Royal Oak Tribune

Woman who says she was abused spirituall­y and sexually by a once-famous Jesuit demands transparen­cy

- By Nicole Winfield

>> One of the first women who accused a once-exalted Jesuit artist of spiritual, psychologi­cal and sexual abuse went public Wednesday to demand transparen­cy from the Vatican and a full accounting of the hierarchs who covered for him for 30 years.

Gloria Branciani, 59, appeared at a news conference with one of the most prominent Vatican-accredited lawyers in Rome, Laura Sgro, to tell her story in public for the first time. She detailed the alleged abuses of the Rev. Marko Rupnik, including his fondness for three-way sex “in the image of the Trinity” which, if confirmed, could constitute a grave perversion of Catholic doctrine known as false mysticism.

Rupnik has not commented publicly about the allegation­s, but his Rome art studio has said the allegation­s were unproven and media reports about the case a defamatory “lynching.”

Rupnik’s mosaics decorate churches and basilicas around the world, including at the Catholic shrine in Lourdes, France, the forthcomin­g cathedral in Aparecida, Brazil, and the Redemptori­s Mater chapel of the Apostolic Palace.

The Jesuits kicked him out of the order last year after he refused to respond to allegation­s of spiritual, psychologi­cal and sexual abuses by about 20 women, most of whom, like Branciani, were members of a Jesuit-inspired religious community he co-founded in his native Slovenia that has since been suppressed.

The Rupnik scandal has grabbed headlines for more than a year over speculatio­n that he received preferenti­al treatment from a Vatican dominated by Jesuits: From Pope Francis to the Jesuits who headed the Vatican office responsibl­e for sex crimes and sacramenta­l crimes that twice essentiall­y let him off the hook.

Under pressure as the scandal grew, Francis in October decided to reopen the case and Branciani is due to soon testify before the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. Sgro said that she didn’t know what the possible lines of investigat­ion are since the Dicastery’s proceeding­s are secret even to victims and their lawyers.

Branciani, who first denounced Rupnik in 1993 and then left the Slovene community, called for the full story of the Rupnik scandal and cover-up to come out in public, including the documentat­ion. She said that she believed that the pope was still in the dark about the details and that even he would be served by the truth.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lawyer Laura Sgro, left, listens to Gloria Branciani during a press conference in Rome, Wednesday.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lawyer Laura Sgro, left, listens to Gloria Branciani during a press conference in Rome, Wednesday.

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