Archive for Saturday, April 19, 2008
A papal visit calls for a litany of planning
The world body’s chief of protocol says planning was much harder than for President Bush. For one thing, Benedict can’t be touched.
The pope may be viewed by his church as infallible, but for his U.N. visit, it was Alice Hecht’s job to make sure everyone else would be as close to perfect as possible.
Hecht, United Nations chief of protocol, said that prepping for Friday’s visit by Pope Benedict XVI was much more difficult than getting ready for a state visit by President Bush, who didn’t move around the building as much or require the same kind of security.
Hecht, a U.N. veteran who helped oversee the search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq before becoming protocol chief, is not easily fazed.
She guided Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the pontiff on the General Assembly dais, whispering when each should sit and where they should stand.
“It’s like a play with a constantly moving set,” she said. “You have to make sure the actors are in the right place at the right time. And you have to rehearse. A lot.”
The crack protocol team from the Vatican, which also will organize the distribution of Communion to 55,000 people Sunday during 18 minutes at Yankee Stadium, visited twice in the last year to help out.
The pope is to be addressed as “Holy Father” by Roman Catholics, she learned, and as “His Holiness” by non-Catholics. No one is to touch him. To make sure, he stood on a special 6-inch-high square platform while greeting U.N. diplomats outside the main hall, preventing anyone from indulging in a papal bear hug.
The pope is considered a head of state and thus outranks the secretary-general – not to mention the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, who, though viewed by followers as a living god, does not represent a state according to U.N. protocol.
“What was unexpected was that everything worked the way it was planned,” she said. “You always expect something to go wrong. He did come 20 minutes early, but he left right on schedule.”
- The story behind Philippe's and its famous French dip
- No rescue in sight for what ails economy
- Frank talk of Obama and race in Virginia
- A home page for bidding on foreclosures
- The real Americans
- $10.1-trillion national debt? Let's cut taxes!
- This time, Roe vs. Wade really could hang in the balance
- Mishaps mark John McCain's record as naval aviator
- Acid reflux disease hits Americans hard
- Countrywide mortgage pact may be worth $3.5 billion to California loan holders
- Voter registration trends appear to favor Democrats
- Barack Obama accuses Republicans of distracting voters from the economy
- A new Dodgers lineup rises with Joe Torre
- Steve Schmidt: The driving force behind John McCain
- European banks struggle to limit turmoil
- Countrywide mortgage pact may be worth $3.5 billion to California loan holders
- 'Beverly Hills Chihuahua' tops weekend box office
- World's stock markets sink; Dow dips below 10,000
- Man and woman shot to death in car in L.A.'s Hyde Park area
- Excavation begins in Moorpark in search of child murder victim
