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June 16-23, 1983
On June 16-23, 1983, the seemingly impossible happened. With Poland reeling from the imposition of martial law, Pope John Paul II visited for the second time after being chosen as the leader of the Catholic church. The visit therefore had triple significance – religious, social and political.
Pope John Paul II was able to galvanize millions of Poles by promoting and projecting an image of a strong, free Poland. As the leader of a global religious movement, the Pope was able to utilize his political power by reaching out to governments who supported an independent Poland, such as the United Kingdom.
John Paul II, Latin Johannes Paulus, original name Karol Józef Wojtyła, (born May 18, 1920, Wadowice, Poland—died April 2, 2005, Vatican City; beatified May 1, 2011; canonized April 27, 2014; feast day October 22), bishop of Rome and head of the Roman Catholic Church (1978–2005), the first non-Italian pope in 455 years …
nine triumphant days
CRACOW, Poland, June 10 — Pope John Paul II, in nine triumphant days in Poland, has made himself a totally novel and incalculable element in future EastWest relations.
It was during this pilgrimage that the Pope uttered the famous words: “And I cry out from the depths of this millennium – let your Spirit descend and renew the face of the earth. The face of this land.”
According to the church, John Paul performed his first miracle on a French nun with Parkinson’s disease in June 2005, several months after he died, while he performed the second miracle on a Costa Rican woman with an aneurism in 2011, six years after his death. John Paul served as Pope from 1978 until he died in 2005.
In 1979 The New York Times reported that Agca, whom it called “the self-confessed killer of an Istanbul newspaperman”, had described the Pope as “the masked leader of the crusades” and threatened to shoot him if he did not cancel his planned visit to Turkey, which went ahead in late November 1979.
If it hadn’t been for John Paul II’s first pilgrimage to Poland in June 1979, there would have been no Solidarity.
Some 18 million people were believed to have greeted the Pope during his stay in Mexico. The Pope’s second foreign visit was to his homeland, Poland, in June 1979.
During his 1979 pilgrimage to Poland, John Paul II said the famous words: “Let the Spirit descend and renew the face of the earth. This earth.” He said these words at a special moment – during the first address as a Polish pope to his compatriots on the Polish land.
On 19 September 1996, the Pope traveled to Saint-Laurent-sur-Sèvre, France to meditate and pray st the adjacent tombs of Saint Louis de Montfort and Blessed Marie Louise Trichet. On 22 March 1998, during his second visit to Nigeria, he beatified the Nigerian monk Cyprian Michael Iwene Tansi.