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WEDNESDAY, 22 MAY 2013
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Cardinals draw lots to settle guesthouse rooms
Reuters
The bedroom of the suite at the Vatican's Santa Marta hotel where the newly elected pope will stay for a few weeks while his apartment in the Apostolic Palace is being renovated. (AP Photo/L'Osservatore Romano, ho)
The bedroom of the suite at the Vatican's Santa Marta hotel where the newly elected pope will stay for a few weeks while his apartment in the Apostolic Palace is being renovated. (AP Photo/L'Osservatore Romano, ho)
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VATICAN CITY: Before they get down to the business of choosing a new pope this week, the 115 “cardinal electors” are holding another ballot – drawing lots to decide which room they get in the Vatican guesthouse that will be their home during the conclave.

Some will be disappointed, because the five-story Santa Martha House inside the walls of the Vatican City has only 106 “suites.” Despite the grandiose name, these rooms have just a single bed, bathroom and a small desk space.

The nine cardinals who miss out on the suites will have to settle for more spartan single rooms.

However basic the Santa Martha accommodation, it is a step up from where cardinals used to sleep before the guesthouse was built in 1996 on the orders of Pope John Paul II.

During earlier conclaves, they had makeshift beds in temporary quarters in the Vatican, with curtains often all that divided one space from another, like on a hospital ward.

As well as allocating the rooms fairly, drawing lots is designed to make sure factions from one country or supporting one candidate are given rooms randomly to prevent them from consulting on strategy from adjoining parts of the guesthouse.

Standing empty for the new pope will be the larger but nevertheless simple Room 201, the sole apartment in the yellow-stone residence block.

It has carved wooden fittings and additional rooms to host meetings for the new pontiff, who could live there for a few weeks until the papal Apostolic Palace has been renovated.

Adding to Santa Martha’s austere feel, TV, telephone, Wi-Fi and other means of communication are blocked to maintain the secrecy of the conclave.

Santa Martha is only a few hundred meters from the Sistine Chapel where the cardinals will start the process Tuesday of electing a successor to Pope Benedict XVI after his decision last month to step down.

Cardinals, many of them elderly, will be able to use a shuttle bus to get to the chapel if they do not want to walk or if Rome sees one of its spectacular spring storms.

Two doctors will be on hand in case any of the cardinals fall ill, while priests will hear confessions in a variety of languages. Like the cardinals, they will be sworn to secrecy. Cooks and cleaners will also be there to attend to the needs of the cardinals.

 
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on March 12, 2013, on page 10.
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Story Summary
The nine cardinals who miss out on the suites will have to settle for more spartan single rooms.

However basic the Santa Martha accommodation, it is a step up from where cardinals used to sleep before the guesthouse was built in 1996 on the orders of Pope John Paul II.

As well as allocating the rooms fairly, drawing lots is designed to make sure factions from one country or supporting one candidate are given rooms randomly to prevent them from consulting on strategy from adjoining parts of the guesthouse.

Standing empty for the new pope will be the larger but nevertheless simple Room 201, the sole apartment in the yellow-stone residence block.
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