On May 13, 1981, during his weekly audience in Rome’s St. Peter’s Square, Pope John Paul II was shot. During that shocking attack, he sustained severe injuries from gunshots fired by 23-year-old Mehmet Ali Agca, an escaped Turkish convict.>>>CONTINUE FULL READING HERE....CONTINUE READING THE ARTICLE FROM THE SOURCE
The assailant discharged four shots, one striking the pontiff in the abdomen and narrowly avoiding vital organs, while another hit the Pope’s left hand. Additionally, one bullet wounded 60-year-old American Ann Odre in the chest and another one injured 21-year-old Jamaican Rose Hill in the arm.
Agca’s gun was knocked out of his hand by bystanders, leading to his subsequent arrest by the police. The Pope underwent extensive surgery at Rome’s Gemelli Hospital, remaining in critical but stable condition for over five hours.
John Paul II, revered by nearly 600 million Roman Catholics globally, was ordained Pope in 1978 as the first Polish and non-Italian pope in over four centuries. Proficient in seven languages and Latin, he was renowned for his fearless public engagements and extensive travels.
Notably, just four days after the attempt on his life, he extended forgiveness to his would-be assassin from his hospital bed. After three weeks of recovery, the Pontiff came out fully healed from his wounds.
The motives driving Mehmet Ali Agca’s attempt on the life of the Roman Catholic Church’s leader remained unclear and have remained a mystery to this day. Despite the trauma, in 1983, Pope John Paul II visited Agca in prison, extending a gesture of forgiveness to him. He also pleaded with the authorities to pardon Agca>>>CONTINUE FULL READING HERE