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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Joshua McElwee

Pope Francis to offer blessing from hospital window in first public appearance in weeks

Pope Francis is set to make his first public appearance in more than five weeks, offering a blessing from his hospital window.

Francis, who is battling double pneumonia, will appear at his room window at Rome’s Gemelli Hospital on Sunday.

The 88-year-old was admitted to the hospital on Valentine’s Day with a severe respiratory infection. His illness has required evolving treatment.

The Pope has only been seen by the public once during his hospital stay, in a photo the Vatican released last week, showing the pontiff at prayer in a hospital chapel.

Francis wants to come to the hospital window around noon on Sunday to give a greeting and blessing, the Vatican said in a brief statement on Saturday.

This picture released by the Vatican Press Office shows Pope Francis concelebrating a mass inside his private chapel at the Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic in Rome (Vatican)

The Pope usually offers a weekly noon prayer in St Peter's Square on Sundays. Francis has not been able to do this since 9 February, before going in to hospital.

The Vatican said Francis was not expected to deliver the prayer this Sunday, in a sign that the pope is still recovering from pneumonia, but would come to the window for a greeting.

Francis is prone to lung infections because he had pleurisy as a young adult and had part of one lung removed.

His hospitalisation has been the most serious health crisis of his 12-year papacy, and the longest he has been out of public view since his election as pontiff in 2013.

The latest Vatican bulletins about the Pope’s medical condition have been cautiously upbeat. On Friday, the Vatican said Francis had been reducing his use of high-flow oxygen to help breathe.

One senior cardinal, however, said on Friday that it could take time for the Pope to “relearn to speak“ after using oxygen during his hospital stay.

“The Pope is doing very well, but high-flow oxygen dries everything out,” said Cardinal Victor Fernandez, the Vatican's chief doctrine official. “He needs to relearn how to speak, but his overall physical condition is as it was before.”

The Vatican has not given a time for the Pope's discharge from hospital, but plans for a meeting with King Charles on 8 April have raised the possibility that Francis could be back at his Vatican residence by then.

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