VATICAN CITY — For a second Sunday, an ailing Pope Francis skipped his popular window appearance to the public in St. Peter’s Square, but in televised remarks, the pontiff said he’s doing better even though his voice wouldn’t let him read all his comments aloud.
As he did a week earlier, Francis delivered very brief remarks from the chapel of the Vatican hotel where he lives and is recovering from what he has said is infectious bronchitis. Thousands of people in the square followed his words from giant screens set up outdoors.
Francis, whose 87th birthday is later this month, also said he is following from afar the workings of the U.N. climate conference in Dubai. The pontiff was due to go to the COP28 conference on Friday to address the gathering.
During his first chapel appearance on Nov. 26, he insisted he would make the trip despite his illness. He instead canceled it on his doctors’ orders and stayed at the Vatican, where he has received antibiotics intravenously.
“Dear brothers and sisters, good day. Also today, I won’t be able to read everything. I’m getting better, but the voice still isn’t” enough to read everything, Francis said. He then passed the microphone to a priest who read prepared remarks, including about the end of the truce in the Israeli-Hamas war.
“It’s painful that the truce has been broken,” Francis said in the remarks read by the priest. ”That means death, destruction and misery.” He called for the release of the remaining hostages who were seized from Israel in the Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack and lamented the lack of food, water and other necessities in Gaza after Israel launched its war against Hamas.
On Thursday, Francis told an audience of health care workers that he was advised against making the Dec. 1-3 trip to the United Arab Emirates because “it’s very hot there, and you go from heat to air conditioning,” Of his current illness, Francis told that audience: “Thank God it wasn’t pneumonia. It’s a very acute, infectious bronchitis.”
Previously, the Vatican had said Francis was suffering from lung inflammation and flu. Francis had a previous case of acute bronchitis in the spring when he was hospitalized for three days so he could receive intravenous antibiotics.
Francis said “even from a distance, I am following with great attention the work of COP28 in Dubai. I am close” to the conference. He said he was renewing his appeal so that “climate change is answered by concrete political change.”
In his Sunday remarks about climate change, Francis urged the end of what he called “bottlenecks” caused by nationalism and “patterns of the past.” He added: “Let’s embrace a common vision, committing all of us and now, without delay, to a necessary global ecological conversion.”
Send questions/comments to the editors.
Comments are no longer available on this story