Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Did you see the Pope?

The counter at Pasticceria Al Duomo in Albano.

"How was the trip?  Did you see the Pope?" wondered a colleague I hadn't seen since the end of the academic year.

The Pope? What?

In late May through early June I spent about three weeks at the Vatican Observatory in the hills outside Rome, visiting with colleagues there (in March I was appointed an adjunct scholar of the Observatory, one of nine on the staff) and enjoying the chance to explore the Observatory library's collection of historical materials (which includes such marvels as Maria Agnesi's book on calculus, thought to be the first published math treatise by a woman).

The biannual Vatican Observatory summer school (VOSS) for young astronomers was on while I was there, and it was great to be able to pop into lectures about planetary geology or comets.  I shared delicious lunches with the faculty coming to teach and with students from 21 different countries.  I tagged along on their field trip to Tivoli to see the famous water gardens.  And to the private audience they had with Pope Francis.

VOSS audience with Pope Francis.  I am on the right side, toward the back.
So yes, I met the Pope.

To say that feels like a show stopper, an experience that effaces all the rest, and so I haven't written about it. But a few days ago, I happened upon Garret Gundlach, SJ's reflection at the Jesuit Post whose Jesuit confrere's only question about his time in another iconic spot, Yellowstone, was "Did you see a grizzly bear?"  "Yes," he sighs, "I saw a grizzly bear."  But wait, he says, there's more.

We live in a time where icons and logos help us thread our way through an overwhelming amount of information.  I'm grateful for those easy to recognize signs when I'm trying to find the train to the airport in the chaos of Termini station, or the app on my phone that gives me a weather report.  But like Gundlach, I worry about reducing each other's experiences — to say nothing of each other  — to a set of binary flags.  Did you see a grizzly bear?  the Liberty Bell?  the Pope?  Are you liberal or conservative?  Democrat or Republican?  Catholic or Muslim? Immigrant or citizen?

Asunta and Gina at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences while 
we waited to meet Pope Francis.
It would be one thing if we held those labels loosely, understanding that the grizzly bear could have been sleeping or charging, encountered around the corner on a trail or in a zoo, and that all of these are quite different experiences.  And grasping that not every Republican supports Donald Trump (1 in 5 does not).  But we do not.  What helps us locate the bathroom in the train station blinds us in very dangerous ways, it flattens our experiences, it deadens our relationships.


I met the Pope, I shook his hand, I made him laugh when my tongue got tangled around a Spanish word.  It was an extraordinary experience, do not mistake me.  But there's more, and all of it equally outside the bounds of my ordinary life.

I met the woman in the coffee shop, who helped me navigate the midmorning scrum at the counter, and taught me the name of my favorite sweet rolls. Her smile lit up my mornings, it still does when I think of it. I met Gina and Asunta, who cooked for us, who put our lunches together for the field trips and came with us, too.  I wish I could wear a red leather jacket with Asunta's panache! I met the woman in the local shop who helped me pick out cheeses and salumi, and made sure I got some of the local bread to have with it.  I met Jinia, a young astrochemist from India, another chemist among all these astronomers. These were extraordinary experiences, too, to travel a quarter of the way around the world in a few hours, to be in a place and for a moment, to be part of it, not just part of the background, but seen for who I am.


There's more!  In another moment of interesting parallels, Gundlach notes: BUT YELLOWSTONE IS A SUPERVOLCANO!  Albano sits on a volcano, too, and it's not as dormant as people thought.  Check out the article, the aerial photo is incredible!

You can watch a bit of the audience at Vatican TV, here (in Italian), and listen to a report in English from Vatican Radio here.

8 comments:

  1. Enjoyed the highlights of your trip (last paragraph)in addition to meeting Pope Francis!

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    1. The trip was amazing, and I look forward to going again, for just those experiences -- I miss my espresso and ciambelli!

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  2. Hello! I´ve been reading here for a year or so (don´t quite remember how I got here but...glad I did!). I´m a Catholic nun living and working in Bolivia (originally from NJ). I have found myself drinking in everything I can related to the idea of non-dual consciousness (mainly listening to talks by Fr. Richard Rohr) and this resonates so nicely with that. Bravo! Enjoyed this, and everything else I´ve read here. Blessings, and thank you!

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    1. It's lovely to meet you - and I'm glad you've found this space as well. Grace and peace and many blessing to you, too.

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  3. Thanks Michelle for this reflection! My husband and I were fortunate enough to visit Rome last year and we did experience many of the "biggies", but it was the ordinary things that we really remember: the smell of honeysuckle pervading the city streets, the adventure of riding the bus and figuring out the transit system, the warm welcome of the staff at our small hotel, St. Peter's square practically empty at dusk, the awe of kneeling in front of St. Paul's remains, etc. It is these more ordinary experiences that tug at our hearts today!

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    1. Thank you for sharing those memories, too! Figuring out the transit system was a great delight for me, too. Your experience of St. Peter's at dusk reminding me of walking along the Tiber in the early morning, the light was gorgeous, the city (relatively) quiet!

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  4. Did you tell him you were a chemist, too? En Espanol?

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    1. I didn't...perhaps next time? :)

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