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dixieagle
Guest
Personal anecdote: in 2001, my husband, daughters and I were blessed to have a private audience with Pope John Paul II while in Rome. We think it was arranged by our archbishop. The day before the audience, a nun called to let us know where to go, what to wear, etc. NO mention of veils, head coverings, etc., at all - just modest-length skirts, shoulders covered,etc. Several other families waited with us for the audience, with the women all suitably dressed, but only one woman with a head covering - a woman from Spain who wore a mantilla, as was clearly her custom. No one handed us chapel veils. If someone had, we would have gladly put them on. I have included a photo.It’s actually required there. When you go to an audience with the pope, they’ve got complimentary chapel veils for any women who doesn’t have her head covered. Perhaps it’s a clue to the fact that the practice was never meant to die.
I read an anecdote about a very feminist women who went to have an audience with the pope, and refused the veil. Apparently she thought it was degrading (she seemed to be fully aware of the whole obedience thing). Finally, she managed to arrange it with bobby pins so that it wasn’t touching her head. Amazing how much pride some people have.