Pope Benedict XVI, at age 84, never
goes to sleep before 11pm, prays the Rosary every day, gets up at 5am and uses
a cell phone only accessible by his closest advisers.
In an article published online at
Europaquotidiano.it on Feb. 17, Italian journalist Aldo Maria Valli documents a
day in life of the Pope, who wakes up when Vatican City “is still immersed in
silence.”
Valli says the Bavarian Pope is a
“typical German, a methodic man,” who “likes to organize his day down to the
last detail, according to a very precise schedule.”
Benedict XVI begins his day by
celebrating Mass in the papal chapel at 7am, together with his two personal
secretaries, Father Georg Ganswein and Father Alfred Xuereb.
Other members of the papal household
who also attend the Mass include the Pope’s assistants, Carmela, Loredana,
Cristina and Rosella, who are all consecrated women belonging to the Memores
Domini community of the movement Communion and Liberation, as well as his
personal valet, 46 year-old Paolo Gabriele, who is married and has three
children.
After the Mass, which is always
celebrated in Italian, Benedict XVI has breakfast at 8am, and then heads to
Valli says the Pope likes to stay
informed of current events around the world and reads news reports in various
languages, including German, Italian, English, French and Spanish. He also
devotes some time to answering important correspondence.
Once finished with his morning work,
the Pope holds meetings with visiting heads of state, ambassadors and other
representatives on the second floor of the Apostolic Palace.
The meetings are usually held in the
Papal Library, depending on the number of visitors and the solemnity of the
occasion. The visits usually last for around two hours. On Wednesday, they are
interrupted by the Pope’s General Audience, which takes place at the Paul VI
hall or at St. Peter’s Square.
At 1:30pm, the Holy Father has lunch
with his two secretaries. Rarely do they ever have a guest, and the menu is
usually Mediterranean. Benedict XVI never drinks wine, always orange juice,
Valli says.
After lunch, the Holy Father enjoys
a short walk for no longer than 10 minutes, together with his
secretaries,
around the balconies of the Apostolic Palace, “adorned with lemon and orange
trees and that provide a splendid view of Rome.” On these walks, there is
usually no talking about work.
The Pope rests for one hour, and at
3:30pm, he returns to his study. He devotes the rest of the afternoon to
writing documents, speeches and homilies. He does not use computers, but writes
everything by hand, and afterwards his texts are transcribed and translated.
Valli says the Holy Father is an
“extremely careful” writer who enjoys “retreating into his study to write in
peace, with personal control over his sources by consulting his vast personal
library.”
At 5:30pm, he signs documents prepared
for his signature by his secretaries and then meets with some of his closest
collaborators, such as Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the
Secretary for Relations With States Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, and others.
The Pope then goes downstairs to
take another walk, this time in the Vatican Gardens. He is usually joined by
one or both of his secretaries, and they pray the Rosary before a replica of
the Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes.
A light dinner is usually served at
7:30pm. At 8pm, the Pope returns to his study and later goes to the chapel for
night prayers.
He “never goes to bed before 11pm,”
Valli writes. That’s when the entire Vatican City shuts down for the night,
except for the security guards and a few engineers, Valli says.
“All the proof you need is to just
walk through St. Peter’s Square around that time and see what time the light is
shut off in the window of the top floor of the Apostolic Palace.”
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