Falsehoods about Pope Francis spread online after his funeral

Kate Atkinson April 30, 2025
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The late Pope often spoke out against misinformation and was frequently a target himself. Image by Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS

WHAT WAS CLAIMED

A video shows a rite performed at Pope Francis' funeral.

OUR VERDICT

False. The video shows an Easter procession in Spain.

AAP FACTCHECK - Between tributes and condolences at Pope Francis' funeral, false claims about "satanic" rites and an inter-faith pontiff are spreading online. 

Pope Francis, who was head of the Catholic church for 12 years, died at the age of 88 on Easter Monday after suffering a stroke. 

The late pontiff was often the subject of misinformation and disinformation, including a viral artificial intelligence-generated image of him wearing a puffer jacket, and false claims about endorsements of political leaders.

A Facebook post claims that a video of people wearing tall black pointed hoods walking in a procession while holding lights shows a ritual performed at his funeral on April 26, 2025.

"The Pope LOOKS LIKE he is literally having a SATANIC Ritual as a funeral with upside down crosses," the caption says.

However, a Google reverse image search reveals the clip was actually filmed during Easter Holy Week processions in Cartagena in southeast Spain, although it's unclear which year the clip is from.

One of the posts falsely claiming to show the Pope's funeral.
This post doesn't show the Pope's funeral, but rather a Spanish Easter tradition. (Facebook/AAP)

The distinctive outfits match those worn by a women's section of the San Pedro Apostol Association, a local Catholic brotherhood dedicated to Saint Peter.

This includes the embroidered rooster on the cloaks (timestamp 25 seconds) seen in a photo on the association's website.

The cloaks also feature an embroidered inverted cross, a symbol associated with the martyrdom of St Peter, according to Reuters and Greece Fact Check.

Architectural details from inside the church in the video, such as the arched ceilings, indicate that the video was filmed in the Santa Maria de Gracia in Cartagena, not in St Peter's Square at the Vatican.

A YouTube video posted by Cartagena TV shows the 2025 Holy Week procession, with the women's contingent, known as the Tercio del Arrepentimiento de San Pedro, approaching the church in the same costumes (from 1:59:30).

It was falsely claimed in widely shared Facebook posts that a video showed attendees waving Palestinian flags at the funeral.

"Mourners waved Palestinian flags during the funeral of the late Pope Francis in the Vatican yesterday," one post says.

The clip shows part of St Peter's Square, with the papal apartments in the background.

However, a reverse image search revealed the video matched a YouTube video of Pope Francis' annual Christmas speech in December 2023.

People waved Palestinian flags while listening to the pontiff's speech calling for peace in Palestine and Israel and criticising the weapons trade, Reuters reported (photo 4).

A fake opinion article from a website resembling The Guardian website, purportedly by Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, has also been widely shared on Facebook as if it were authentic.

A Facebook post featuring the fake Guardian article.
This fake article is from a satirical account, not The Guardian. (Facebook/AAP)

"The next Pope must be Muslim or there will be violence on the streets of Europe," the headline says.

However, the image originated from a satirical X account that regularly posts fake news articles.

The parody name, "The Grauniad", is visible in the top right corner instead of The Guardian logo.

The opinion piece does not appear on Ms Alibhai-Brown's author page on The Guardian's website, where she last published an article in 2016.

Another post features a fake image of the late Pope wearing the LGBTQI pride flag, which appeared in Facebook posts and X posts with the hashtags '#midjourney' and '#midjourneyv5', referring to an AI image generation tool.

AFP FactCheck has previously debunked the images as AI-generated.

Pope Francis often spoke about the dangers of misinformation, and reflected on being the subject of deepfakes in his 2024 World Social Communications Day message.

He said there was no such thing as "harmless disinformation" in his 2018 World Communications Day message.

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Sources

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