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Pope calls Buzz Aldrin to mark 1969 moon landing

THIS handout photo taken and released on July 20, 2025 by the Vatican press office, Vatican Media shows Pope Leo XIV looking through a telescope during his visit at the Vatican Observatory, Specola in the summer papal estate in Castel Gandolfo, 40 km southeast of Rome. The newly elected Pope Leo XIV, revives a long-standing papal tradition paused under Francis, as Castel Gandolfo prepares to welcome a pope for the first time in over a decade.
THIS handout photo taken and released on July 20, 2025 by the Vatican press office, Vatican Media shows Pope Leo XIV looking through a telescope during his visit at the Vatican Observatory, Specola in the summer papal estate in Castel Gandolfo, 40 km southeast of Rome. The newly elected Pope Leo XIV, revives a long-standing papal tradition paused under Francis, as Castel Gandolfo prepares to welcome a pope for the first time in over a decade.Handout / VATICAN MEDIA / AFP
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Pope Leo XIV on Sunday called astronaut Buzz Aldrin and visited the Vatican's astronomical observatory in Castel Gandolfo to mark the 56th anniversary of man's first moon landing.

"This evening, 56 years after the Apollo 11 moon landing, I spoke with the astronaut Buzz Aldrin," the American pope wrote on X.

"Together we shared the memory of a historic feat, a testimony to human ingenuity, and we reflected on the mystery and greatness of Creation", he wrote.

After Neil Armstrong, who died in 2012, Aldrin was the second person to set foot on the Moon on the historic Apollo 11 mission that secured the United States' victory in the space race.

A devout Christian, Aldrin took communion on the lunar surface using a travel kit provided by his Presbyterian pastor.

The pope said he blessed the 95-year-old US astronaut and his family during the call.

Earlier Sunday, Leo visited the Vatican Observatory, which sits on a leafy hilltop near the papal summer home of Castel Gandolfo.

Vatican photographs showed the pope looking through a large telescope in the Observatory, one of the oldest astronomical research institutions in the world, where planetary scientists mix the study of meteorites with theology.

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