World
Standing With History to Say Goodbye
I never had the chance to say hello. But I stood in line to say goodbye.
After Pope Francis died, my editors asked me to fly to Italy in advance of a move next month to take up the post of Rome bureau chief. I recently finished an eight-year tour in Tokyo and had thought I would cover the twilight of Francis’s term.
Instead, after arriving Thursday night to help report on the funeral and upcoming Conclave to elect Francis’ successor, I wandered over to St. Peter’s Square on Friday morning. I wasn’t planning to linger. I hadn’t picked up my press badge yet, and had read my colleagues’ stories about people waiting for hours to pass before Pope Francis’ coffin.
Once I joined the flow of the faithful, I didn’t want to leave the line. I felt an undeniable pull to stay.
It was a holiday in Italy and many locals stood to wait along with thousands of tourists and pilgrims. I heard Italian, Spanish, English and many other languages. There were nuns in their habits, older people in wheelchairs, youth groups dressed in identical T-shirts and carrying matching drawstring backpacks.
Despite the heavy police presence, the order was loose, with some people weaving in and out and passing ahead, as if on a congested freeway on a weekend. There was not much grumbling, perhaps in deference to the solemn reason we were there.
I heard a group from Croatia chant a prayer, repeating after a leader who spoke into a small microphone. We passed through metal detectors to enter the square. A volunteer wearing a lime green vest directed us with a desultory wave, pointing one way and intoning “Papa,” and gesturing in the opposite for “uscita,” — exit.
The mood was more tranquil cheer than mournful. In some ways, it was like any long line, where a mother handed her phone to a restless young daughter to distract her with a video game. At one throttle point, a woman harangued the volunteer holding us back with her arm. The volunteer smiled her way through a skilled de-escalation.
I noticed a man wearing a polo shirt with an insignia from the Oakland sheriff’s department. A long line being an easy place to start a conversation, I asked him if he was from California, since I grew up not far from Oakland. Michigan, he said.
The man, Shawn Hopkins, 57, a sheriff’s deputy in Pontiac, was on a short vacation with his mother and his sister, Katrina, 60, who had traveled from Florida. His mother, Julya Hopkins, 85, converted to Catholicism when she was 20 and married their father; it had been her dream to come to Rome.
Mr. Hopkins, who attended Catholic schools and has been a police officer for 37 years, told me that his work schedule prevented him from regularly making it to mass, but his childhood in the faith tethered him here.
Mr. Hopkins also wanted to honor his partner, who was lost in the line of duty last year. He gave me a medal commemorating his partner, Deputy Sheriff Bradley J. Reckling. He had swapped them for badges all week with police officers around the city.
As for the pope, he said, “Seemed like a decent guy. I didn’t get that into the politics of it all.”
Francis was a divisive pontiff: many loved him, many wished he did far more, and some believed he was too liberal and already had done too much.
Paying respects did not require agreement. Katrina Hopkins, who said Francis was “kind,” observed that people stood in line “not so much because they are faithful but because they want community.” This was the pope’s last gift, she said, bringing us all together.
I met a young woman from Taiwan, Chelsea Yu, 27, who described how strangely emotional it had been to see the pope’s body.
She had spent the last few months exploring death, visiting a cremation temple in Nepal and contemplating how to prepare for the eventual passing of her grandparents. Nothing approached the gravity of death. Seeing the pope in his coffin made her feel genuine grief, in part because she admired his values of inclusiveness and calls to protect the environment.
Inside the basilica, people hoisted their phones for photos of the opulence, until a security guard sternly ordered us to stow our devices. Just before I stepped in front of the altar, a baby dressed in a suit and cradled by his father grabbed the handle on my belt bag, yanking me close. I was reassured by this vibrant sign of new life.
I had stood in line for two and a half hours and had five seconds to bid farewell. I caught a brief glimpse of the pope in his red cassock, lying in the simple coffin he requested, tilted slightly forward but not on an elevated bier. Two members of the Pontifical Swiss Guard flanked the coffin, stiff as the Queen’s Guards at Buckingham Palace.
I am not religious, but I bowed my head and pressed my hands together. Addio, holy father.
World
Video: Athletes and Protesters Criticize U.S. Policies at Winter Games in Milan
new video loaded: Athletes and Protesters Criticize U.S. Policies at Winter Games in Milan
transcript
transcript
Athletes and Protesters Criticize U.S. Policies at Winter Games in Milan
Displays of anti-U.S. sentiment have turned up at the Milan Winter Games. Vice President JD Vance was booed at the Olympics opening ceremony, and anti-ICE protesters took to the streets to demonstrate.
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I think that as a country, we need to focus on respecting everybody’s rights and making sure that we’re treating our citizens, as well as anybody, with love and respect. And I hope that when people look at athletes compete in the Olympics, they realize that that’s the America that we’re trying to represent. If it aligns with my moral values, I feel like I’m representing it. Just because I’m wearing the flag doesn’t mean I represent everything that’s going on in the U.S. So yeah, I just want to do it for my friends and my family and the people that support me.
By McKinnon de Kuyper
February 7, 2026
World
Trump’s special envoy Witkoff and Kushner visit US aircraft carrier amid Iran tensions, talks
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U.S. Special Envoy for Peace Missions Steve Witkoff along with Jared Kushner and Adm. Brad Cooper, the commander of U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM), visited the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea on a scheduled deployment Saturday.
The visit comes amid tensions with Iran as Witkoff said the service members were “keeping us safe and upholding President Trump’s message of peace through strength,” and a day after the U.S. and Iran held talks in Oman to discuss Iran’s nuclear program.
“We thanked the sailors and Marines, observed live flight operations, and spoke with the pilot who downed an Iranian drone that approached the carrier without clear intent,” Witkoff wrote on X. “Proud to stand with the men and women who defend our interests, deter our adversaries, and show the world what American readiness and resolve look like, on watch every day.”
The aircraft carrier left San Diego in November for the Indo-Pacific region and moved to the Middle East in January.
IRAN VOWS TO ‘TARGET US BASES’ IF AMERICAN FORCES LAUNCH AN ATTACK: REPORT
Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner flew to the USS Lincoln on Saturday in the Arabian Sea. (CENTCOM/X)
“I join the American people in expressing our incredible pride in the Sailors and Marines of the Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group,” Cooper told the service members. “Their dedication to the mission and professionalism are on full display here in the Middle East as they demonstrate U.S. military readiness and strength.”
This comes as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said he would meet with President Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday to discuss Iran.
IRANIAN OFFICIAL SAYS NUCLEAR TALKS WILL CONTINUE AFTER US, TEHRAN NEGOTIATIONS HAD ‘A GOOD START’ IN OMAN
Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner flew out to the USS Lincoln with Adam Cooper on Saturday, according to officials. (CENTCOM/X)
“The prime minister believes that all negotiations must include limiting ballistic missiles, and ending support for the Iranian axis,” Netanyahu’s office said, referring to Tehran’s support for groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas.
The two leaders last met in September.
Trump described Friday’s Oman talks, which included Witkoff and Kushner, as “very good.”
Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner greeting Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Hamad Al Busaidi ahead of U.S.-Iran talks, in Muscat, the capital of Oman, on Friday. (Oman Foreign Ministry/Anadolu via Getty Images)
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“Iran looks like it wants to make a deal very badly,” the president told reporters Friday aboard Air Force One en route to Mar-a-Lago. “We have to see what that deal is.”
World
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