Pope John Paul II is cheered on by a large crowd during a visit to Italy's leading Marian shrine in Loreto on Sunday. Organizers said at least 200,000 pilgrims showed up to greet the pope.
A frail Pope John Paul II put three more Catholics on the road to sainthood Sunday during a visit to a hilltop shrine, struggling at times but cheered on by 200,000 pilgrims.
He seemed drained, seated in a wheeled throne in glittering green vestments, at the end of the three-hour ceremony in 86-degree heat. The large crowd broke into applause when he told them: "The pope greets you, supports you and blesses you from the heart."
The 84-year-old pontiff, who has Parkinson's disease and crippling knee and hip ailments, read his homily with difficulty. He left one portion to be read by an aide. But he seemed stronger than during his trip to Lourdes, France, three weeks ago.
John Paul did not speak of the Russian school tragedy that killed hundreds of people. But a young man read a prayer "for the dead, for the children and for all the innocent victims."
Organizers and police said at least 200,000 pilgrims showed up at Italy's leading Marian shrine, which overlooks the Adriatic Sea south of Ancona.
Security was tight, with police closing down roads into Loreto hours before the pope's arrival by Italian military helicopter from his summer residence at Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome.
The trip was arranged around the beatification of three members of the Christian organization Catholic Action - a Spaniard and two Italians.
Beatification is the last formal step before possible sainthood. Sunday's ceremony raises to 1,333 the number of Catholics John Paul has beatified, more than done by all his predecessors combined over the past 50 years.
The pope has sought to give Catholics role models, and he said Sunday that "there is no greater freedom than that of love" for Christ, "no greater brotherhood than that born from Christ's cross."
Those beatified Sunday lived in the 20th century: a Spanish priest-physician, Pedro Tarres y Claret, and two lay Italians, Alberto Marvelli and Pina Suriano.
Although John Paul has difficulty walking and standing, he has insisted on keeping up his travels, but Loreto could be his last trip of the year.
He has already visited Switzerland and France this year, and although he has been invited to Istanbul, Turkey, by an Orthodox leader, the Vatican has given no confirmation that the visit will take place.
It was the fifth trip to Loreto during his nearly 26-year papacy