The Vatican has released its third
documentary on Pope Leo XIV after one on his formative years as
a missionary in Peru and another on his US origins and early
days in Chicago.
The new docu, titled 'Leo in Rome', charts the young prelate's
activities and interests while based in the Italian capital,
attending peace protests against Euromissiles in 1983, taking
out a pedalo for spin on the lakes of Trentino, snapping himself
with the traditional 'carretti' of Sicily and spending many an
enjoyable evening watching iconic showman Renzo Arbore's cult
and game-changing late-night variety show 'Quelli della Notte'
in 1985.
It also features a funny photo of Leo in his cassock wearing the
trainers he used to play his favourite sport, tennis.
"I had a small black-and-white television in my room that had
been given to me," a former companion and friend, Augustinian
brother Giovanni Lenzi, recalls on camera.
"He (Leo) would come and watch it in my room after dinner.
"It was the time when Renzo Arbore's show 'Quelli della notte'
was on.
"We caught an episode once by chance, and after that we never
missed a single episode.
"Every evening after 10, we'd start watching for an hour, two
hours; for us, it was our break," Lenzi recounts.
"He would then go to his room to study. He'd study until 3 or 4,
then he'd get up at 6."
The old acquaintance also recounts how they went to Chicago
together and the future pope took him to play on the tennis
courts of the nearby oratory, "and it was 40-45 degrees."
The young Augustinians studied, organized theatrical
performances, and "played lots of pranks on each other," says
Father Ciro Musiello, who still laughs when he thinks back to a
prank the future pope played on him, placing an alarm clock in
his closet.
"I thought it was a plane, I opened the window, and instead it
was the radio in the closet..." he says, laughing.
Father Pietro Bellini, for his part, emphasizes the pontiff's
extensive education.
"He has three degrees, the first in mathematics," and "he has a
mind like a clock."
Augustinian Gianfranco Casagrande recalls his mission in Peru
and the time when, due to a landslide, rain, and mud, the then
Cardinal Robert Prevost's van slid into a ravine.
"We were all there screaming, and he, the driver, very coolly,
saw a rock and jumped over it. And he said, 'Come down one at a
time.'
"Providence saw to it that the brave driver was destined to
become the successor of Saint Peter."
The documentary has many iconic photos, from the one in his
cassock with sneakers underneath to those with the young people
he met on so many occasions.
Finally, there is his relationship with Pope Francis, who called
him from Chiclayo to Rome to serve as Prefect of the sensitive
Dicastery of Bishops and later created him a cardinal.
Some other stories were shared by nun Lia Zervino.
When she asked her mother what she thought about the role of
women in the church, her mother commented, "I know I'm more
important than your father," a remark Leo appears to have
digested as he seeks to put more nuns in leadership positions,
continuing Francis's moves.
Finally, there is Valerio Masella, Leo's personal trainer, who
says: "You can see he's been active all his life."
The documentary is a production of the Dicastery for
Communication, produced by journalists Felipe Herrera-Espaliat,
Salvatore Cernuzio, and Tiziana Campisi, with editing by Jaime
Vizcaíno Haro.
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