Catholics in DC rejoice as new pope from Chicago chosen
There was a Mass set to start with the monsignor announcing the new pope, sending those gathered into cheers.
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That excitement among Catholics is felt all around our region. Few could ever imagine a cardinal from the U.S. would be picked.
Even Monsignor Walter Rossi was surprised.
'I said, 'Oh my God, an American Pope!' And the person I was with said, 'You said it would never happen.' I said, well, I guess I was wrong,' said Monsignor Walter Rossi.
Rossi said Pope Leo XIV has been to D.C. before.
'When he was appointed cardinal two years ago by Pope Francis, he actually stopped here at the Shrine on his way to Rome to celebrate mass,' Rossi said. 'That was my first time meeting him. And at that moment he was gracious, kind and a little bit shy.'
There was excitement among a group from Columbus, Ohio, on an eighth-grade field trip to the basilica.
'A guy from Chicago, the big city of Chicago, is now the pope of the world, and so it's a neat experience and I want to enjoy that today,' said visitor Jeff Uhlenhake.
'I hope that he can kind of just relate to all those in America, just because he's from here,' said Noah Phillips.
'It was really thought-provoking because he might have grown up in the same conditions that we grew up in, so he can really connect more on the people and bring more people to our faith,' said Kamani Phillips.
Rossi said Pope Leo XIV is American by birth but international by life, and will carry forward the legacy of Pope Leo XIII
'A pope for the people, a pope for the marginalized, a pope for those who are in need, a pope for those who are poor,' Rossi said.
Rossi hopes the pope will make a trip to D.C., but said that might take a couple of years.
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