'A great human': How Pope Francis's home city remembers himpublished at 17:26 British Summer Time 22 April
Ione Wells
Reporting from Buenos Aires

Yenish Cedeño from Venezuela paid tribute to Pope Francis in a cathedral in Buenos Aires.
In his home city of Buenos Aires, people I’m speaking to remember Pope Francis for his tolerance and inclusion.
Cicera Rodes tells me she met him on the subway once when he was still known as Jorge Begoglio, describing him as “very empathetic". He was known for taking public transport to mingle with ordinary people.
A missionary from Indonesia, Candida Bana, has lived here for 15 years and says he was a Pope for everyone.
“He went to Indonesia last year. He even inaugurated a tunnel from the cathedral in Jakarta to the mosque for Muslims – what an image of tolerance,” she says.
Paying tribute at the city’s cathedral Yenish Cedeño, from Venezuela, tells me she's deeply proud she had a Latin American Pope.
"The day he was appointed, we celebrated a lot in Venezuela and today we feel a great loss.”
She migrated to Argentina several years ago due to the economic and political crisis in Venezuela.
“In recent years, with migration in Europe and the United States, he was very concerned about the migrants that were losing their lives, many lives," she adds.
"He always emphasised that aspect of migration. He was always a great human being.”