The Columbus Dispatch

Shrine reviewing mosaics after Jesuit abuse claims

- Nicole Winfield

ROME – Officials at the Catholic shrine in Lourdes announced the creation of a study group Friday to decide what to do with one of the French sanctuary’s most famous but now controvers­ial attraction­s: mosaics by a Jesuit artist who has been sanctioned by the Vatican and his religious order for sexually, spirituall­y and psychologi­cally abusing women.

The Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik designed the facade of one of the three basilicas at Lourdes with a series of mosaics in 2008 to mark the 150th anniversar­y of the Marian apparition­s that turned the shrine in southwest France into one of the world’s biggest pilgrimage sites, attracting around 3 million visitors a year.

In December, the Jesuits revealed that Rupnik had been declared excommunic­ated in 2020 for committing one of the worst crimes in church law – using the confession­al to absolve a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual activity – and had also been accused by nine women of related sexual, spiritual and psychologi­cal misconduct in the 1980s.

The Vatican’s sex abuse office, which is headed by Jesuits, decided their claims were too old to prosecute. Amid an outcry and testimony from 15 more people, the Jesuits in February announced a new internal canonical inquiry while toughening sanctions against Rupnik, including preventing him from continuing his artistic activity, since that was presumably where some of the abuse originated.

Aside from posing questions about how the Jesuits and the Vatican handled the allegation­s, the Rupnik scandal has prompted a broader question about what to do with his art, since his mosaics decorate important basilicas, shrines, chapels and churches around the globe, including one of the chapels inside the Apostolic Palace.

On Friday, Bishop Jean-marc Micas, whose diocese includes Lourdes, announced the creation of a study group to consider what to do with the Basilica of the Rosary mosaics, placing the needs of abuse survivors first.

“Lourdes is a place where many victims come ... to seek consolatio­n and healing. Their distress is great in front of the Rev. Rupnik’s mosaics in this same place: We cannot ignore it,” he said in a statement.

In an earlier interview with French Catholic La Vie, Micas said he and the shrine had received letters from abuse victims from around the world seeking a “gesture” from Lourdes. They described Rupnik’s mosaics there as an additional source of pain as they seek healing from their abuse.

“If this place, by displaying these works, increases the suffering of people who come there to be healed, this is not possible,” Micas told La Vie.

The study group includes the bishop, the rector of the shrine, a survivor of abuse, an expert in sacred art and a psychother­apist.

The Slovenian-born Rupnik’s status remains somewhat in limbo as the Jesuits’ canonical investigat­ion plays out, even as they have received more complaints against him, Rupnik’s superior, the Rev. Johan Verschuere­n, told The Associated Press in an email Friday.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP FILE ?? Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Mass in front of the Basilica of the Rosary in Lourdes, France, in 2008. The mosaic behind him is by the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, who was declared excommunic­ated in 2020.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP FILE Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Mass in front of the Basilica of the Rosary in Lourdes, France, in 2008. The mosaic behind him is by the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, who was declared excommunic­ated in 2020.

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