is the first pope to
preach in a Protestant church and a synagogue and the
first pope to set foot inside a mosque.

But ironically, over the past 25 years he also has
been a visible source of deep division to his own
church.

Many Catholics, particularly in developed countries,
have disregarded his teachings against contraception,
questioned his ban on women priests and campaigned for
a liberal successor. They have also chafed under
growing Vatican centralisation.

John Paul has not been swayed by their protests.

Concerned that many Catholics have strayed from
traditional teachings, he has waged an unflagging
battle against abortion, contraception, pre-marital
sex, divorce, homosexuality and the breakdown of
traditional family values.

>From Haiti to the United States, from Brazil to
Austria, he has revived conservative Catholic
self-awareness and stressed obedience to the Church's
hierarchy in the midst of dissent.

Liberal theologians balked, signing petitions accusing
him of wielding too much power. But he once told
reporters: "Church doctrine cannot be based on popular
opinion."

He has appointed more than 95 percent of cardinals who
could enter a conclave to elect his successor, thus
stacking the odds the next pope will not tamper with
his controversial teachings.

Karol Wojtyla was born on May 18, 1920, in a humble
apartment house in the small town of Wadowice, near
Krakow. His father was a non-commissioned officer in
the Polish army and his mother died in 1929 when he
was eight.

In 1938, Wojtyla moved to Krakow, where he entered the
Jagellonian University. The Nazis closed the
university when they invaded in 1939, and to escape
death or deportation the students merged with the
population, becoming labourers.

But he studied for the priesthood secretly during the
occupation and was ordained a priest after the war in
1946.

He was made archbishop of Krakow in 1963 and promoted
to cardinal in 1967, becoming one of Poland's leading
anti-communist churchmen during the post-war period.

After the early death of John Paul I, Wojtyla became
the 264th successor of St Peter and, at 58, the
youngest Pope for more than a century.


© Reuters 2005. All Rights Reserved.


                
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