VATICAN CITY, April 1, 2006

John Paul II Mourned One Year Later

On Anniversary Of Death, Pilgrims Flood Vatican, Push For Sainthood

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    On the eve of the first anniversary of the death of Pope John Paul II, pilgrims visit his tomb in Vatican City. As Allen Pizzey reports, there has been a major push to make the beloved pope a saint.

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    As the one-year anniversary of Pope John Paul II's death approaches, Allen Pizzey looks at the intense campaign to make the beloved pope a saint.

    • Polish pilgrims pay homage to the tomb of Pope John Paul II, in St.Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Saturday, April 1, 2006, a day before the first anniversary of the death of the Polish-born pope.

      Polish pilgrims pay homage to the tomb of Pope John Paul II, in St.Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Saturday, April 1, 2006, a day before the first anniversary of the death of the Polish-born pope.  (AP Photo)

    • People wait in line to enter St. Peter's Chatedral to visit the grave of the late Pope John Paul II in the Vatican crypt April 1, 2006 in St.Peter's Square, Vatican City.

      People wait in line to enter St. Peter's Chatedral to visit the grave of the late Pope John Paul II in the Vatican crypt April 1, 2006 in St.Peter's Square, Vatican City.  (GETTY IMAGES)

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(CBS/AP)  Pilgrims marked the first anniversary of Pope John Paul II's death, praying by his tomb and preparing for an evening vigil in St. Peter's Square at the exact time of his passing Sunday night.

The Polish Embassy to the Holy See said it expected some 10,000 Poles from John Paul's homeland to participate in the Vatican's anniversary commemorations, which also include a Mass on Monday celebrated by Pope Benedict XVI. The city said it was expecting at least 100,000 to 150,000 pilgrims over the weekend.

On Saturday, groups of pilgrims milled about the square, some toting Solidarity flags and banners. John Paul was a firm supporter of Poland's pro-democracy trade union and is credited with helping to overthrow communism in 1989.

Other pilgrims visited John Paul's simple white marble tomb in the grottoes underneath St. Peter's Basilica, kneeling in prayer and tossing flowers and notes onto his grave.

"It is my biggest dream in life to visit his tomb," said Henry Adamczyk, 55, of Lubin, Poland, who said he came to Rome for the anniversary.

"I was happy to hear he died, so he can go and visit his father in heaven," he said while visiting St. Peter's on Saturday.

Pope Beneditct XVI has put his predecessor on the fastest ever track to sainthood, waiving the modern five-year waiting period. He appointed Monsignor Slawomir Oder as the "chief postulator," a kind of holy super lobbyist to promote and defend John Paul’s case for sainthood, reports CBS News correspondent Allen Pizzey.

The Chief Postulator told CBS that the new Pope ordered him to do the job “quickly but strictly.”

The postulator's office has received more than 5,000 thousand e-mails and letters attesting to the late pope's holiness.

"I receive letters that say, 'Monsignor Oder, don't waste your time. He is a saint already,'" Oder says.

But three miracles must be attributed to John Paul for the process to become inevitable. At least two claims are already being seriously studied, including a nun in France who like John Paul suffered from Parkinson's disease and says she was cured after praying for his intercession, Pizzey reports.

John Paul died April 2 at 9:37 p.m. in his apartment in the Vatican's Apostolic Palace, surrounded by Polish prelates and nuns and his doctors. The cause of death was blood poisoning, as well as kidney and heart failure brought on by a urinary tract infection.

He had suffered for years from Parkinson's disease, and by the end of his life was unable to speak to the faithful, managing only to bless them weakly with his hand.

Sunday's anniversary vigil, to be led by Cardinal Camillo Ruini, is likely to recall the scenes in St. Peter's in the days and weeks before John Paul's death, during which tens of thousands of people lit candles and prayed silently underneath the papal apartment windows.

Ruini, the vicar for Rome, is expected to lead the faithful in recitation of the Rosary prayer, and Benedict is expected to address the crowd near the time of John Paul's death.

On Monday, Benedict celebrates Mass inside the Basilica which is expected to be attended by John Paul's longtime private secretary, the newly elevated Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, archbishop of Krakow.

Edith Degroot, a 37-year-old Dutch businesswoman visiting the Vatican on Saturday, said she was in Rome last year at this time.

"It was impressive, because so many people came to honor him," she said. "I am not Catholic but I enjoy the way they celebrate faith."

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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