The Jerusalem Post

Who is Carlo Maria Vigano, the man accusing Pope Francis of covering up sex abuse?

- • By JAWEED KALEEM

The Roman Catholic Church went into crisis mode last week after a Vatican official published an 11-page letter alleging that Pope Francis and US Catholic leaders covered up sexual abuse by an American cardinal.

In the unusually detailed and direct letter, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, the former Vatican ambassador to the US, made unsubstant­iated claims that Francis, Pope Benedict XVI and several American cardinals and archbishop­s had teamed up over the years to protect Theodore McCarrick, who as a cardinal was one of the most powerful figures in the church.

Vigano, who released the letter as the pope was visiting Ireland, blamed church leaders for protecting a widespread “homosexual current” in the Vatican and said Francis must resign. He also said church leaders had a “pro-gay ideology” that ran counter to long-standing church prohibitio­ns against homosexual acts.

But church experts say the letter’s significan­ce may be less about those allegation­s than about power struggles within the church hierarchy.

Francis has set a more liberal tone by meeting with gay people and expressing more tolerance for homosexual­ity than any pope in history, though still hewing to the church’s prohibitio­n on same-sex marriage. Vigano, who was the Vatican’s ambassador to the US until 2016, is part of a more conservati­ve wing of the church that has protested Francis’ leadership, especially on issues of sexuality.

“This letter has everything to do with factions in the church that are vying for power and influence,” said Massimo Faggioli, a professor of theology at Villanova University who studies the Vatican. “You have a convergenc­e of interests that is making this a huge mess in the US Catholic Church.”

Vigano’s long and intimate access to the inner workings of the papacy makes the letter difficult for the pope to brush aside.

Born into a rich Italian family, Vigano eventually became an archbishop in 1992 at the behest of Pope John Paul II. From there, he ascended the church’s ranks, becoming a diplomat for the Vatican, the secretary of the governorat­e of Vatican City and the Vatican’s ambassador to the US.

But throughout his rise, he clashed with church officials – including Benedict and Francis – over whether Vatican leaders were supportive of him, his attempts to change church governance and his views of homosexual­ity in the church.

He has said that by not cracking down on homosexual­ity within the church, the leadership has contribute­d to the problem of pedophile priests – a contention that is roundly disputed by liberal Catholic leaders and victims’ advocates who say sexual orientatio­n has no bearing on whether somebody commits abuse.

In widely publicized leaked church documents in 2012, Vigano was shown appealing to church leadership to discredit anonymousl­y sourced articles in the Italian press criticizin­g his performanc­e and role in the Vatican. The documents – dubbed VatiLeaks – showed that the leaders refused to defend him.

The documents also showed that Vigano was desperate to not be transferre­d to the diplomatic position in Washington and protested to his superiors, including Benedict’s second-in-command, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone.

Vigano said in the leaked letters that he was being punished for uncovering corruption in the Vatican. Bertone is among the church leaders Vigano named in his recent letter as co-conspirato­rs in Vatican cover-ups.

IN 2015, when Francis visited Washington, Philadelph­ia and New York, Vigano played a key role in one of the most controvers­ial moments of the trip.

He arranged for the pope – who had until then received widely positive news coverage for saying it was not his place to judge gay people – to meet Kim Davis, a Kentucky county clerk who had become embroiled in national controvers­y over her refusal to give marriage certificat­es to gay couples. Vatican insiders said the pope, who shook hands and took photograph­s with many people during his visit, did not fully understand who Davis was when he posed with her at the ambassador’s residence.

The incident, which overtook otherwise glowing reports on the pope’s US visit, was blamed internally on Vigano and said to be one of the reasons Francis did not ask him to stay in his post upon reaching the retirement age of 75. Catholic officials frequently stay in posts beyond retirement age at the request of the pope.

In his letter released over the weekend, Vigano wrote that Francis and Benedict were aware of sexual abuse by McCarrick, the former cardinal who led churches in the Washington region from 2001 to 2006.

McCarrick resigned in July and was stripped of his title of cardinal after US news outlets reported that he had abused seminarian­s. Vigano also said that other Catholic figures, including Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, were aware of the abuse.

Wuerl said through a spokesman that he was never told that the Vatican had barred McCarrick from celebratin­g Mass. Reaction to the letter varied. In a statement released Monday, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, the president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the allegation­s must be investigat­ed.

“The questions raised deserve answers that are conclusive and based on evidence,” DiNardo, the archbishop of Galveston-Houston, said. “Without those answers, innocent men may be tainted by false accusation and the guilty may be left to repeat sins of the past.”

Also named in the letter was Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, NJ, who said in a statement that the allegation­s had “factual errors, innuendo and fearful ideology.” Tobin said there needed to be “scrutiny of the claims” to “help establish the truth.”

Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelph­ia, a leader among conservati­ve Catholics, issued a statement praising Vigano’s “integrity” but said he could not comment on the letter because it had details “beyond his personal experience.”

Bishop Joseph Strickland of the Diocese of Tyler, Texas, went further. In a letter to church members, he said that the details in Vigano’s letter “are still allegation­s but as your shepherd I find them to be credible.”

Though the US church indicated it will investigat­e, it’s unclear what the Vatican will do.

When asked about the allegation­s after he departed Ireland on Sunday, Francis refused to address them.

“I will not say a single word on this,” he said. “I think this statement speaks for itself, and you have the sufficient journalist­ic capacity to draw conclusion­s.”

– Los Angeles Times/TNS

 ?? (Joe Giddens/TNS) ?? POPE FRANCIS waves to the crowds in Dublin, during his visit to Ireland last week.
(Joe Giddens/TNS) POPE FRANCIS waves to the crowds in Dublin, during his visit to Ireland last week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel