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  • 12
    Feb
    2013
    7:29am, EST

    Surprise, excitement in St. Peter's Square after pope's announcement

    Filippo Monteforte / AFP - Getty Images

    Tourists and the faithful walk on St Peter's Square at the Vatican on Tuesday. The Catholic Church entered uncharted waters after Pope Benedict XVI's shock announcement that he would become the first pontiff to resign in more than 700 years.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    VATICAN CITY — The faithful in the heart of the world’s Catholic community reacted with surprise and excitement to the Pope’s decision to step aside.

    Among the crowds in St Peter’s Square in the Vatican City, the papal enclave within Rome, ordinary Italians joined the lines of tourists waiting to get inside St Peter’s Basilica on Tuesday.


    "We were shocked and decided to come here to pray," said Roberta Roteri, a financial sales worker from Sicily who was visiting Rome on business with her friend Elena when the news broke on Monday lunchtime.

    Alastair Jamieson / NBC News

    Italian newspapers' reaction to the pope's decision to step down. "A historic farewell" is the headline in La Repubblica.

    "Maybe all the scandals that have been revealed in recent months have contributed to his decision," she said as she stood in the biting wind. "He has been a good pope, but I hope they will choose somebody young who can touch our hearts deep inside in the way John Paul II did."

    Italy’s newspapers reflected just how unprecedented Monday’s announcement was.

    "The Pope leaves — a historic farewell," ran the headline in La Repubblica, the country's largest newspaper.

    "We enter an uncharted territory," added the newspaper’s editor-in-chief Ezio Mauro, one of Italy’s leading journalists.

    'A little more tolerant'
    Cynthia Aponte, from Oceanside, California, was among the Americans on vacation whose visit to the Vatican has been given an added point of interest.

    "It’s certainly a surprise," she said. “I was taking pictures of the television news because we couldn’t quite believe it.”

    "It’s an exciting time for people here and Catholics in the U.S.," added her friend Josephine Estrella from Los Angeles.

    Alastair Jamieson / NBC News

    Josephine Estrella, from Los Angeles, Calif., and Cynthia Aponte, from Oceanside, Calif. -- both on vacation in Rome in St Peter's Square on Tuesday.

    Abby Leskovar, from Rome, N.Y., said she hoped the new pope would spell changes at the top.

    "It will be interesting to see who they choose — hopefully someone who can make the church maybe a little more tolerant," she said.

    Her friend Eric Stebbins, also from Rome, N.Y., added: "In America, where diversity is important, I think a pope from a different background would be a popular choice."

    That sentiment was echoed by Scott Reising, on vacation from Cincinnati, Ohio, with his wife, Kate. "Imagine the boost the Catholic Church could have if it had a leader from the Third World," he said.

    Related: 

    'Cardinals are pretty shrewd': Subtle, secretive process to choose new pope set to move quickly

    Pope's hometown in disbelief over resignation

    168 comments

    The "faithful" are often surprised and excited. Not unlike small children.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, vatican, rome, pope, catholic-church, featured, benedict-xvi, st-peters
  • 3
    Oct
    2012
    7:37am, EDT

    'Enough!' Business owner mounts protest on dome of St. Peter's Basilica

    Andrew Medichini / AP

    Italian businessman Marcello di Finizio stands above his banner as he protests on St. Peter's dome at the Vatican on Oct. 3, 2012.

    Vatican City — An Italian man clambered onto a ledge on the huge dome of St Peter's Basilica on Tuesday to stage a precarious protest against Prime Minister Mario Monti and the European Union.

    Video footage showed the man, identified as Marcello Di Finizio, jumping over railings near the top of the 450-foot high dome on Tuesday afternoon, shocking visitors taking a tour. He then tied a cord to the railings and abseiled to a ledge over a window in the cupola.

    Filippo Monteforte / AFP - Getty Images

    Marcello di Finizio continues his protest on Wednesday. The businessman from Trieste in northern Italy managed to slip past security guards at the Vatican on Tuesday evening.

    Tottering on the ledge, Di Finizio unveiled a banner reading: "Help! Enough Monti, Enough Europe! Enough Multinationals!".

    Officials said Wednesday that the man, who identified himself as the owner of a beach resort, refused appeals from government ministers offering to meet with him if he would come down.

    -- Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report

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    Video shows and anti-austerity protester jumping the railing at the observation deck atop St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican to set up camp with a sign on the iconic Italian dome. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.


    25 comments

    The Vatican does have a military force - it's called the Swiss Guard. There are plenty of other sovereign nations in the world that have an official religion or that are run by religious leaders. As far as the scandals, that is not unique to the Catholic Church.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, vatican, economy, europe, protest, european-union, world-news, featured, st-peters

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