It is one of the Catholic Church's closely guarded secrets: the identity of the French nun whose inexplicable cure from Parkinson's disease may be the miracle the Vatican needs to beatify Pope John Paul II.
Church officials said on Tuesday that the nun was expected in Rome next week for ceremonies marking the second anniversary of the pontiff's death and the closure of a church investigation into his life -- a probe that was ordered up after chants of "Santo Subito!" or "Sainthood Now!" erupted during John Paul's 2005 funeral.
While a few more details about the nun's whereabouts are expected to be released this weekend, it remains to be seen whether she will ever come forward publicly, leaving the faithful with only an anonymous written description of her cure from a disease John Paul himself lived with for years.
The Vatican's saint-making process requires that John Paul's life and writings be studied for its virtues -- an investigation that will close with ceremonies next Monday, the second anniversary of his death. In addition, the Vatican requires that a miracle attributed to his intercession be confirmed before he can be beatified, the last formal step before possible sainthood.
Pope Benedict XVI announced in May 2005 that he was waiving the traditional five-year waiting period and allowing the beatification process to begin. While many people had hoped that John Paul would have been declared a saint by now, there is still no word on when any possible beatification or canonization might occur.
Monsignor Slawomir Oder, the Polish prelate spearheading John Paul's beatification cause, announced last year that the case of the French nun was the most compelling he had found.
But the woman's identity has remained a mystery.
At a press conference on Tuesday, Oder joked that there would be "thousands of nuns" in the St. John Lateran basilica on April 2 attending the ceremony -- including the sister in question.
"I leave it to your investigations and diligence to figure out which one is the nun," he quipped.
He added that the woman's diocese and community would be announced on Sunday by her bishop.
Only one document about the woman's experience has been made public: an article she penned for Totus Tuus, the official magazine of John Paul's beatification case.
In it, she wrote of being diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in June 2001, that she had a strong spiritual affinity for John Paul because he too suffered from the disease and that her symptoms had worsened in the weeks after the pontiff's death.
"I was wasting away, day by day," she wrote, saying she could no longer write legibly or drive long distances because her muscles would go rigid -- a typical symptom of Parkinson's disease.
The nuns of her community prayed for her and exactly two months after John Paul's death, she awoke in the middle of the night, cured.
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