ROME — Speakers blasted songs including ''Born in the U.S.A.'' and ''American Pie'' as six cardinal electors from the United States gathered in Rome on Friday to share their thoughts on the election of the first U.S.-born pope, Cardinal Robert Prevost.
''I took a look at Bob ... and he had his head in his hands and I was praying for him, because I couldn't imagine what happens to a human being when you're facing something like that," said Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, of the moment right after casting his vote in the Sistine Chapel. ''And then when he accepted, it was like it was made for him.''
One day after the Chicago-born Prevost became Pope Leo XIV, the cardinals met on a stage decorated with the Stars and Stripes and a Vatican flag at the Pontifical North American College. The hilltop institution for U.S. seminarians is a short walk from St. Peter's Basilica, where Leo made his first speech to the world on Thursday evening as the new leader of the Catholic Church's global faithful of 1.4 billion people.
The cardinals highlighted how his American nationality wasn't a deciding factor, especially in the most geographically diverse conclave in history, though many rejoiced in it.
''The fact that he was born in the United States of America, boy, that's a sense of pride and gratitude for us,'' Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York said.
But Dolan and others added that Leo's experience as an Augustinian as well as ministry in Peru — where he also acquired citizenship — and leading the Vatican's Dicastery for Bishops made him a ''citizen of the world."
''In a very real sense, Cardinal Prevost in his life has been at his core a missionary, in every way,'' Cardinal Robert McElroy of Washington said.
They also said that Leo could build bridges to all world leaders, including U.S. President Donald Trump. U.S. Catholic bishops have had a fraught relationship with Trump, especially over the crackdown on immigration, and Pope Francis had sparred with Trump since he first was a presidential candidate.