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The Swiss Guards and Vatican gendarmes stood by and gamely let 6-year-old Wenzel Wirth run around Pope Francis. Photo: AP

Adorable moment boy interrupts Vatican ceremony, and Pope Francis doesn’t mind

  • Pope Francis praises the freedom – albeit ‘undisciplined’ – of a disabled child who climbed onto the stage to play during the pontiff’s general audience
  • Boy’s father says son has behavioural problems and speech limitations
Pope Francis

The boy had escaped his mother’s grasp and Pope Francis watched as he scuffled across the smooth granite Vatican podium, past the outstretched arm of an archbishop and into the orbit of someone more intriguing than the pontiff.

Francis laughed. The Swiss guardsman on his right flank remained stoic as the boy tugged on his gloved hands and pulled on the fringes of his blue and yellow-striped uniform.

Wenzel Wirth, 6, is not even half as tall as the polished halberd staff wielded by the Swiss guardsmen for centuries.

The Swiss Guards and Vatican gendarmes stood by and let the young boy run around. Photo: Reuters

His mother rushed to the stage to pull Wenzel away. She explained to Francis that he is mute, Reuters reported.

Francis issued a decree, of sorts. Let him play.

“This child cannot speak. He is mute. But he can communicate,” Francis said in Spanish to the crowd of pilgrims in the audience, whom came to hear clerical leaders give a catechism lesson in various languages.

“And he has something that got me thinking: He is free. Unruly … but he is free.”

The boy tugged on the hand of a Swiss Guard. Photo: AP

Wenzel had something in common with Francis, his mother explained to the pope – blood from the same South American country.

“He is Argentine. Undisciplined,” Francis joked to Archbishop Georg Ganswein, seated to his right.

The boy’s father said that Wenzel suffers from behavioural problems as well as his speech limitations, and that the family at home tries simply to let him express himself as he can. Photo: EPA

Ariel Wirth, the boy’s father, told the Associated Press that his family journeyed from their home in Verona in northern Italy to be in the general audience.

The long trip and wait to get inside took a toll on Wenzel, he speculated, and the boy needed to stretch.

Wirth explained it was not a planned moment that Wenzel would approach one of the most guarded men on earth, or ignore the gestures of Ganswein, the personal secretary of Pope Benedict XVI whose chiselled features have earned him the nickname “Gorgeous Georg”.

The boy’s mother briefly spoke to the pope as she tried to pull the child away, saying that he was mute. Photo: Reuters

Wirth explained his son has some behavioural problems and challenges with speech.

“We try to let him be free. He has to express himself, and we live without hiding his problems,” he said.

Francis, mindful of a lesson, left the crowd with a similar thought.

“When Jesus says we have to be like children, it means we need to have the freedom that a child has before his father,” he said.

“I think this child preaches to all of us.”

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