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Pope opens door to new entrance of Vatican Museums
February 07, 2000
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- After opening the Holy Doors of Rome's four major basilicas, Pope John Paul II opened his fifth door of the jubilee: the new entrance to the Vatican Museums. At a Feb. 7 ceremony, the pope pushed open the museums' new bronze door to inaugurate the revamped space. Praising the museums' role as a ``temple of art and culture'' for all people, the pope said ``the museums are, on a cultural level, one of the most significant doors of the Holy See opened to the world.'' The pope said the new entrance is not only functional, ``but symbolic of a more `capacious' entrance, that is, more welcoming, to express the renewed will of the church to dialogue with humanity in the sign of art and culture, making its entire patrimony available to all.'' During the 1500s, when Pope Julius II began the Vatican's collection, only papal guests were allowed to view the artwork of the Holy See. At the time of the museums' modern inception in the late 18th century, visitors were restricted to an elite group of nobles and intellectuals. Today, 3 million people from all walks of life visit the museum each year -- more than double the number of just two decades ago. Over the years, the steep increase in visitors led to daily havoc at the one door used as both entrance and exit. Infamous lines that often wound their way around the block caused many tourists to rise at dawn in hopes of getting into the Sistine Chapel before crowds impeded views of Michelangelo's masterpieces. U.S. Cardinal Edmund C. Szoka, president of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State, which financed the $24 million, three-year project, said the new entrance would eliminate lines and speed up the ticket-buying process. The new bronze door, situated to the left of the old entrance, which will now be used solely as an exit, leads visitors into an ultramodern space capable of handling 2,000 people at a time. Once visitors have paid the $9 entrance fee at newly computerized ticket booths, a spiral ramp takes them up to a glass-roofed room with a close-up view of St. Peter's dome. From there, tourists can enter the museum itself, or take advantage of the renovated food court, complete with a pizzeria. In addition to its practical advantages, the new entrance will also remind visitors of the museums' ``connection to the Christian faith and the 2000-year history of the church,'' said Cardinal Szoka. Directly inside the new entrance, a statue by Italian sculptor Giuliano Vangi titled ``Crossing the Threshold'' depicts the pope guiding a man into the third millennium. Cardinal Szoka said the sculpture ``interprets the message of the supreme pontiff on the centrality and dignity of the human person at the dawn of the third millennium.'' The new entrance was expected to be opened to the public a few days after the Feb. 7 inauguration, following last-minute checks of the new security and computer systems.


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