Pope
John Paul II, 1920 - 2005
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Pope dies
Date: 03 April, 2005
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The body of Pope John Paul II lying in state
photo: Rex Features
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Andrew Chapman looks back at the life of
Pope John Paul II, who died on 2 April 2005.
Chapman Karol Jozef Wojtyla was born
on 18 May in 1920 in Wadowice,
a small town of around 20,000 inhabitants in southern Poland. The
town is otherwise largely known for light industry. His father had
been an officer in the Habsburg
army.
As a young man, he worked in a quarry and
chemical factory during the Nazi occupation of Krakow, about 30
miles for his home town. An all-rounder both physically and mentally,
he was an athlete and an actor, a playwright
and a remarkable linguist, speaking around a dozen languages fluently.
He also taught ethics at Jagiellonian
University in Krakow (where Copernicus had studied) and elsewhere,
and was ordained a priest in November 1946.
He rose fairly rapidly through the Catholic
hierarchy: in 1958 he became auxiliary
bishop of Krakow, and then vicar
capitular of the same see, then finally archbishop.
He participated in the Second
Vatican Council of 1962-5, which encouraged ecumenism
and a more vernacular approach to mass. He was appointed a cardinal
in 1967 by Pope
Paul IV and, on his death in 1978, contributed to the Papal
Conclave that elected Pope
John Paul I, who himself died after a papal reign of only 33
days.
Wojtyla was elected Pope John II in the
second Conclave of 1978 as a compromise candidate, becoming the
first non-Italian Pope since the 1520s. At 58, he was also unusually
young for the role. Pope John Paul II's reign has been notable for
a number of reasons:
- it has been the third longest in history
- he was the first ever pope of Slavic origin
- he has beatified
or canonised
more people than any previous Pope in history - more than 1300
- he has allegedly travelled across the world
more than all previous popes put together
- he was the first pope to visit an Orthodox
country (Romania) since the 11th century
Known for his warm relationship with Judaism,
dating back to his early years in Poland, Pope John Paul II was
also renowned as a theological conservative, particularly on abortion,
the ordination of women, and homosexuality. He is known for his
wide range of writings
on these and other subjects.
The new Pope
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