The crowds have filled the Plaza de San Pedro in the Vatican since the death of the Pope was announced on Monday, and the entire city-state is full of activity.
Many visitors have seen the body of Pope Francis, who has been in the state since the state, while others seem happy to take a selfie in front of the imposing Tuscan colonnates that border the square.
Ambulance personnel teams, mounted police officers, members of the Swiss Guard, the Vatican Army itself, and the Italian special forces, some of the anti -ddrone weapons, align the square.
In St Peter’s Square, Al Jazeera spoke with people from many countries, including Morocco, Kenya and the United States.
Some had traveled to Rome hearing news of the Pope’s death, but many lived or visited Rome. Some had extended their stay to eat the funeral.
Francisco Horfa, a 33 -year -old theology student from the Southeast Asian nation of Timor Eastern, was in Rome to be ordered as a deacon on May 7.
Proudly stirred the flag of red, yellow and black Timor with a compatriot in the square while describing this period of mourning as “emotional and full of prayer.”
He said the Pope had visited his country of origin in September and left a “great impression” in his people.
It was reported that approximately half of the population of 1.3 million nations attended their mass on the outskirts of the capital Dili, as the Nation celebrated for its reconciliation with its neighbor Indonesia, of which it achieved independence in 2002.

Annalia Alia, a 69 -year -old woman from the Philippines and a devout Catholic, had Pope Francis when she visited the country of Southeast Asia in 2015.
Now, 10 years later, he had seen his body lying on a open wooden coffin on the main altar of the Basilica of San Pedro.
“It feels as if everything has been a complete circle, I saw it in life and now I saw it in death,” he said. He had bone an “indigreased and emotional experience,” he added.
She had come to Rome for the jubilee, when pilgrims around the world travel to the city to seek spiritual renwal.
Duration of the year of the jubilee, the sacred doors in the four papal basilicas of Rome open, which allows the pilgrims to pass them through them to receive a plenary indulgence (a forgiveness of the sins).
Flanked by her two daughters, she said she felt lucky to have her leg in Rome when the Pope died, but wanted to go to her hotel to rest, since she felt too rejected.

Ernest Damascus, a 55 -year -old pilgrim from the Philippines, said he had come to Rome “hoping to see the Pope’s wave from the balcony (with a view to the Plaza de San Pedro), but instead he feels like artless for the father of a father.”
He brought a “fresh and different approach” to his papacy, with more teachings with his feet on the ground compared to their predecessors that resonated with many Catholics worldwide, Damascus said.