US president moved to tears as he says meeting chaplain at Knock who gave his son Last Rites “seemed like a sign”

President Joe Biden was moved to tears on Friday during a stop at Ireland’s Knock shrine when he discovered that a chaplain working there had performed last rites on his late son Beau Biden.

“It was incredible to see him,” Biden said later during remarks at the foot of a cathedral in nearby Ballina. “It seemed like a sign.”

Knock Shrine is where Mary, Joseph and John the Evangelist appeared near a stone wall in 1879. Biden touched the remaining old wall, and toured the site with priest Father Richard Gibbons (pictured).

Gibbons said he discovered earlier in the day that the Father Frank O’Grady working at the site was the same one who’d performed the Last Rites for Beau.

Fr O’Grady is a former U.S. Army chaplain and was formerly assigned to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., where Beau died in 2015 from brain cancer at the age of 46.

But Gibbons said he did not know about the Biden link until Friday.

“I told the president that,” Gibbons told BBC Ulster. “He wanted to meet him straightaway, so he dispatched a Secret Service agent to go and find him.”

He said it was “a wonderful, spontaneous thing that happened.”

“He was crying and it really affected him,” he said of Biden. “Then we said a prayer, we said a decade of the rosary for his family, we lit a candle. Then he took a moment or two for private prayer.”

O’Grady told Irish national broadcaster RTE that he was summoned after learning of the Beau Biden connection.

“He gave me a big hug, it was like a reunion. He told me he appreciated everything that was done,” he said. “I hadn’t seen him really in eight years since Beau died. His son Hunter was there too, so we had a real reunion.”

O’Grady said that Biden misses his son. “He has been grieving a lot but I think the grief is kind of going down a bit. We talked a little bit about how grief can take several years.”

The death of his oldest son rocked the elder Biden, who was vice president at the time. He said he chose not to run for president in 2016 in part because of Beau’s death. He talks of Beau often, including during a speech to the Irish parliament this week when he said it was his son who should have been standing there as president.

After the visit to the shrine on Friday, President Biden toured a hospice centre that displays a plaque commemorating his son.

He has been in Ireland this week with his sister Valerie and son Hunter, touring his ancestral home and meeting with the nation’s leaders.

Story courtesy Yahoo News

www.yahoo.com