VATICAN CITY — Leaders from around the world will gather in Rome for the funeral of Pope Francis, taking place in the Vatican’s St. Peter’s Square. Despite the grandeur of the occasion, a group of underprivileged individuals will be present to pay their respects at a small basilica across town, reflecting Francis’ modest nature and distaste for extravagance.
Among those arriving on Friday are U.S. President Donald Trump and Argentine President Javier Milei. This marks the final day that the body of the Argentine pope will be on display at St. Peter’s Basilica before his coffin is sealed in the evening, in preparation for the funeral on Saturday.
The Vatican said 130 delegations are confirmed, including 50 heads of state and 10 reigning sovereigns.
Watch “Celebrating Francis: The People’s Pope,” beginning Saturday at 3:30 a.m. ET / 12:30 a.m. PT on ABC.

Paying respects
Thousands of individuals have queued for hours to bid farewell to Francis, who passed away at the age of 88 following a stroke on Monday. The unexpectedly large crowds have led the Vatican to keep the basilica open overnight to accommodate all those who wish to pay their respects.
By Friday morning, more than 128,000 mourners had filed past Francis’ open coffin placed in front of the basilica’s main altar – at times praying, at times holding smart phones aloft – despite instructions not to – for a photo of the late pontiff laid out in red robes, a bishop’s pointed miter and a rosary entwined in his hands.
St. Peter’s Basilica remained open most of the second night, closing for just a few hours. Mourners began arriving before dawn, and sprinted into the piazza when security reopened the flows.
Photos: Pope Francis through the years
Pope Francis waves as he arrives for his weekly general audience in the Paul VI Hall, at the Vatican, Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025.
AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino
Giovanni Guarino drove from Naples with his girlfriend to make their final farewells to the Francis, moved by his work to help the young and disadvantaged.
“I hope that his successor follows the footsteps of Francis,” Guarino said.
The three days of public viewing are scheduled to end at 6 p.m. on Friday – an hour earlier than previously announced – after which Francis simple wooden coffin will be sealed.
Cardinal Kevin Farrell will preside over the closing and sealing of the coffin in his role of camerlengo, or interim Vatican administrator. A white cloth will be placed over the pope’s face, and a bag containing coins minted during his papacy will be put in the coffin along with a one-page written account of his papacy.
‘We will see each other again’
Roman neighbors and retired flight attendants Aurelia Ballarini and Francesca Codato came to pay respects to Pope Francis on Friday with very different motivations. Ballarini, 72, was coming to terms with her grief, and Codato, 78, was seeking forgiveness.
For Ballarini, the pope’s death leaves a hole in her life. While only 16 years younger than Francis, she considered him a grandfather figure. Every morning, she would log on to Facebook for his daily greeting, and respond “with a couple of words.”
“He gave everything, gave all of himself, up to the end,” said Ballarini. “I spent the last two days crying. I was not well after his passing – I can’t even say the word. For me he flew away. One day, we will see each other again.
Codato said she feels tremendous guilt toward Francis, having forsaken him out of devotion to one of his predecessors, St. John Paul II. When Francis became pope “he was an outsider to me.”
“I feel guilty, because through videos I have seen in these days, I have understood he was a man of enormous humanity, close to the simple people,” she said. “So I came to ask forgiveness, because I feel guilty towards him, like a worm.”
Cardinals ‘are in discussions’
The work of the conclave to choose a new pope won’t start until at least May 5, after nine days of public mourning.
Cardinals have been also been arriving in Rome, with 113 meeting Thursday morning to discuss church business. They will meet again Friday before taking a break for the weekend.
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Cardinal Franois-Xavier Bustillo, who hosted Pope Francis during his last papal trip, to Corsica, last year, remembered Francis as “a free man” who “humanized the church without desacralizing it.”
He describe the atmosphere inside the meetings as “good,” but said they were not yet “at the point of decisions; we are in discussions.”
Papal burial
In keeping with Francis’ embrace of the marginalized, the Vatican said a group of poor and needy people will meet the pope’s coffin to pay homage to him when it arrives at St. Mary Major basilica for burial on Saturday. It has already become a point of pilgrimage.
The tomb is being prepared behind a wooden barrier within the basilica that he chose to be near an icon of the Madonna that he revered and often prayed before.
Photos released by the Vatican on Friday show the marble tombstone flat against the pavement, with the simple engraving in Latin that he requested in his last testament: “Franciscus”
Royals and leaders
Trump, who is traveling with first lady Melania Trump, is scheduled to arrive Friday, after Francis’ coffin has been sealed.
Among the other foreign dignitaries confirmed for the papal funeral are:
– Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and first lady Olena Zelenska
– French President Emmanuel Macron
– British Prime Minister Keir Starmer
– Prince William
– Spain’s King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia
– Hungarian President Viktor Orbán
– Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
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