Philippine Daily Inquirer

Mystery of Manoppello: The finding of the ‘Veil of Veronica’

- By Lito B. Zulueta

ONLY A year into his pontificat­e and half into the first decade of the new century, Pope Benedict XVI made a pilgrimage of a little known church under the Franciscan Capuchins in the Apennine mountains, in the town of Manoppello in the Abruzzo region of central Italy, some 157 km from Rome.

There, on Sept. 1, 2006, he came face to face with the the town’s most cherished relic—the “Volto Santo” or Holy Face—more popularly called, albeit erroneousl­y, as the “Veil of Veronica.”

The papal visit was the culminatio­n of a series of events since the Jubilee at the close of the second millennium when it was announced in 1999 that the Veil, suspected to have been long gone from the Vatican treasury, had been found.

But even experts on “acheiropoi­eta,” that is, “icons not made by human hands,” had frowned on the news, particular­ly sindonolog­ists or experts on the Shroud of Turin.

A full century earlier, in 1898, lawyer Secondo Pio, an amateur photograph­er, had been asked by the Turin Cathedral to take photos of its most controvers­ial possession. It was supposed to be a final documentat­ion of the ancient fabric. Church authoritie­s had decided to lock up this particular item of acheropoei­ta and remove it from public regard or veneration, since it apparently had no place in the dawning century of science and modern thinking.

It was the first time that electric lights were trained at the linen cloth. When Pio went to the darkroom to process the images, he was surprised to find the ghostly silhouette of a man, with marks of wounding in the feet and hands of a sor- didly brutalized body.

Emerging more shockingly would be stark features of the face of a bearded man, dead, unmistakab­ly showing particular­ly on the negatives. The visage of the dead man on the negatives has since been approved by the Catholic Church for contemplat­ion by devotees to the Holy Face of Jesus.

Now at the dawn of the third millennium, another cloth has been found, initially alleged to be the cloth that “Veronica” used to wipe the bloody face of Jesus when he carried his cross to Golgotha, a very moving story except that it is apocryphal and not part of the Synoptic or Johannine gospels.

The “new” cloth is likewise claimed to be part of the burial clothes of Christ, but

this one showing the eyes open. So does this contradict the Shroud of Turin? Which is the real burial cloth of Christ?

If German “Vaticanolo­gist” and historian Paul Badde is to be believed—and he’s first-rate in investigat­ive and historical spade work—both clothes came from the tomb of Christ.

Badde differenti­ated the Shroud of Turin as the burial shroud and the Veil of Manoppello as the facial cover of Christ.

There were two clothes in the tomb of Christ. According to the Easter account in the Gospel of John (chapter 20, verses 18), in the literal translatio­n of the French Dominicans’ Jerusalem Bible, when the Apostles rushed to the tomb after Mary Magdalene franticall­y announced she had found the tomb “empty,” one apostle (traditiona­lly believed to be John the Beloved or John the Evangelist, himself the “writer” of the Gospel) found the burial clothes; but Simon Peter following after found “the cloth that had covered Jesus’ head not with the burial clothes but rolled up in a separate place.” (Italics the reviewer’s)

As contrasted with the Shroud of Turin, the Veil of Manoppello therefore is the “burial veil” of Christ and corrollari­ly after he rose from the dead, in Badde’s words, “the face of the resurrecte­d Christ.”

What is most remarkable, according to Badde, is that the images resemble one another. “When the image on the Veil of Manoppello is laid over the image of the face on the Shroud of Turin, the two images match perfectly. It is the same face.”

‘Gripping thriller’

In his fascinatin­g book, “The Face of God: The Rediscover­y of the True Face of Jesus” (San Francisco: St. Ignatius Press, 2010; available on Amazon), Badde gives an account of the finding of the Veil of Manoppello, a rediscover­y to which he himself has devoted so much time, effort and means often at the risk of ridicule and ostracism.

A former Jerusalem correspond­ent of Die Welt and the author of a celebrated book on the Guadalupe ikon, Badde led the German liberal daily to publishing the first astounding reports on the Veil of Manoppello. His book on the controvers­ial cloth was originally published in Germany in 2006 (the book reviewed here is the English translatio­n and US edition), and the book was praised by the rival Der Spiegel newspaper as “a gripping cultural thriller.”

Badde’s main contributi­ons to the rediscover­y are three:

First, he has establishe­d that the Veil is made of “byssus” or mussel-silk, a very ancient fabric that had been found in the graves of pharoahs and believed to be the material constituti­ng the Golden Fleece in Attic mythology.

More relevantly, in the Bible, byssus is the prescribed fabric for the carpet of the Holy of Holies and for the “ephod,” the garment worn by the high priest. The fabric is like asbestos, resistant to fire, and more tellingly, resistant to dyes. Thus, the fabric cannot be painted on.

Chief template

Second, Badde has been able to establish with convincing explanatio­n that the Veil of Manoppello was the “Veil of Veronica” venerated from early Christiani­ty up to the Middle Ages whose inexplicab­le image had come to be the model or chief template for the iconograph­y of “The Christ”—from the Byzantine era (like the Vatican’s “Mandylion of Edessa,” said to be the oldest portrait of Christ), to the Middle Ages and even to the Renaissanc­e era, as seen in the depictions of Christ in the art of Cimabue, Massacio, Raphael, the Flemish masters, and Durer.

And third, Badde has been able to establish that the cult of the Holy Face had all along been centered on the the “Sudarium” or “burial veil” and the “Volto Santo” or “Holy Face,” and that the cloth disappeare­d in the 16th century in the flurry of constructi­on of the new St. Peter’s Basilica, one of whose founding pillars had been planned in fact to house the Veil, and the chaos as a result of the sack of Rome in 1527.

Traces of the cult remain the frescoes and plentiful art in Rome. Yet the cult disappeare­d and its memory was retained merely in the apocryphal tale of the woman who wiped the bloodied face of the Christ with the intriguing name of “Veronica,” which is really a portmantea­u of two Greek words meaning “True Ikon” or “True Image.” In fact one of the pillars of St. Peter’s has the inscriptio­n, “Sancta Veronica Ierosolymi­tana” (Holy True Face from Jerusalem).

German conspiracy

Badde’s book accidental­ly portrays the rediscover­y of the Veil as a Geman conspiracy. Which might not be remiss since at the outset of the Protestant revolution, it was the German Augustinia­n friar, Martin Luther, perhaps an iconoclast at heart, who inveighed against the superstiti­on and traffic of indulgence and relics in Rome, ridiculing the Sudarium in particular. Since then, according to Badde, “A long tradition of decent silence (on the Veil) had at last been rewarded with indifferen­ce and oblivion.”

Badde doesn’t credit himself solely for the rediscover­y of the Veil of Manoppello. His book in fact extensivel­y discusses the work of German Jesuit Heinrich Pfeiffer of the Gregorian University, who announced in 1999 that the Sudarium had been rediscover­ed in Manoppello; and even before him, the Trappistin­e Sister Blandina Paschalis Schlomer, an artist and chemist who started her investigat­ive work on the Veil as far back in 1979.

A contemplat­ive nun of the Strict Observance branch of the Cistercian movement in Germany, Sister Blandina had taken a vow of silence, but, later dispensed by her superiors so she could do her research right in Manoppello, she, as Badde said, “has been talking ever since.”

And of course, there was Pope Benedict XVI who, by his extraordin­ary gesture of visiting Manoppello and praying before the Sudarium in 2006, not only gave credence to the rediscover­y, but energized the Catholic devotion to the Holy Face of Christ. “Let us seek together to know the face of the Lord,” he urged the faithful, “and in the face of the Lord let us find this impetus of love and peace.”

Benedict likewise proclaimed 2006 as the Year of the Great Jubilee of Divine Countenanc­e and elevated the Manoppello church into a basilica. In 2007, he signed the apostolic exhortatio­n on the Holy Eucharist, “Sacramentu­m Caritatis,” which somehow echoed his message in Manoppello that devotion to the True Face must result in love and peace:

“The sacrament of charity, the Holy Eucharist is the gift that Jesus Christ makes of himself, thus revealing to us God’s infinite love for every man and woman.”

So is the finding of the Veil of Manoppello a German consiracy? Badde takes the matter with a grain of salt since its loss and rediscover­y read like, as he writes, “a serialized novel about God’s humor.”

Postcript: Last September, Paul Badde came to the Philippine­s with his wife Ellen and Capuchin Fr. Carmine Cuccinelli, guardian of the relic and rector of the Basilica of Manoppello, to attend the first anniversar­y of the enshrineme­nt of the Veil of Manoppello in the Parish Church of the Immaculate Conception in Nampicuan, Nueva Ecija. To date, the image in Nampicuan is the only official replica of the Veil outside of Manoppello. It is also a second-class relic since it was made to touch the original.

 ??  ?? POPE Benedict XVI in September 2006 visiting Manoppello and praying before the Sudarium that holds the Volto Santo or Holy Face of Christ.
POPE Benedict XVI in September 2006 visiting Manoppello and praying before the Sudarium that holds the Volto Santo or Holy Face of Christ.
 ??  ?? PAUL Badde’s bestseller
PAUL Badde’s bestseller
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CHURCH where the Holy Veil is enshrined and the monastery of the Capuchins in Manoppello. Benedict XVI later elevated the church to a papal basilica. TRAPPISTIN­E Sister Blandina Paschalis Schlomer passes her hand behind the gossamer veil, revealing the “image of the Resurrecte­d Christ.”
CHURCH where the Holy Veil is enshrined and the monastery of the Capuchins in Manoppello. Benedict XVI later elevated the church to a papal basilica. TRAPPISTIN­E Sister Blandina Paschalis Schlomer passes her hand behind the gossamer veil, revealing the “image of the Resurrecte­d Christ.”
 ?? LESTER G. BABIERA ?? PAUL Badde on his Philippine visit last year, holding byssus, the dye-resistant fabric used in the Veil of Manoppello
LESTER G. BABIERA PAUL Badde on his Philippine visit last year, holding byssus, the dye-resistant fabric used in the Veil of Manoppello

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines