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Pope Francis dies after recent health struggles

Pope Francis, the first Latin American pope, died following recent hospitalizations, a day after delivering his final Easter blessing

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Pope Francis stands at the main balcony of St. Peter鈥檚 basilica for the Urbi et Orbi message and blessing to the city and the world as part of Easter celebrations, at St Peter鈥檚 square in the Vatican on April 20, 2025.

Tiziana Fabi/AFP/TNS

By Henry Chu
Los Angeles Times

VATICAN CITY 鈥 Pope Francis, the first pontiff from Latin America, whose galvanized the Roman Catholic Church and drew widespread admiration from outsiders almost from the moment of his surprise election to the throne of St. Peter in 2013, has died.

The church鈥檚 266th leader, Francis died Monday morning, the Vatican announced.

Francis鈥 death came the morning after he made a high-profile appearance, giving the traditional Easter blessing from the balcony of St. Peter鈥檚 Basilica in the Vatican following a brief meeting with U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance.

No cause of death was announced in a statement released by Cardinal Kevin Farrell, the Vatican camerlengo who will lead the church until a new pope is named. Francis is weeks removed from a lengthy hospital stay to treat pneumonia and a complex lung infection.


The 87-year-old pontiff remains hospitalized after experiencing breathing issues and aspiration complications but has not been intubated, according to Vatican officials

鈥淒earest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis,鈥 Farrell鈥檚 statement released by the Vatican read. 鈥淎t 7:35 this morning, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father. His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and of His Church.鈥

Francis was beloved by many for his public displays of compassion, commitment to social justice and the scandal-ridden Vatican. He largely hewed to the church鈥檚 conservative line on social issues such as abortion and LGBTQ+ rights but urged clerics not to be 鈥渙bsessed with鈥 those issues. His emphasis on God鈥檚 love and his demand that the church go out and minister to oppressed and needy people impressed even those who disagreed with him.

In the years before his death, the pope was beset by several illnesses. His health again began to deteriorate Feb. 14, when he was admitted to Gemelli hospital for what was described as a respiratory infection. Within days, it had developed into pneumonia in both lungs.

Francis鈥 nearly 12-year in style and tone from that of his predecessor, the late Benedict XVI, a shy scholar who wrote dense theological treatises and saw the church as a holy institution under siege from an increasingly godless, relativistic society. Francis, by contrast, likened the church to a battlefield hospital tending to the spiritually wounded.

His call for a 鈥減oor church鈥 also put him at odds with those inside the Vatican who prized the church鈥檚 splendor and finery as symbols of its transcendent nature. Some conservatives were upset by his choice to shun such trappings as richly adorned papal vestments and the lavish apartment in the penthouse of the Apostolic Palace.

But many more Catholics, and plenty of non-Catholics, were captivated. They during Francis鈥 appearances, eager to see him wade into the crowd, kissing babies and laying hands on the sick and disabled despite security concerns 鈥 an accessible leader whose simple white cap and robes matched the homespun wisdom of his humor-laden homilies.

Less than nine months after his elevation to the papacy, Time magazine .

鈥淭his focus on compassion, along with a general aura of merriment not always associated with princes of the church, has made Francis something of a rock star,鈥 the magazine wrote, crediting him with 鈥減ulling the papacy out of the palace and into the streets, for committing the world鈥檚 largest church to confronting its deepest needs and for balancing judgment with mercy.鈥

Beneath the friendly exterior was also a leader willing to take decisive action. Vatican watchers noted Francis鈥 determination to sweep clean institutions that had become rife with dysfunction, factionalism and accusations of corruption. Soon after his election, he replaced key officials at and appointed a blue-ribbon commission to advise him on overhauling the Curia, the Vatican administration.

Those and other moves hardened the opposition of some within the church, particularly more conservative senior clerics who already felt that Francis was weakening traditional Catholic teaching on personal morality while focusing too much on societal and environmental problems such as the treatment of migrants and climate change.

In 2018, a former Vatican ambassador openly blasted Francis and demanded that he step down, in part because of his handling of the ongoing , which the onetime envoy blamed on 鈥渉omosexual networks鈥 within the church. The pope brushed off the demand.

This year, the pope called out President Donald Trump鈥檚 plan for mass deportations of immigrants. Nearly a decade before, Francis called Trump 鈥渘ot Christian鈥 for wanting to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border.

In a letter to U.S. bishops on Feb. 11, three days before he was hospitalized, Francis wrote: 鈥淭he act of deporting people who in many cases have left their own land for reasons of extreme poverty, insecurity, exploitation, persecution or serious deterioration of the environment, damages the dignity of many men and women, and of entire families, and places them in a state of particular vulnerability and defenselessness.鈥

The pope鈥檚 letter also seemed to correct Vance鈥檚 use of the concept of 鈥渙rdo amoris鈥 as a defense of deportations.

鈥淐hristian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extend to other persons and groups,鈥 Francis wrote. 鈥淭he true ordo amoris that must be promoted is that which we discover by meditating constantly on the parable of the 鈥楪ood Samaritan,鈥 that is, by meditating on the love that builds a fraternity open to all, without exception.鈥

Francis cut his teeth as an authority figure in his native Argentina. He served for 15 years as the archbishop of Buenos Aires, where he gained his reputation for humility by opting to live in a small apartment, ride the bus and cook his own meals.

He was born in the Argentine capital Dec. 17, 1936, the son of Italian immigrants: a railway worker and a homemaker.

As a youth, he had part of a lung removed because of a respiratory illness. A diligent student, he studied to be a chemist in college but decided instead to join the Jesuits, the highly intellectual order known for its focus on education and its engagement with gritty real-world situations. Bergoglio entered the priesthood a few days before turning 33.

His rise within the ranks was steady. Not long after his ordination, he was named the Jesuit provincial for Argentina, which put him in charge of the order鈥檚 activities throughout the country.

During his six-year tenure, events unfolded that would later give rise to the most serious criticism of his life as a priest. Argentina鈥檚 military took power in a right-wing coup and launched a , killing and 鈥渄isappearing鈥 thousands of victims. Two Jesuit priests were kidnapped by the government and tortured for several months in 1976; critics accused Bergoglio of willingly handing the men over.

Exactly what happened remains murky. But one of the two priests 鈥 both survived the ordeal 鈥 said later that he did not believe Bergoglio to be at fault. It also emerged that Bergoglio, at some risk, petitioned the ruling junta to release the clerics.

After giving up the job of provincial, he served as a parish priest in San Miguel, received a doctorate in Germany and then returned to Buenos Aires, becoming archbishop in 1998 and a cardinal three years later, .

Though not a fan of trips to the Vatican or of hierarchy and power plays, Bergoglio evidently earned the respect of his fellow senior prelates, the red-hatted 鈥減rinces of the church.鈥 A credible inside account of the closed-door conclave that elected Benedict to succeed John Paul II in 2005 revealed that Bergoglio, despite not wanting the job, was the group鈥檚 consistent second choice through four rounds of balloting.

Yet he flew far enough below the radar of even veteran Vatican experts that, when Benedict made his 鈥 the first to step down in six centuries 鈥 the Argentine figured on virtually no one鈥檚 list of likely successors. Part of that was due to Bergoglio鈥檚 age, 76; the cardinals were believed wary of choosing someone who might tire and, like Benedict, throw in the towel after just a few years.

The vote for Benedict鈥檚 replacement, inside Michelangelo鈥檚 , concluded the evening of March 13, 2013, after just five rounds and barely 24 hours. Bergoglio, who had impressed his fellow cardinals with a speech on the need to clean up the Vatican, reportedly begged a colleague before the conclave, 鈥淧ray for me,鈥 sensing that a two-thirds majority might flow his way whether he wanted the job or not.

He repeated the request to the jubilant crowds in St. Peter鈥檚 Square after his unveiling as pope, on the basilica鈥檚 balcony.

鈥淵ou know that the duty of the conclave was to give Rome a bishop,鈥 he said, referring to the pontiff鈥檚 role as bishop of the Italian capital. 鈥淚t seems that my brother cardinals picked him from almost the ends of the Earth!鈥

Francis鈥 personal stamp on the ancient office was immediately apparent. He refused to don the traditional red mozzetta, or half-cape, before stepping out in front of the masses.

He also chose Francis as his papal name, a first for the church, signaling the themes of his pontificate. The name honors Francis of Assisi, who lived in service of the poor and marginalized and , and Francis Xavier, a 16th century Jesuit who spread the Gospel in Asia.

The cardinals who voted for Francis made their own break with tradition. They picked a leader from outside Europe, in an acknowledgment of the increasingly global nature of the Catholic Church. And they selected a Jesuit.

鈥淭he Jesuits are used to serving and often resist becoming bishops, so to see one become pope I see as a call to service, a strong summons and not an ambition,鈥 Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi, himself a Jesuit, said after Francis鈥 election. 鈥淲e have a pope who wants to serve.... This is a radical response. It is a refusal of power.鈥

The new pope appeared determined to . He continued to live in a guesthouse on the Vatican grounds instead of the papal apartment, a move that disrupted the usual rhythm of Vatican business and allowed him to exercise greater control over his agenda. He tooled around cheerfully in a used car given to him by an old friend. He called up people who wrote to him with their problems.

Many of the Catholic Church鈥檚 1.2 billion followers were thrilled with their outgoing, down-to-earth new leader, whom the Italian media quickly dubbed the 鈥渨orld鈥檚 parish priest.鈥 The number of followers of the official papal Twitter account skyrocketed, which seemed fitting for a man who proclaimed the internet to be a 鈥済ift from God.鈥

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During Easter week, the pope chose to perform the traditional washing of others鈥 feet . Among those he ministered to were two female prisoners, one of them a Muslim, which raised some hackles in the Vatican.

Conservatives within the church were further riled when, returning from his first overseas trip to Brazil in July 2013, Francis told reporters, 鈥淲ho am I to judge?鈥 when asked about . Two months later, in an interview with a Jesuit magazine, the pontiff lamented that the church too often appeared to be 鈥渙bsessed鈥 with sex and reproductive rights.

鈥淲e cannot insist only on issues related to abortion, gay marriage and the use of contraceptive methods. This is not possible,鈥 he said, then alluded to the consternation he was causing conservative Catholics. 鈥淚 have not spoken much about these things, and I was reprimanded for that.鈥

Francis did not suggest change in the church鈥檚 teaching on these subjects 鈥 鈥 but experts described him as striving to balance dogma with mercy by insisting that 鈥渨e must always consider the person.鈥 In December 2023, Pope Francis approved letting priests bless same-sex couples, while keeping the ban on gay marriage. The formal document from the Vatican鈥檚 doctrine office reiterated the church鈥檚 contention that marriage is a lifelong sacrament between a woman and a man.

The pope also came in for criticism from right-wing commentators such as , who labeled Francis a Marxist because of his blunt condemnations of heartless capitalism and the concentration of wealth in the hands of so few.

鈥淭he promise was that when the glass was full, it would overflow, benefiting the poor,鈥 Francis said. 鈥淏ut what happens instead is that, when the glass is full, it magically gets bigger. Nothing ever comes out for the poor.鈥

Such was Francis鈥 astonishing international popularity that many politicians of all stripes tried to trade on it, allying themselves with his causes.

His attempt to reform the Vatican was marked by both action and a Jesuit penchant for deliberation. New appointees to tried to bring more transparency to a shadowy institution suspected of laundering money, and a panel of eight cardinals from six continents advised Francis on how to overhaul the Curia.

The pope also appointed a commission to tackle the and, in 2020, pledged to finally But critics said he was much too slow to recognize the persistence and pervasiveness of the problem and too trusting in his bishops and other underlings to address it, despite frequent allegations by victims of cover-ups and evasions of responsibility.

Francis tried to head off a growing clash over then-President Joe Biden鈥檚 rights to take Communion by telling the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to defer acting on a document that could potentially deny full church participation to Biden 鈥 only the second Catholic president 鈥 and other politicians who support reproductive rights. When the conservative wing ignored the pope, Francis warned that going forward with the Communion document would become 鈥渁 source of discord rather than unity.鈥 The bishops eventually compromised on the document.

In July 2021, as pope, to have half of his colon removed because of a severe narrowing of his large intestine. He spent 10 days in the hospital, during which he delivered his weekly prayer from a balcony and visited patients in the pediatric cancer ward. He was hospitalized again for several days in March 2023, this time for a pulmonary infection.

In June 2023, the pontiff underwent another operation under general anesthetic to remove scar tissue and repair a hernia in his abdominal wall, problems incurred by his previous colon surgery. By then, he had already taken to using a wheelchair and cane because of persistent knee pain, but still insisted on maintaining a .

Public concern over Francis鈥 health bubbled up again in November 2023, when he excused himself from reading prepared remarks at a meeting with European rabbis because of what the Vatican later called 鈥渁 bit of a cold.鈥 A few hours later, however, he was warmly mingling at a gathering of 7,000 children from 84 countries, fielding their questions, shaking hands and autographing caps and a sports jersey.


Pope Francis is recovering at the Vatican under 24-hour medical care, receiving ongoing respiratory and speech therapy, with doctors reporting no current threat to his life

Francis was clear-eyed about his health and its effect on his ability to carry out papal duties. He revealed in late 2022 that, soon after his election almost a decade before, he had entrusted a to a senior Vatican official in case he was ever too incapacitated to serve.

He cautioned, however, against papal resignations becoming 鈥渁 fashion, a normal thing.鈥

Francis had no problem with the potentially kibitzing presence in his backyard of another pope, Benedict, who retired to a life of contemplation in a villa on the Vatican grounds, which later inspired the 2019 film 鈥 .鈥 Indeed, Francis鈥 first encyclical, issued in July 2013, was essentially a joint effort, a meditation on faith that he happily acknowledged was written mostly by Benedict before he stepped down but supplemented with 鈥渁 few contributions of my own.鈥

When , Francis joined tens of thousands of Roman Catholic faithful in bidding farewell at a rare requiem Mass for a dead pope presided over by a living one.

An avid soccer fan, Francis zealously supported the San Lorenzo team from his native Argentina. In December 2013, members of the squad, which won the title in Argentina鈥檚 top division, met the pope at the Vatican and presented him with a gift: his own team jersey, with 鈥淔rancisco 鈥 Campeon鈥 (鈥淔rancis 鈥 Champion鈥) emblazoned on the back.

The pope was delighted.