The Palm Beach Post

2 popes aware of misdeeds, critic says

Archbishop makes the claim but offers no proof.

- By Chico Harlan, Stefano Pitrelli and Michelle Boorstein Washington Post

DUBLIN — A former Vatican ambassador to the United States has alleged in an 11-page letter that Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis — among other top Catholic Church officials — had been aware of sexual misconduct allegation­s against former Washington, D.C., archbishop Cardinal Theodore McCarrick years before he resigned this summer.

The letter from Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, who was recalled from his D.C. post in 2016 amid allegation­s that he’d become embroiled in the conservati­ve American fight against same-sex marriage, was first reported by the National Catholic Register and LifeSite News, two conservati­ve Catholic sites. The letter offered no proof, and Viganò on Sunday told The Washington Post he wouldn’t comment further.

“Silence and prayer are the only things that are befitting,” he said.

Asked about what had been published under his name in the Catholic outlets, Viganò said, “I confirm that it is my text and that I wrote it.”

The National Catholic Register reported that Viganò’s letter was “simultaneo­usly released” to the Register and other media.

The letter sent shock waves through the Catholic world as Francis, finishing a two-day trip in Ireland, was begging forgivenes­s for the “scandal and betrayal” caused by church-related abuses. Francis and other church leaders are facing a bitterly polarized Catholic Church, and some Francis critics, including Viganò, are calling for the pope to step down.

The Vatican had no immediate comment. McCarrick’s attorney, Barry Coburn, declined to comment.

The letter was the latest dramatic developmen­t stemming from a fresh wave of allegation­s related to clergy sex abuse and its cover-up. Rumors that had swirled for decades about McCarrick exploded in June when Pope Francis suspended the cardinal. Last month, McCarrick, facing credible allegation­s of abusing seminarian­s and minors, became the first U.S. cardinal in history to resign.

Viganò, 77, was the Holy See’s apostolic nuncio, or ambassador, in Washington from 2011 until 2016. He has been a lightning rod within the Vatican who lost a power struggle in Rome under Benedict, emerged as a Francis critic, and reportedly ordered the halt of an investigat­ion into the alleged sexual relations between an archbishop in Minnesota and seminarian­s.

Jason Berry, who has written several investigat­ive books about the Vatican, said he believes this is the first time a pope has been accused from within. Berry and his co-author, Gerald Renner, wrote “Vows of Silence” about Catholic cover-ups, including a dramatic one about abuser Marcial Maciel, who founded the religious community Legion of Christ.

“Our book lays the cover-up question right at (Pope) John Paul II’s doorstep. But from within the Vatican hierarchy, from within the Roman Curia, I don’t think anyone has ever publicly accused a pope of covering up for a sex abuser,” Berry said. “That’s why this is such a big deal.”

Viganò’s letter said that McCarrick had been privately sanctioned under Benedict — though only after years of warnings about his alleged behavior. The warnings that Viganò describes dealt with McCarrick’s alleged behavior toward seminarian­s and young priests — not toward minors. Viganò wrote that the measures, taken “in 2009 or 2010,” banned McCarrick from traveling, holding Mass, or participat­ing in public meetings.

Yet McCarrick appears to have done essentiall­y the opposite. He regularly appeared as a speaker and celebrant at church functions and represente­d the church in prominent foreign diplomatic efforts in places like China and Iran. A video from 2013 shows Benedict warmly greeting McCarrick in Rome, at the pope’s resignatio­n (and the subsequent election of the new pope), where McCarrick gave round-the-clock television interviews and stayed at a seminary.

Viganò’s letter also says that in 2013, he met Francis months into his papacy and told him face to face that there was “a dossier this thick” about McCarrick. He says he then told Francis about Benedict’s order that McCarrick remove himself from public life.

“He corrupted generation­s of seminarian­s and priests and Pope Benedict ordered him to withdraw to a life of prayer and penance,” Vigano says he told Francis. “The pope did not make the slightest comment about those very grave words of mine and did not show any expression of surprise on his face, as if he had already known the matter for some time, and he immediatel­y changed the subject.”

Vigano also alleges in that conversati­on that Francis told him American bishops “must not be ideologize­d, they must not be right-wing ... and they must not be leftwing, and when I say leftwing I mean homosexual.”

It was not possible to reach Benedict or his representa­tives right away. Francis has not commented previously about what he was ever told about McCarrick, and on Sunday Vatican spokesman Greg Burke did not respond to a request seeking comment.

The American Catholic Church is deeply divided over Francis’ leadership, with fault lines similar to those seen in the political realm. Francis’s comments and teachings about everything from immigratio­n and global warming to the death penalty are frequently adopted or refuted along partisan lines.

The Viganò document uses American culture-war language, such as “right-wing” and “left-wing,” and concludes the letter by blaming “homosexual networks” for sexual abuse and corruption.

U.S. conservati­ve Catholics who have suspected Francis of surreptiti­ously opening the door for liberalizi­ng changes around sex and marriage have in recent years focused on the increased acceptance of LGBT people. Common targets for rightwing blogs like Life Site and Church Militant are bishops and cardinals they deem too moderate or liberal. Constantly on this list is D.C.’s Donald Wuerl, Chicago’s Blasé Cupich and Joe Tobin of Newark. All are named by Vigano as being linked by “wickedness.”

In the letter, Viganò described several figures who could corroborat­e parts of his account. Those people could not be immediatel­y reached.

Before moving to D.C., Viganò spent time as delegate within the secretary of state’s office, working with the Vatican’s embassies around the world. He says in his letter that his job included “the examinatio­n of delicate cases, including those regarding cardinals and bishops.”

“I can imagine Viganò wanted to unburden his conscience,” said Marcello Pera, a retired professor who knows Viganò, co-authored a book with Benedict XVI, and has spoken critically about the direction of the church under Francis.

“The author is a reliable person who has suffered because of events,” Pera said. “His warnings were not listened to.”

Vigano was sent to Washington — reportedly as punishment — in 2011 and was there until May 2016. He arranged a hugely controvers­ial meeting between Francis and an American woman, Kim Davis, who had lost her job as a municipal clerk for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-gender couples. Allies of Francis alleged Vigano set up the pope during a high-profile U.S. visit, and that Francis didn’t intend to affirm Davis’ cause.

 ?? JEFF J. MITCHELL / GETTY IMAGES ?? Pope Francis attends the festival of families at Croke Park on Saturday in Dublin. He has asked forgivenes­s for the church’s sex abuse scandal.
JEFF J. MITCHELL / GETTY IMAGES Pope Francis attends the festival of families at Croke Park on Saturday in Dublin. He has asked forgivenes­s for the church’s sex abuse scandal.

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