Pope reads speeches unassisted after illness

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Pope greeting a man

Pope Francis had seven meetings the morning of December 7 where he read out three speeches unassisted for the first time in nearly two weeks.  

The pope, who has been recovering from a bout of bronchitis, said that he was feeling “much better” on December 6 but opted to have an aide read his general audience catechesis, explaining to the crowd that he still had difficulties if he “talks too much.”  

The following day, the pope seemed to show improvement in this respect as well by reading out his speeches during his meetings with members of the Focolare Movement, Italy’s National Association of St. Paul, and new ambassadors to the Holy See.   

Pope Francis could be seen reading the speeches in videos released by Vatican Media, one day after the Italian news aggregator site “Il Sismografo” published a commentary saying the pope’s “health condition does not look good,” citing the pope’s decision not to read his speeches aloud.  

Since November 26, the pope has only offered brief off-the-cuff remarks during many of his audiences, while his longer prepared speeches were either read by an aide or distributed to his guests, as Pope Francis recovered from what he has described as “very acute infectious bronchitis.”  

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s secretary of state, also read Francis’ keynote speech to the U.N.’s COP28 climate conference on December 2 after the pope’s trip to the climate summit in Dubai was canceled at the request of his doctors, according to a Catholic News Agency report.  

In addition to his three speeches in early December, Pope Francis had private meetings with the former archbishop of Paris Michel Aupetit; Archbishop Yagop Jacques Mourad of Homs, Syria; Archbishop Jan Romeo Pawłowski, the apostolic nuncio to Greece; and Archbishop Nareg Alemezian of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

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