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ARTICLE: Pope Set To Celebrate 84th Birthday
14:02 AEST Sun May 16 2004

AFP - Pope John Paul II prepares to celebrate his 84th birthday on Tuesday, buoyed by plans for fresh trips abroad
despite poor health which has led to fears his trademark foreign travel was over.

The pontiff will symbolically blow out the candles on a birthday cake prepared for him by his cook, Sister Germana, and
millions of copies of a book of his memoirs will be published in several languages to mark the occasion.

But his entourage said that the best present for the ailing pope would be his trip on June 5 and 6 to the Swiss capital
Bern, where he is due to meet with thousands of young Roman Catholics.

It will be his first travel out of Italy since a visit last September to Slovakia that sparked fears that it would be
his last trip abroad. During the trip the pope was too weak to read out in full any of his speeches and appeared
exhausted.

And last October, during celebrations to mark the 25th anniversary of his pontificate, senior church figures began
talking openly about the possibility of his death.

But John Paul has in recent months appeared in much better form. The improvement is due, according to medical sources,
to rest, a better diet, speech therapy, physiotherapy and better-adapted treatment for his Parkinson's disease.

The pope is now even considering going to the French shrine at Lourdes in mid-August, a trip that would coincide with
the 150th anniversary of the Catholic dogma of the Immaculate Conception.

John Paul, whose confinement to a wheelchair limits his movements, has received other invitations, including ones to
Mexico and Austria, but the Vatican has not yet said if he will accept any.

Despite his poor health, the pontiff has a busy agenda, with regular public appearances and private audiences.

John Paul, who staunchly opposed the US-led war on Iraq, is due to meet US President George W Bush on June 4. He will
tell him that US policy in the Middle East is misguided, according to a Vatican source.

He was elected in 1978, becoming the first non-Italian pope in four-and-a-half centuries, and the first from eastern
Europe. Karol Wojtyla is the 263rd successor to Saint Peter as Bishop of Rome and the third longest-serving pontiff.

A warm and earthy figure, the pope is immensely popular, imposing his own style and agenda on the papacy, eschewing the
pomp that surrounded his forebears and seeking contact with ordinary people.

He has travelled far more than any of his predecessors, visiting more than 600 cities in 130 countries.

"Don't tire yourself, Lolek," urged the weekly Italian Catholic newspaper Famiglia Cristiana, using the name he was
called as a child. "But don't stop!"

SOURCE: AAP / Ninemsn, Australia
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=8101

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