Missing Girl's Parents Blessed By Pontiff
Madeleine McCann's parents met with Pope Benedict XVI
ROME, Italy, May 30, 2007 — -- The plight of Madeleine McCann, the 4-year-old English girl who went missing in Portugal on May 3rd, caught special attention again as the girl's parents came to the Vatican to meet Pope Benedict XVI and ask for his blessing and support in their search for their daughter.
At the end of his weekly Wednesday general audience, after giving his catechism and greeting the crowds in several languages, Pope Benedict XVI went up to the section reserved for special guests and greeted people lined up to see him. Kate and Gerry McCann, both Catholics, waited for their turn with particularly mixed emotions.
"In normal circumstances it could be one of the most exciting things we could do in our own lifetime but the fact remains we are here without Madeleine," Gerry McCann told journalists in front of St. Peter's Basilica just before the audience. "This is a very nerve-racking experience."
The Pope was shaking hands, smiling and waving as he made his way along but the mood changed dramatically when he was introduced by his secretary to the McCanns. Both dressed in dark suits (Kate McCann was wearing a rosary around her neck and a green ribbon in her hair) the couple stood apparently on the verge of tears as the Pope approached them and took their hands. Gerry McCann quickly kissed the Pope's ring and Kate McCann quietly listened to the Pope's words and almost in a whisper asked him if he would bless "a picture of Maddie."
The Pontiff gently stroked the photo and made the sign of the cross. He then turned to Gerry McCann and squeezed his hands at length. Gerry McCann was holding Madeleine's favorite stuffed animal, her Cuddle cat. He seemed too upset to speak.
At a news conference in Rome after the meeting, Kate McCann said the Pope "was very kind, very sincere," and said that he told them he would continue to pray for Madeleine's return. Gerry McCann was touched by how personal the Pope had been. "His touch and thoughts and words were more tender than we could have hoped, and that will sustain us during this most difficult time," he said.