The Day

Angelo Sodano, once-powerful Vatican prelate

- By FRANCES D’EMILIO

Rome — Cardinal Angelo Sodano, a once-powerful Italian prelate who long served as the Vatican’s No. 2 official but whose legacy was tarnished by his support for the pedophile founder of an influentia­l religious order, has died. He was 94.

The Vatican in its Saturday announceme­nt of his death said Sodano had died on Friday. Italian state radio said that Sodano recently had contracted COVID-19, complicati­ng his already frail health. Corriere della Sera said he died in a Rome clinic where he had been admitted a few weeks ago.

Pope Francis in a condolence telegram Saturday to Maria Sodano, the retired prelate’s sister, noted that Sodano had held many roles in the Vatican’s diplomatic corps, culminatin­g in his being named secretary of state on June 28, 1991, by the then-pontiff, John Paul II. A day later, John Paul, who later was made a saint, elevated Sodano to the rank of cardinal.

In the condolence message, Francis expressed “sentiments of gratitude to the Lord for the gift of this esteemed man of the church” and paid tribute to his long service as a Vatican diplomat in Ecuador, Uruguay and Chile in South America, Francis’ native continent.

But late in his Vatican career, Sodano’s church legacy was tarnished by his staunch championin­g of the Rev. Marcial Maciel, the deceased Mexican founder of the Legion of Christ, a religious order, who was later revealed to be a pedophile. Maciel’s clerical career was discredite­d by the cult-like practices he imposed on the order’s members. An internal investigat­ion eventually identified 33 priests and 71 seminarian­s in the order who sexually abused minors over some eight decades.

Sodano for years, while secretary of state under John Paul, had prevented the Vatican from investigat­ing sex abuse allegation­s against Maciel. The Holy See had evidence dating back decades that the founder of the religious order — an organizati­on that was a favorite of John Paul’s — was a drug addict and a pedophile.

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