Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Gerard O’ConnellDecember 06, 2019
The Teutonic cemetery at the Vatican is seen in this 2015 file photo. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)The Teutonic cemetery at the Vatican is seen in this 2015 file photo. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Pope Francis granted the last wish of an 11-year-old Argentinian boy, called Tomasito, who before dying from cancer asked to be buried near the pope in the Vatican.

In 2015, Francis had Tomasito laid to rest in the Teutonic cemetery in the Vatican, close to the place where St. Peter was executed, next to the famous basilica and less than a 5-minute-walk from Santa Marta, the Vatican guest house where he lives.

This moving story was first reported today by Domenico Agasso, the Vatican correspondent for La Stampa. He wrote that Francis first got to know the boy when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires because the secretary of his auxiliary-bishop was an aunt of the boy. Mr. Agasso said that in 2004 doctors that diagnosed that Tomasito had cancer—a tumor of the kidney—when he was just two years old.

In 2015, Francis had Tomasito laid to rest in the Teutonic cemetery in the Vatican, close to the place where St. Peter was executed.

Cardinal Bergoglio was informed and met the child and young boy on a number of occasions. According to La Stampa, Cardinal Bergoglio was “deeply moved” by the exemplary way he faced his illness as he grew older and by his faith in God. Tomasito bore his sufferings with “great courage” and “prepared for death,” Francis recalled, and with his faith “converted his parents, who then got married in church. He did a miracle.”

Further details on this story were added by Elisabetta Piquè (my wife), correspondent for the Argentine daily, La Nacion, after speaking to Bishop Joaquin Mariano Sucunza, the auxiliary bishop of Buenos Aires, who accompanied the boy on his final journey. “Tomasito was a very special boy, very intuitive, who kept going forward [after the early diagnosis] until the illness exploded in his adolescence,” the bishop recalled.

Francis told La Stampa that when it was clear that the end was near, Tomasito’s parents asked him if he had a last wish, and he responded, “I wish to be buried near Pope Francis in the Vatican!”

Tomasito died on July 20, 2013, just over four months after Cardinal Bergoglio was elected pope, and his body was subsequently cremated, Bishop Sucunza told La Nacion.

The boy’s ashes were brought in a box to the Vatican and buried in the Teutonic cemetery where normally only people of Germanic and Flemish origin living in Rome are interred.

Today, Tomasito rests under a simple tombstone in the small cemetery inside the Vatican. His mother and his younger sister have come to the Vatican to pray there, Bishop Sucunza told La Nacion.

“The only thing that he wanted was to be near me, to be buried in the Vatican,” Pope Francis recalled. He made sure the boy’s wish was granted.

We don’t have comments turned on everywhere anymore. We have recently relaunched the commenting experience at America and are aiming for a more focused commenting experience with better moderation by opening comments on a select number of articles each day.

But we still want your feedback. You can join the conversation about this article with us in social media on Twitter or Facebook, or in one of our Facebook discussion groups for various topics.

Or send us feedback on this article with one of the options below:

We welcome and read all letters to the editor but, due to the volume received, cannot guarantee a response.

In order to be considered for publication, letters should be brief (around 200 words or less) and include the author’s name and geographic location. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.

We open comments only on select articles so that we can provide a focused and well-moderated discussion on interesting topics. If you think this article provides the opportunity for such a discussion, please let us know what you'd like to talk about, or what interesting question you think readers might want to respond to.

If we decide to open comments on this article, we will email you to let you know.

If you have a message for the author, we will do our best to pass it along. Note that if the article is from a wire service such as Catholic News Service, Religion News Service, or the Associated Press, we will not have direct contact information for the author. We cannot guarantee a response from any author.

We welcome any information that will help us improve the factual accuracy of this piece. Thank you.

Please consult our Contact Us page for other options to reach us.

City and state/province, or if outside Canada or the U.S., city and country. 
When you click submit, this article page will reload. You should see a message at the top of the reloaded page confirming that your feedback has been received.
Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

A child kicks a football in front of a mural of Nelson Mandela, in Soweto, South Africa, as the country celebrates Freedom Day on April 27. (AP Photo)
Polls abound, and the political ground keeps shifting, but one thing is sure: South Africa is likely to experience a significant political realignment on May 29.
An artistic rendering of Dante Alighieri from ‘Dante: Inferno’ to Paradise (courtesy of PBS) 
Ric Burns’s splendid two-part PBS documentary, “Dante: Inferno to Paradise,” has brought Dante’s achievement beyond the groves of academe and into America’s living rooms.
Robert P. ImbelliMay 10, 2024
With “Cowboy Carter,” her eighth studio album, Beyoncé not only explores the longed-for and carelessly and/or intentionally erased Black past in country music, but also moves the genre forward into a hopefully more expansive future.
Kim R. HarrisMay 10, 2024
An image from the film Petite Maman of two sisters sitting next to each other in winter jackets
“Petite Maman” is a magical-realist story about children and parents, the things we can’t say and learning to understand each other.
John DoughertyMay 10, 2024