From Jerusalem to Rome: Veronica’s veil exhibited at St. Peter’s
Skeptics consider the relic, allegedly used to dab Jesus' sweat and blood, a fraud invented during the Crusader period.
The veil – not to be confused with the Shroud of Turin – is placed in a silver reliquary and stored inside one of the columns surrounding the main altar in St. Peter’s Basilica, above a statue of Veronica holding a veil. It is displayed once a year on the fifth Sunday of Lent, the last Sunday before Palm Sunday, which marks the beginning of Holy Week.
The annual display of the relic is based on a non-canonical legend (not found in the Gospels). According to Catholic tradition, a woman stepped out of her home by today’s Sixth Station of the Cross on the Via Dolorosa to wipe Jesus’s face. She later came to be known as Veronica – a corruption of the Latin phrase vera icona, meaning “the true image.”