Monday 23rd of December 2024

the vatican news .....

the vatican news .....

The Pope has broken his silence on the Vatican leaks scandal, expressing his anger at the way some parts of the media are covering the story.

Pope Benedict XVI said "exaggerated" and "gratuitous" reports were painting a false image of the Holy See.

A series of leaks has revealed allegations of corruption, mismanagement and internal conflicts.

The Pope's butler has been charged with illegally obtaining private papal documents and memos.

Paolo Gabriele, who lives with his wife and children in a Vatican flat, where a stash of confidential documents was allegedly discovered, has pledged "full co-operation" with the investigation.

The Vatican has denied Italian media reports suggesting that Mr Gabriele, 46, had not acted alone, but was part of a group of 20 or so whistleblowers led by a cardinal.

'Sadness'

During his weekly address in St Peter's Square, the Pope said: "Suggestions have multiplied, amplified by some media, which are totally gratuitous and which have gone well beyond the facts, offering an image of the Holy See which does not respond to reality."

He also spoke of the impact of the charges against Mr Gabriele, his valet for many years and one a very limited number of people who had access to his private apartments.

"The events of recent days about the Curia [Vatican ecclesiastical officials] and my collaborators have brought sadness in my heart," he said.

He added that he was grateful to those who had continued to work alongside him "every day, with loyalty and a spirit of sacrifice and in silence".

On Tuesday, the Vatican undersecretary of state, Archbishop Angelo Becciu, called the reports a "brutal" attack on the Pope.

"It's not just that the Pope's papers were stolen, but that people who turned to him as the vicar of Christ have had their consciences violated," he told the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano.

The scandal began in January, when Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi revealed letters from a former top Vatican administrator begging the Pope not to transfer him for having exposed alleged corruption.

The prelate involved, Monsignor Carlo Maria Vigano, is now the Vatican's US ambassador.

Last month, the Pope set up a special commission of cardinals to find the source of the confidential memos.

But in the space of a few days last week, the head of the Vatican's own bank was abruptly dismissed, Mr Gabriele was arrested and an entire book by Mr Nuzzi was published with reproductions of the Pope's private correspondence.

Vatican Leaks: Pope Denounces "Gratuitous" Coverage

sins of the father .....

"It's been a rough week" is how the Rev. Charles Zlock, pastor of the St. Mary of the Assumption Parish, started his 10 a.m. homily on Sunday.

It seemed like an obvious reference to the searing trial that ended Friday with the conviction of a senior Philadelphia archdiocese official, Msgr. William J. Lynn, on a charge of endangering children by placing a known pedophile in an unwary parish.

But the 120 worshipers attending St. Mary's on Sunday, though upset by the case, were mostly heartsick for a different reason: After final services next Sunday, this handsome church in northwest Philadelphia, a center of life for nearby residents since 1849, is scheduled to close.

For the unsettled Roman Catholics in this 1.5 million-member archdiocese, the closing is one more blow in sweeping and bitterly contested cutbacks. Across the city, thousands are already incensed because church leaders have closed 27 cherished schools.

Even as it struggles with the revelations of sexual abuse and the failure of top officials to act, the Philadelphia Archdiocese, long considered an eminent stronghold of Catholic power and tradition, is being battered from several sides.

Faced with an unheard-of $17 million deficit this year - worsened by millions of dollars in legal fees - Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, who arrived in September, announced last week that he was closing the youth office, shutting down the nationally known monthly newspaper and laying off 45 archdiocese employees. He has put the archbishop's 13,000-square-foot mansion up for sale.

It was the threat of school closings, not the evidence that church officials failed to protect children, that brought hundreds of livid parents into the streets this year.

"We've been through a really hard 18 months," said Matthew Gambino, referring to the seemingly abrupt convergence of woes since Monsignor Lynn's indictment in February 2011. Mr. Gambino was the editor of the venerable archdiocese newspaper, The Catholic Standard and Times, until it was closed last week; now he edits an official Web site.

Philadelphia's elaborate network of parishes and parochial schools was developed more than a century ago, after the settlement of European ethnic groups that have long since dispersed. For too long, officials here avoided making unpopular decisions, said Rocco Palmo, an expert on the Catholic Church and writer of the blog Whispers in the Loggia.

Parishioners were never told that the church was sinking in the red, Mr. Palmo added, and this year's announced cuts, which will be far from the last, took many by surprise.

"Chaput has taken on the toughest job any bishop in the United States has faced in at least 50 years," Mr. Palmo said, who has been appointed by the archbishop to an advisory council, praised him for changing the culture of what had been an insular and often imperious clergy.

The sprawling archdiocese covers Philadelphia and four nearby counties. Some suburban churches, like St. Joseph's, in Downingtown, are thriving: with a membership of 15,000, it is one of the largest parishes in the archdiocese.

But the child abuse scandal continues to resonate, it was clear during multiple Sunday services at St. Joseph's, where Monsignor Lynn, after he had retired from a senior job supervising priests, served as pastor from 2004 until his indictment in 2011.

Some worshipers and priests said they thought Monsignor Lynn had been a scapegoat for the wider failings of the church hierarchy.

"They had to blame somebody," said Betty Celii, 72, a parishioner at St. Joseph's for about 50 years. "I'm sure there's more work to do."

Bishop John J. McIntyre, an aide to the archbishop, made a special visit to St. Joseph's and repeated the church's apologies to victims of sexual abuse.

In a sermon that drew applause, the acting pastor of St. Joseph's, Msgr. Joseph McLoone, said, "We want to rid the church of this profound stain, this powerful evil."

While the archdiocese says it has strengthened measures to detect and punish abusers, the misdeeds of the past will continue to be in the news. This fall, another priest and a former Catholic schoolteacher are to be tried on charges of child sexual abuse. Eighteen priests who were suspended last year because of accusations of abuse remain in limbo as the church investigates.

But cutting parishes and schools may be the most divisive issue in the coming years. At St. Mary of the Assumption, in the Manayunk neighborhood of northwest Philadelphia, parishioners are appealing to the Vatican to overrule the archbishop.

Anne Andersen, 49, who lives nearby, has been a member all her life and attended the parish school, which was shut down a number of years ago.

"Our hearts are here," she said of the parish, and she hopes the appeal will succeed, noting that several families with young children were present, hints of a possible demographic renewal.

Joe Hadfield, 70, and his wife, Carol, were married in St. Mary's 50 years ago next Saturday. "It was family," Mr. Hadfield said of their years in the parish, recalling great Fourth of July picnics.

Knowing that the church would be shut down, the Hadfields had driven in from their home in the suburbs to hear services there one last time, they said.

They heard Father Zlock say Mass at St. Mary's at 10 a.m., after conducting 8 a.m. services at another church; because of the priest shortage, he has presided over two smaller parishes, both of them now closing.

Father Zlock said he was exhausted after being "screamed at" over the last year and a half by parishioners who were worried about their children and the loss of churches and schools. The Philadelphia officials and priests, he said, had become "arrogant and complacent" over the years, contributing to the crises today.

But like many others, he praised Archbishop Chaput for tackling unpopular issues head-on. "Chaput has put a steamroller in place and said we're going to fix this thing," he said.

"Two years from now we're going to be a smaller, leaner church," Father Zlock said. "But the people who will be here will be spiritually vibrant and engaged."

Archbishop Chaput declined to be interviewed, but in a speech last week he called for a zealous new missionary movement in Philadelphia. He lamented that only 18 percent of registered Catholics here attended Mass weekly, compared with 40 percent in Denver.

Mr. Gambino, the archdiocese news editor, also said he was optimistic about the future.

"A lot of times in life you have to hit rock bottom before you can pull yourself up again," he said. "I think people are ready to move forward."

Budget Cuts & Abuse Cases Roil Philadelphia Archdiocese

meanwhile, back in tinsel-town .....

In an effort to shore up its communications strategy amid a widening leaks scandal in a troubled papacy, the Vatican has hired the Fox News correspondent in Rome as a senior communications adviser.

The correspondent, Greg Burke, 52, who has covered the Vatican for Fox since 2001, will leave the network to help improve and coordinate the Vatican's various communications operations, Mr. Burke and the Vatican spokesman said.

Some Vatican watchers called the move a power play by media-savvy Americans - including Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, the archbishop of New York and the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops - inside a Vatican hierarchy run by Italians whose most frequent communications strategy is to accuse their critics of defamation.

Mr Burke is a member of the conservative Opus Dei movement, and his hiring underscores the group's role in the Vatican.

In a telephone interview on Sunday, Mr Burke, the Vatican's first communications expert hired from outside the insular world of the Roman Catholic news media, said that he would not replace the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, but would advise officials on how to shape their message. He said he had turned down the Vatican twice in the past month before accepting the paid position. He will answer directly to officials in the Secretariat of State, the Vatican's executive branch.

"If you look at what the White House has, everyone knows who the spokesman is, no one knows who the secretary of communications is," Mr. Burke said. "It's a very similar job. It's a strategy job. It's very simple to explain, not so easy to execute: to formulate the message and try to make sure everyone remains on message."

That is a tall order. Vatican experts say that the institution is suffering from a deep crisis of leadership more than of communications. Pope Benedict XVI is seen as an intellectual with little interest or skill in governing, and his deputies have been mired in infighting.

The Vatican must deal with a growing investigation that has led to the arrest of the pope's butler in connection with the leaking of private documents, a case that could reach into higher levels of the hierarchy. On Saturday, Pope Benedict called a meeting of the high-ranking cardinals who are investigating the case.

At the same time, the Vatican's secretive bank remains embroiled in controversy over whether it can meet international transparency standards. And on Friday in Philadelphia, a former aide to a cardinal became the first senior official of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States to be convicted of covering up sexual abuse by priests under his supervision in a vast scandal that has cost the church untold credibility and more than $1 billion in legal settlements.

Since his papacy began in 2005, Benedict has also tangled with Muslims and drawn criticism for revoking the excommunication of four schismatic bishops, one of whom had denied the scope of the Holocaust in an interview broadcast worldwide before the pope's announcement. Asked how he would handle a case in which the message was as much an issue as the medium, Mr Burke said, "I think at that point you say, 'We have a train wreck coming here.'"

He added, "I don't have an answer for you on how I'd stop the train, but I'd try."

Mr Burke will have to contend with members of an Italian Vatican hierarchy whose most common defense strategy is blaming the media. In an interview last week with Famiglia Cristiana, an Italian Catholic weekly, the Vatican's secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, accused the press of "imitating Dan Brown," the author of "The Da Vinci Code" and other best sellers, in its coverage of the "Vatileaks" scandal.

A graduate of Columbia University and Columbia Journalism School, Mr. Burke worked for a decade as Time magazine's correspondent in Rome before moving to Fox News in 2001, where he covered the death of Pope John Paul II and the election of Benedict, and also traveled around Europe and the Middle East for the network.

Like Cardinal Dolan, Mr Burke is a native of St. Louis. He said that he had met with Cardinal Dolan in New York in late May, and he did not rule out that being known by the cardinal might have helped him get hired.

Affable and easygoing, with an all-American air in a baroque culture, Mr. Burke is a numerary in Opus Dei, which means, he said, that he is celibate and gives most of his income to the movement.

He is the second Opus Dei member to take on a crucial role dealing with Vatican communications. The first was Joaquín Navarro-Valls, a psychologist and journalist who, as the Vatican spokesman under John Paul, was known for his skillful efforts to shape John Paul's image in the media and the world.

Vatican experts said that Mr Burke's hiring could be seen as an implicit rebuke to the Vatican spokesman, Father Lombardi, a Jesuit priest who is also the director of Vatican Radio and has struggled to contend with the multiple scandals on Pope Benedict's watch.

Mr Burke will answer directly to the Vatican's third-ranking official, Archbishop Giovanni Angelo Becciu, the deputy to Cardinal Bertone. He will also work closely with Msgr. Peter Wells, an Oklahoman who as Archbishop Becciu's deputy has taken an active role in improving the Vatican's communications in the face of recent scandals.

"For a global institution with a billion followers worldwide, let's just say the press operation is locally understaffed," he said.

For his part, Father Lombardi said he welcomed Mr. Burke's arrival, which he said was aimed at "integrating" communications between the Secretariat of State and other Vatican communications organs, including Vatican Radio and the newspaper L'Osservatore Romano.

"I am not going to be a power guy," Mr Burke said. "I'm not going to be making the decisions. But I certainly hope to be sitting at the table when those decisions are made. I have the sense that this is not going to be easy. This is tough stuff."

Vatican Hires Fox News Correspondent As Media Adviser