Here are some highlights of his four-day trip, which capped an Asia tour that also took in Thailand:
A ‘happi’ Pope
The majority of the pope’s public appearances were sombre affairs, celebrating mass or marking disasters such as the Fukushima nuclear meltdown or the atomic attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
But the 82-year-old threw off the shackles of formality during a speech to young people, departing frequently from his prepared remarks and joking with the audience, asking them at one point if he was boring them and if he should go on.
He said some young people today are like “zombies”, who are bored by everything and “no longer dream, laugh or play.”
“We have invented all sorts of gadgets but we still can’t take selfies of the soul. Thank God!” said the pope, who seemed invigorated by his exchanges with Japan’s youth.
In more unscripted activities, he was presented with a colourful “happi” shirt, a traditional garment worn for Japanese festivals, and the beaming pontiff immediately put it on over his white vestments, giving a thumbs-up to the crowd.
Papal umbrella
Francis was exposed to some choice Japanese weather during his trip, with fierce winds and torrential rain greeting his arrival and blowing his robes around.
A storm — complete with thunder and lightning — broke hours before his solemn speech marking the atomic attack on Nagasaki, forcing the faithful to huddle under umbrellas and transparent waterproofs.
The pope was also shielded by a phalanx of brollies and delivered his speech under a protective tarpaulin but he broke from cover to pray at the memorial, his bowed head pelted with rain becoming one of the images of the trip.
Just hours later, the weather had completed changed and the crowd celebrating Mass with him in Nagasaki’s baseball stadium had to shield themselves not from the rain but from a fierce sun.
Emotional high
There were several moments of high emotion during the trip, with many survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki attacks or Fukushima nuclear disaster breaking down as the pontiff comforted them.
But the pope seemed especially moved by the testimony of 17-year-old Matsuki Kamoshita who described how he wanted to kill himself after the Fukushima disaster, as he was bullied after being evacuated.
In a strong and steady voice but trembling with emotion, Kamoshita challenged adults to reveal the truth about the contamination and fallout of the disaster, saying: “I don’t want them to die before us, having lied or not admitting the truth.”
The pope rushed up to him after the speech and they had a long exchange, the boy bowing and struggling to keep his emotions in check, before throwing his arms around the pope in a touching, spontaneous moment.
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