
Pope Leo XIV gets rock star welcome from young Catholics at huge vigil
Pilgrims began crying and cheering when the white military helicopter descended over the sprawling site in Rome's eastern outskirts. Organisers said more than 800,000 young pilgrims from 146 countries around the world had assembled as part of a Jubilee of Youth – and perhaps as many as 1 million.
Smiling from his popemobile, the first US pope waved to throngs of screaming young people lining his route, many running for a better vantage point.
They had already spent the day in the hot sun listening to music, praying and talking with fellow Catholics. 'The pope is here' announced an excited voice over the public address to thunderous applause from the crowd.
But the tenor of the event became more solemn and contemplative as the pope took to the stage, carrying a large wood cross. 'Dear young people, after walking, praying and sharing these days of grace of the Jubilee dedicated to you, we now gather together in the light of the advancing evening to keep vigil together,' Leo, 69, told them.
In the crowd was French pilgrim Julie Mortier, 18, whose voice was hoarse from singing and screaming for hours. 'We're too happy to be here. Seeing the pope, that's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,' she said.
Event organisers said people had continued to arrive during the vigil and that it was possible that attendance numbers had reached 1 million.
Most pilgrims said they would camp overnight for a Sunday morning mass at the site led by Leo. That will mark the culmination of the week-long youth pilgrimage, a key event in the Catholic church's Jubilee holy year.
Some in the crowd were so far away they could not see the massive stage with a golden arch and towering cross that dominated the open area – which at more than 500,000 sq m was the size of about 70 football fields.
'I'm so happy to be here, even if I'm a bit far from the pope. I knew what to expect,' British student Andy Hewellyn said.
'The main thing is that we're all together,' he said ahead of the pope's appearance, as other young people nearby played guitars, sang or snoozed in the sun.
Italian broadcaster Rai called the event a Catholic 'Woodstock', as throughout the day nearly two dozen musical and dance groups, many of them religious, entertained the crowds.
In a video message, Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni welcomed pilgrims to the capital, who were 'praying, singing, joking among themselves, celebrating in an extraordinary party'.
The Jubilee of Youth, which began on Monday, comes nearly three months after the start of Leo's papacy, and 25 years after the last such massive youth gathering in Rome under Poland's pope John Paul II.
Early on Saturday, groups of young people set off from central Rome for the venue in Tor Vergata. They were ready to spend the next 24 hours surrounded by a crowd of people and sleep under the stars.
Victoria Perez, who carried a Spanish flag, could not contain her excitement at seeing 'the pope up close'. 'It's the first time I'm going to see him, and I can't wait,' the 21-year-old said, looking forward to a 'night of prayers under the stars'.
French pilgrim Quentin Remaury, 26, said he had been inspired by the late pope Francis's rousing message to youth during a 2016 visit to Krakow, Poland. 'Pope Francis told us to 'get off your couches', and that really gave me a boost,' he said.
Throughout the week, attenders participated in church-planned events, such as confession at Circus Maximus, one of Rome's top tourist spots.
On Friday, about 1,000 priests were on hand, with 200 white gazebos serving as makeshift confessionals lining the hippodrome where chariot races were once held in Ancient Rome.
The pilgrimage unfolds as under-30s navigate economic uncertainty, the climate crisis and international conflict, with some pilgrims travelling from war-torn areas such as Syria and Ukraine.
Samarei Semos, 29, who said she had travelled three days from her native Belize to get to Rome, said she hoped Leo would have a strong say about 'third world countries'.
The Vatican said that before the vigil the pope had met and prayed with travellers accompanying an 18-year-old Egyptian pilgrim who died on Friday night.
Rai News reported that the young woman had died of a heart attack on a bus while returning to her lodging from an event in Rome.
Amid tight security, more than 4,300 volunteers and more than 1,000 police were watching over the vigil, organisers said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
22 minutes ago
- The Sun
Frankie Bridge says ‘you're dead to me' in cryptic post after ‘secret feud' is revealed
FRANKIE Bridge has raised eyebrows after saying 'you're dead to me' in a scathing post after appearing to 'snub' former bandmate and friend Rochelle Humes. The Loose Women panellist, 36, took to TikTok to share the damning video, showing her sipping on a glass of rosé wine. 4 4 A caption written over the clip read: 'You're so quiet… 'Thanks, you said something five years ago and I've just realised you're actually dead to me.' Frankie then added below: 'Takes me a while, but once you're dead you're dead.' The Sun has contacted a representative for Frankie for comment. Mum-of-two Frankie and presenter Rochelle, 36, shot to fame together at just 12-years-old in pop group S Club Juniors. Frankie and Rochelle then joined girlband The Saturdays in 2007, going on to enjoy a string of huge hits including Issues, Ego and What About Us. The Saturdays - also made up of Vanessa White, Una Healy and Mollie King - have always insisted their decision to go on indefinite hiatus in 2014 wasn't down to them falling out. Speaking to HELLO! previously, Frankie explained: 'We never fell out. We never really officially broke up or anything, so the option [to get back together] has kind of always been there.' But last month The Sun revealed an apparent 'feud' between Frankie and Rochelle, after they gave each other the cold shoulder at Wimbledon. As guests of sponsor Evian, the pair were invited to watch the tennis in a suite in the sought-after hydrangea building nearCourtOne. But while they mingled with other celebrities and guests just yards away from one another - they failed to actually interact with each other. The I'm A Celebrity clip I use to win any row with Marvin, says Rochelle Humes An insider told The Sun: 'It was clear the women were keeping their distance. They sat on opposite sides of the suite and kept to themselves. 'While Frankie posed for pictures with S Club's Rachel Stevens, Rochelle took selfies with her husband Marvin and his I'm A Celebrity campmate Sam Thompson. 'It was a shame because having the two girls from The Saturdays together for a mini-reunion was exciting for everyone there. 'Even though they were pleasant to each other when they did brush shoulders, they didn't spend any extra time together than they had to, in between being amicable while passing each other en route to watch the tennis.' While Frankie has taken the 'never say never' approach to a potential Saturdays return and Una, 43, has admitted several times she's ready to perform with the girls again, Rochelle previously insisted she 'highly doubts' it will happen. 4


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Hamlet: Wakefulness review – fraught and full-throated musical tragedy
It begins with lines from Under the Earth I Go, a reflective piece about death and renewal, written as his own elegy by the Scottish poet Hamish Henderson. That serves as a suitably contemplative introduction to Shakespeare's death-fixated play, one that begins after the poisoning of one Hamlet and ends with the slaughter of another. Wrocław's Song of the Goat gravitates naturally to such material. This least frivolous of companies made its name on the fringe in 2004 with Chronicles: A Lamentation, an expressive dance-theatre piece shot through with haunting polyphonic song that felt placeless and timeless. The company is in full voice here in Grzegorz Bral's response to Shakespeare's play, the music more recognisably of a western operatic tradition, but no less rich and resonant. Gorgeous though the singing is, with its waves of tightly drilled choral sound sometimes accompanied by the bowed string instrument known as a nyckelharpa, the production seems uninterested in saying anything fresh about Hamlet. Packed into an hour, it is set on the night of the old king's murder and features the familiar characters – a resolute Claudius, an obstinate Ophelia and an angry Gertrude, as well as an indignant Hamlet – but makes no attempt to explore them in depth. There is a smattering of speeches, heavily accented and hard to make sense of, and a couple of anachronistic additions ('The end justifies the means,' says Claudius; 'Quiet bitch,' says old Hamlet for no apparent reason), but only the sketchiest sense of a narrative arc. And that is a problem because when emotion is detached from action, it comes across as histrionic. The mood is sombre, fraught and intense, but to what ends? It leaves the characters looking two-dimensional and crudely old-fashioned. A primarily sung piece, Hamlet – Wakefulness scores highly on gothic ferocity, less so on dramatic purpose. At Summerhall, Edinburgh, until 15 August All our Edinburgh festival reviews


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
'Women-obsessed' Prince Andrew lost his virginity at the age of 11 and had scores of sexual experiences before he turned 13, royal biographer claims
Prince Andrew lost his virginity at the age of 11, a royal biographer has claimed. Andrew Lownie made the bombshell claim in his new 456-page tome 'Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York'. The Duke of York's first sexual experience was when he was aged 8, according to an unnamed source. 'He admitted that his second sexual experience came before he turned 12 and when he was 13 he had already slept with more than half-a-dozen girls,' the source said. 'I believe this might be the root of Andrew's problems.' Mr Lownie, a celebrated biographer, gave a jaw-dropping first interview about his book to the Daily Mail's unmissable Palace Confidential show. In it he claimed Andrew had slept with up to 3,000 women and had multiple affairs in his first year of marriage to Sarah Ferguson. His early sexual experiences are said to have been when Andrew 'realised he was obsessed with women'. They are detailed in the book under the subheading 'Randy Andy' - something Mr Lownie says he was called at school, and later by the press. One source close to Andrew told The Telegraph the Duke had previously 'alluded to sexual experiences at what most of us would consider as too young an age, poor chap'. 'The Duke's personal story is far more complex than people realise or have ever been prepared to properly consider,' they added. Mr Lownie believes Jeffrey Epstein was blackmailing the 'over sexed' Duke of York, who will find no way back to royal duties. 'When William comes to power, Andrew will be toast. He sees him as a liability to the monarchy and Andrew has not always been very polite about Catherine. William is very protective of his wife', the author and journalist said. Speaking to Palace Confidential host Jo Elvin, Mr Lownie believes Andrew has had between 1,000 and 3,000 lovers and viewed himself as a sex God because women 'threw themselves' at him. But this led to the Duke of York being blackmailed by Jeffrey Epstein and also made him an 'easy target' for hostile foreign states, Mr Lownie claims. 'Jeffrey Epstein provided women and course then used it to blackmail people and Andrew, I'm afraid, fell into that honey trap, not just with Epstein but many other people as well', he said. 'He's so stupid he doesn't realise how stupid he is', Mr Lownie declared in the bombshell interview available now on the Daily Mail Royals YouTube channel. Based on four years of painstaking research and hundreds of interviews, the new biography of Prince Andrew book lays bare his lofty ambitions, thirst for wealth and hedonistic life. The Duke of York had a controversial friendship with billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, who once declared: 'We are both serial sex addicts. He's the only person I have met who is more obsessed with p***y than me'. Mr Lownie said Andrew 'was apparently a sex addict long before he came into Epstein's orbit. 'He was called Randy Andy, even at school. He's clearly highly sexed. Various numbers have been quoted at me ranging from 1,000 to 3,000 women that he slept with. 'He was good looking, he was a prince and women threw themselves at him. He was a notch on their bedpost and he took advantage of that'. Mr Lownie believes he was unfaithful to Sarah Ferguson on a number of occasions, but so was she. 'There are allegations that both of them had affairs pretty early in the marriage', he said. Mr Lownie claimed that 'girls would be provided for' Andrew and used as kompromat - a Russian word for when compromising material is gathered to blackmail. 'But not just the Russians, the Libyans, countries in the Middle East, people in Kazakhstan, you name it. They've all got kompromat on Andrew', he said. Most notably there was a tall, stunning blonde, who had dyed her hair red, part of a Russian spy ring operating in Britain. She had seduced him in the penthouse of a Knightsbridge hotel, loaned him £25,000 interest-free to pay for one of his daughter's trip to Switzerland. 'She gave him a Mac computer which was bugged', his biographer has said. Mr Lownie has said Andrew was a target for assassination. He said: 'The Argentinian Junta had planned at the time of the Falkands to assassinate him. After the war he went to Mustique with Koo Stark. It was never implemented but it was certainly planned'. He added: 'There have been several assassination threats against Andrew including one by the IRA to get him on a golf course. And this is why his laxity about security, his reluctance to sign his girlfriends into the security gate at Buckingham Palace, is so important'.