Late Pope John Paul II-Unfulfilled Wish to Take a Dip in Holi Ganga

As preparations proceed for the beatification of Pope John Paul II — a ceremony scheduled for May 1 at the Vatican and one of the most anticipated religious events of the year — a quieter, more personal story has emerged from those who knew him: that among his unfulfilled wishes was a desire to visit India and immerse himself in the holy waters of the Ganga.
The story surfaces in accounts from Indian Catholic clergy who had extended invitations to the late Pope on multiple occasions and who describe a genuine, long-standing fascination with India's spiritual traditions. John Paul II visited India twice during his papacy — in 1986 and 1999 — but the specific wish to bathe in the Ganga, as millions of Hindu pilgrims do, was apparently never realized.
The image is striking: a Pope who spent his papacy reaching across the boundaries of faith, who kissed the soil of over 100 countries, who met with the Dalai Lama and prayed at the Western Wall, wishing to participate in one of Hinduism's most ancient acts of devotion.
Those who interpret this story charitably see it as consistent with John Paul II's documented commitment to interfaith dialogue — a recognition that spiritual truth could be found in traditions outside his own. His 1986 Assisi gathering, where he brought together leaders from dozens of world religions to pray for peace, remains one of the defining gestures of his papacy.
Whether the story reflects a literal plan or a more metaphorical aspiration, it adds a dimension to the portrait of a man whose spiritual imagination was evidently not confined by the boundaries of a single tradition.
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