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PEOPLE AROUND THE POPE

Ultimo Aggiornamento: 14/11/2013 17:36
04/02/2006 02:17
 
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THE ITALIAN PRINCESS

At the risk of getting Simone really upset, I decided to check out Alessandra Borghese's website after reading Teresa's post above and Rocco Palma's comments in his blog today about Princess Ale's connection to Papa (including a photo of her sitting next to Papa on the plane from WYD). The website is very interesting and includes A LOT of articles that she has written about Papa or his brother. Unfortunately, the articles are all in Italian and since I can only pick out every tenth word, I didn't get much out of them. But if any of you who do know Italian would like to read about Ale and Papa's encounters, the site is:
www.alessandraborghese.it/.
Maybe if we can get Teresa to take a week off from work and just translate day and night, we can get an English version of the articles. Sorry, Teresa, no pressure.
04/02/2006 06:55
 
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THE POPE AND THE PRINCESS
Rocco has the picture - shown here - but we had the story that went
with the picture two days earlier, and he doesn't. Many thanks anyway
to Rocco and his whispersintheloggia.blogspot.com/ for this:


Alessandra Borghese with the Pope on the flight home from Cologne
last August; Cardinal Sodano is seen in the background.


Rocco implies the Princess had the seat next to the Pope throughout the flight. "As you can see, she's in, alright. (A real princess as opposed to a clerical one -- how refreshing!) On that topic, while some American bishops (who shall remain nameless) were stamping their feet and throwing diva fits over their logistical arrangements in Cologne, la vera principessa had no such issues, including the perk of flying on the papal plane. And what a seat, eh?"

We know she wrote she had "a few minutes" to sit beside him during the flight.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 04/02/2006 13.33]

04/02/2006 14:29
 
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THE POPE AND THE PRINCESS
Aaaaaaahhhh !!! Dear sisters, have pity on me ! Oh, what a torture, what a pain ! [SM=g27825] [SM=g27825] [SM=g27826] [SM=g27826]
But I still want to see every pic and read every article about that ladies. [SM=x40792] [SM=x40792]
I tell you, call it female intuition or anything else, I’m sure, if A. and G. would not be princesses and for this reason VIP’s, both would be with us in our Papa Ratzi Forum and they were crying much louder than I do, or some of us. And their Love-List would be much longer than mine, be sure.
In german we would say "Sie ist hinter ihm her". I don't know, what 's the same meaning in english.
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Wer glaubt, ist nie allein, im Leben nicht und auch im Sterben nicht.
(PREDIGT DES HEILIGEN VATERS BENEDIKT XVI. ZUR AMTSEINFÜHRUNG 24. April 2005)
04/02/2006 17:53
 
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WOMEN AROUND THE POPE
Dear Simone - I am sure you have visited Alessandra's site by now and noted, among other things, her article recounting the emotions she felt on the death of John Paul II, whom she considers "an important point of reference" for her during the years when she decided to become a practising Catholic again.
www.alessandraborghese.it/upload/Gente%2021-04-2005.pdf

And this article, in fact, shows two pictures of her seated net to JPII on an airplane, much like she sat next to Papa in the picture above. In the sidebar to the above article, she says at one point, "The true Catholic does not love a Pope, but loves the Pope." She wrote these articles right after JPII's funeral, before anyone knew Ratzinger would be the next Pope.

So, even if it is only in jest, I wouldn't say that "she is after him" in the sense that you mean by 'hinterher". Of course, we can all envy her that her venerable ancestry gives her far easier access to the Popes and to the Vatican than lesser mortals do. But, hey, if I were a Borghese of the Borgheses, and I had sincerely returned to the Faith, what better occupation to choose than being a Vatican correspondent?

And personally, the women I envy around the Pope are Carmela, Loredana, Cristina and Emanuela, who serve his most direct personal needs. God bless them all...

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 04/02/2006 17.54]

05/02/2006 13:47
 
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WOMEN AROUND THE POPE
Dear Teresa, please excuse me, if I write my answer in german, because I can’t find the right english words as quick as I want.

Quote: "The true Catholic does not love a Pope, but loves the Pope."
Ein schöner Satz, der aber bei mir nicht stimmt. Ich liebe diesen einen Papst, unseren B16.
JPII habe ich gemocht und respektiert, diesen aber liebe ich. Er weckt in mir eine Art Beschützerinstinkt, ich wünschte ihm zu dienen, ihn zu umsorgen und zu behüten. Aber das ist ein sehr schwerer Dienst, der umso schwerer wäre, wenn man die Gefühle nicht immer so ganz 100 % unter Kontrolle hat. Deshalb bewundere ich die Laienschwestern mehr als dass ich sie beneide und ich wünsche von ganzem Herzen, dass sie Papa’s Leben so leicht und angenehm wie möglich machen.
Mein Vertrauen zu ihm ist grenzenlos und ich würde alles befolgen, was er mir sagt.

Mit Alessandra und Gloria ist es etwas anders. Sie sind weltliche Frauen, die nur aufgrund ihrer gesellschaftlichen Stellung Zugang zu Papa haben. Über Alessandra weiß ich eigentlich viel zu wenig, aber Gloria ist viel mehr das Ziel meines Zorns. Ich habe das Buch „Gloria“ von Peter Seewald gelesen, in dem ganzen Buch wird der Name Ratzinger nicht ein einziges Mal erwähnt, außer unter einem Familienfoto. Ist das nicht seltsam, wenn sie andererseits in Interviews sagt: „Er (Ratzinger) ist mein Retter und mein Held“ und dass er sie zum katholischen Glauben zurückgeführt hat ? Nichts davon ist in dem Buch zu finden.
Dann ihre Ehe mit dem wesentlich älteren Fürsten.., vielleicht ein Indiz dafür, zu welcher Altersgruppe von Männern sie sich möglicherweise hingezogen fühlt.....
Und ich schließe hier von mir auf andere !
Deshalb quält es mich so sehr, weil immer nur Prominente Zugang zu Papa haben und wir ohne jede Chance sind.

Liebe Teresa, ich bin ein närrisches Weib, bitte sei nachsichtig mit mir !

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Wer glaubt, ist nie allein, im Leben nicht und auch im Sterben nicht.
(PREDIGT DES HEILIGEN VATERS BENEDIKT XVI. ZUR AMTSEINFÜHRUNG 24. April 2005)
05/02/2006 16:44
 
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mag6nideum
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To Simone55
Dear Simone - I have read your German post above to Teresa-B.
I'm becoming worried about you! [SM=g27819] Why don't you just forget "die Gloria" and the Borghese woman and try and get your own audience with the Pope? Is there anaything that prevents you from trying? [SM=g27828] [SM=g27835]
05/02/2006 17:00
 
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Dear mag6nideum

try and get your own audience with the Pope? Is there anaything that prevents you from trying?



Hihihi, don't ask me, ask the vatican..... [SM=x40795] [SM=x40795]

And don't be worry about me, I'm still alive ! [SM=x40791] [SM=x40791]

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wer glaubt, ist nie allein, im Leben nicht und auch im Sterben nicht.
(PREDIGT DES HEILIGEN VATERS BENEDIKT XVI. ZUR AMTSEINFÜHRUNG 24. April 2005)
05/02/2006 19:24
 
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Alessandra Borghese
I think it is wonderful that the Pope does not only talk to cardinals, bishops, priests etc. but also to beautiful women.

How often do the press attack him and say that he has a problem with women, that they have no sympathy for him - especially the German feminists?

And there comes this Italian Princess and obviously the two of them found something like a friendship or relationship. I think it's great. Every man, even the Pope, needs some feminine aspect in his life.

Gloria - yes, she used to get on my nerves a few years ago, whe turned up on TV all the time with her funny hairstyles and she was a real party girl. But obviously she changed, that is possible. People do change, may be something happened in her life, who knows.... And I believe her that she does adore the Pope. I'm not jealous at all because I think it's good for him.

I'm happy when he is happy and I'm sure Papa is intelligent enough to know which people are good for him. And I hope that there are many people around him who love him the way I do (well, I know that's hardly possible but...... )[SM=g27828]
06/02/2006 00:41
 
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@Jil: "I think it is wonderful that the Pope does not only talk to cardinals, bishops, priests etc. but also to beautiful women."


Jil, can we compromise? Let's say he can talk to all the women he would like to, just not beautiful women.
07/02/2006 17:04
 
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NEWS ABOUT ONE OF MY FAVORITE PEOPLE AROUND THE POPE

U.S. Archbishop Foley has nonmalignant tumor, kidney removed

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

ROME (CNS) -- U.S. Archbishop John P. Foley, president of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, underwent surgery Feb. 3 to remove a nonmalignant tumor, but said that, "unfortunately, they also had to take out my kidney."

The archbishop, who was to remain at Rome's Gemelli hospital at least until Feb. 8, told Catholic News Service Feb. 6 that although he felt "a little bleak" right after the surgery, he was improving quickly.

The most surprising thing, he said, was how much attention the operation got on Catholic news sites and blogs, or Web logs.

Archbishop Foley, 70, said a blood test he had in the United States showed something wrong, but it was only after further tests and a CT scan that the kidney tumor was diagnosed.

A native of Philadelphia, he had been editor of the Catholic Standard & Times, the archdiocesan newspaper.

Pope John Paul II named him an archbishop and president of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications in 1984.

While he said he did not know how long it would be before he could return to work, the archbishop said the council's plenary meeting would take place as planned in mid-March.

Under his leadership, the council has issued major statements on a variety of ethical issues facing the mass media, including ethics in advertising, pornography, the Internet, and ecumenical and interreligious dialogue.
14/02/2006 03:28
 
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THE PAPAL PRESS SECRETARY, DR. JOACHIN NAVARRO-VALLS
From The National Catholic Register


February 10, 2006 / Joaquin Navarro-Valls has seen history up-close over the past 22 years.

The Vatican spokesman worked closely with Pope John Paul II and now Pope Benedict XVI. He said he’d like to get back to his original field — medicine — but that Pope Benedict has asked him to stay on.

Navarro-Valls spoke to Register correspondent Edward Pentin Jan. 19 at the Holy See Press Office.

How much do you consider your work as evangelization, as a mission?

As with every job, this is one that should and must be done with a background of professionalism, with norms, and so on — it’s a professional job. Certainly for a Christian and a Catholic, every single job and every situation in life could be, and should be, at the same time a mission. This is the context in which I should try to live my beliefs. So from my point of view, you cannot separate any of these things, and I insist on a level of professionalism. Without those parameters, you cannot try to do something serious as a job — and specifically a job like this.

So do you consider your work a vocation?

Again, for every single Christian, any situation in life can be a vocation. This is why I was called to this work. The same can be said for marriage, to a profession, to developing activities in one’s social life and so on. But again, I always try to stress to myself, to others, and to my colleagues here in the office, the idea of professionalism. It can be said that for a layperson, professionalism is the name of mission.

Doing it to the best of your ability.

That’s it — that’s your responsibility in your job. To be honest and so on and so on.

Has belonging to Opus Dei helped you foster this approach to your work?

Yes, Opus Dei, of course, but also just being a Christian. I feel there are so many people who feel a kind of tension between their Christian vocation and their professional life. At a certain point, they can and should be mixed together. You cannot follow a double path in your life.

As you know, much of the press these days focuses on the sensational aspects of news, and tends to omit the facts. By doing so, the press often fails to grasp the essential nature of the Church when reporting on the Vatican.

Does this irritate you at all?

Irritation, no. I wouldn’t be so pessimistic in this regard. I’ve asked myself what kind of picture people must have of the Catholic Church and Christian values if the only way they come to know the Catholic Church is through the papers. Well, many of the characteristics of key points of Christianity are there. For instance, a Catholic should be honest in any walk of life, have stability in family life through marriage between a man and a woman, respect for life, dignity for every single person. So there are a set of values, in different languages and maybe not expressed with great clarity, but which are nevertheless there.

Certainly if you want to get the complete picture, nobody goes just to the papers or public opinion. They go to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, or whatever. But with respect to the general picture, I don’t feel so pessimistic about it, which is why I don’t get irritated by it. Certainly there are some occasions you see something which is totally opposed to the values that we have in the Catholic Church. At that point, it is the job, the vocation of my office, to try to clarify that by offering people our views, by offering people exactly what the Pope is saying, and so on. Nevertheless, there will always be people who will say, “Okay, I’ve understood it, but I don’t like it and I will write just the opposite.” It’s up to them!

But do you see things getting better in your view, that since Pope John Paul II died people are taking more of an interest and coming to grips with issues more than they used to?

I think that the vitality, to use a neutral word, of the 27-year pontificate of John Paul II, is there. And the result is that Christian values are clearer now — even among people who are not Catholics. The curiosity towards Christianity has improved. And even in this pontificate, not a year long, you can see — concentrating on one single parameter as there are many others — the large number of people coming to St. Peter’s Square to take part in the audiences and the Angelus. These numbers have increased enormously, even to the extent that up until the first part of winter, the audiences were in the open because it was impossible to accommodate them inside.

So I would say there is something at the root of all this, and this is something I’ve been reflecting upon these days — and not only these days. The anti-Christian prejudice in modernity is now dissolving. It’s disappearing. It’s crumbling. The idea that modernity is equal to an anti-Christian prejudice is disappearing.

But if I may take you up on that: Only yesterday there was a resolution passed in the European Parliament warning that states that refuse to approve “marriage” and unions between same-sex couples would be subject to sanctions and eventual expulsion from the European Union. A few Members of the European Parliament also directly criticized Pope Benedict XVI on this issue. Isn’t that an indication that there’s still a long way to go?

If you’re thinking that everybody around the world is Catholic then. … But for Christianity, that’s always been the same. It was very clear in the long pontificate of John Paul II and it’s also clear now in the papacy of Benedict XVI. The Catholic Church is not, in essence, interested in succeeding in a battle and imposing values. She is offering values.

And it’s up to them to take it or leave it?

Yes. To put it in Italian: La Chiesa e non interessante a vincere, ma a convincere (the Church is not interested in winning, but convincing) which is completely different. Not to win, but to offer. And more than one billion people around the world agree with that.

But in Italy there is still significant prejudice, or resistance, against the Church in terms of what the Church teaches.

Yesterday, I read in the paper — I’d like to read it in its entirety — a survey that said that 87% of the people in this country say they’re Catholics, and this is an increase of 20% compared to 20 years ago, or something like that.

Yet two thirds of that 87% support civil unions legislation in favor of same-sex couples.

That’s why I’m interested in taking a closer look at the survey. I don’t know how the questions were put to the people. I mean, to publish a survey without detailing what questions were used, makes it difficult to say.

Regarding the Holy See Press Office, it’s been said that Pope Benedict is very likely to streamline the Vatican’s press and communications offices to try and make them a single, unified voice. How true are these rumors, and what reforms would you personally like made to these offices?

Regarding the first part of your question, I don’t know anything about that. From the point of view of unifying the voice, for the last 27 years it’s been very clear: it’s the [Vatican’s] point of reference. The press office represents the official position of the Holy See. I don’t know what is the mind of the Holy Father on this.

But would you personally like to see changes?

I think the structural changes in any organization are very easy; the difficulty is in changing the mentality — that’s much more difficult. The central question is: Are you interested in participating in the dialectic of public opinion, or not? If you want to participate in that, then you have got to develop a semantic — a way of saying things that can be understood by people. Then you have to revise your method of releasing information — exactly what we have been trying to do over the last years and, I would say, with some success.

If you take some points, the way in which the Holy See has informed on many issues, one could even say it was a model for other people, especially when you look at the coverage of the last month of the life of John Paul II. But if you put it into context of other countries, I’m not even going to get into that. Absolute clarity from the very beginning up to the last moment, etc.

Regarding the point of view and position of the Holy See regarding many issues, that has been very clear.

But there was the incident last summer, for example, when unknown to you, the Secretariat of State put out a strong rebuttal to comments made by some Israeli officials over the absence of a papal condemnation of a terrorist attack in the country.

That was, shall we say, a mistake. A position was attributed to me but it was one that I had not expressed. The statement was released when I was personally flying back to Rome from Val d’Aosta, but this was a small thing that was immediately clarified afterwards. I went to the press, to Corriere della Sera, to say that No, I hadn’t read it before it was published — or after it was published. But it is a small thing in the whole context. I don’t think it was a great problem because it was clarified immediately.

What’s it like to work for Pope Benedict XVI? What are the differences in comparison to working for John Paul II?

I think there is a double continuity. There is continuity with John Paul II because, among other things, Cardinal Ratzinger was a key person in the Roman Curia for 25 or 26 years with John Paul II.

But at the same time, there’s another interesting continuity to take into account which is the long continuation of 20 centuries of popes — nothing is changing. The basic points of the Catholic Church are there.

Then, after that, it can be said there are differences in style, in the way of doing some things. For instance, in Benedict XVI, there’s an extraordinary conceptual capacity and yet at the same time there is the facility in which he expresses those difficult concepts in a way that everybody understands. At World Youth Day in Cologne last August, there was a huge headline in the leading German newspaper that read: ”The Academic Who Can Be Understood.” That is a great capacity, and we’re seeing that every single day in the audiences. Maybe this is exactly what our time needs, to go deep into many concepts of everything — the concepts of mankind, the conception of man, human love. The key points of our culture. And, at the same time, saying that in the kind of way that can be understood. This, by the way, is a great facility for my office where we have to transmit all this — it’s being done already by the Holy Father.

A Vatican official told me that he’s making theology attractive as well as easily understood.

Yes, both by academics and also by people at audiences — both of them. None of them is disappointed when they listen to Benedict XVI.

Will it be a great teaching pontificate?

I would say so. I’m sure. By saying that I’m not just making an act of faith, but I am thinking of the long list of books written by then-Cardinal Ratzinger — it’s huge. And dealing not only with, so to speak, clerical matters, but dealing with everything that is put there by modernity and he has tried to successfully deal with those topics. The content is there in what has been published in the last 20 years.

Is his papacy part of the reason for the fact that anti-Christian prejudice is, as you say, dissolving?

I am sure and certainly also the contribution of John Paul II. One of the successes is due to putting the religious dimension of human beings there at the center of the discussion. What you mentioned earlier about the European Parliament confirms that. What is happening here is that people get nervous. They are not setting the agenda, that’s being set somewhere else.

In many ways, there’s a different pastoral approach here, isn’t there?

Yes. When we use the word pastoral, this is what it is. Such a thing is badly needed, because there is a great confusion in basic concepts that we use every single day. What is life? What is the meaning of suffering? What is the meaning of human dignity? What does it really mean? He’s explaining what they are.

I remember during the pontificate of John Paul II being sent in 1995 to the Beijing conference regarding women, that huge conference there. And to my surprise there was some delegation trying to delete from the documents the word “dignity” regarding women because they saw dignity as being something religious when it’s very human. It’s nothing dogmatic, it’s just philosophy, conception, how you understand the human being. It was something stupid, and eventually they were defeated.

On that issue of confusion, does it concern you when a senior Vatican official speaks about something that is at odds with established Church teaching? I’m thinking of a cardinal who said recently that he didn’t think divorce, in some cases, was a sin.

He was not a Vatican official, and I’m not sure the paper reported accurately what he said. Divorce — what is divorce? It is a civil procedure.

But what about when a cardinal or senior bishop says things not consistent with Catholic teaching?

But do you think a situation like that can put into doubt the position of the Catholic Church on some topics?

I’d say it adds to confusion.

It’s clear, the position of the Catholic Church, regarding marriage. To give a complete answer to this question, I would need to go to the journalist and ask him, “Did the cardinal say that?” Because at the bottom, you’ve got to ask yourself, here is the Bible, here is the Catechism; whom should I believe, this or that? The Bible or the Catechism? Certainly on important things like this. So in the end of all this, public opinion has its importance. I’ve been working in this field for many years, but at the bottom, when someone tries to clarify himself or herself on a key point of Catholic doctrine, I think it’s a little bit risky just to follow what the paper says, and this is something everybody understands. Everybody.

What are your plans as press officer? Do you intend to stay for the duration of this papacy?

I’ll say to you what I said to myself many times during my 22 years with John Paul II in this job: I want to live each day as it comes. Certainly I’m convinced that 22 years in this job is something absolutely unprecedented, not only in the Holy See but around the world. I have known in this time 12 spokesmen for the White House, 15 for the secretary general of the United Nations and I’m still here. One day I’ll say I am finished. What I can tell you is that Benedict XVI has asked me to remain for some time and so I said Okay, but I still have a nostalgia for my first professional love which, as you know, was medicine. Some time I spent in Oxford doing research in my specialized field but I don’t know that.

You’d like to go back to that?

It’s a possibility, or to write a book to explain the experience of 22 years, I don’t know yet; I haven’t decided.

What have been your highlights of 22 years here?

It’s impossible to single out a moment because, for now, the memories are all there. Certainly, I have seen history up close on many occasions. History with capital letters. I cannot forget all the occasions I was working with John Paul II, day by day, and now with Benedict XVI. The last days of his life, that month from the first time he was recovering in hospital until the day he died, I was trying to do two things simultaneously — following the events and at the same time coming here to the press office for at least two briefings every day, explaining everything. There are too many memories just to single out a single moment. Certainly, I can remember being called here with much surprise as I wasn’t trying to do this kind of job, really not looking for it. It was quite unexpected for me.

What are your abiding memories of John Paul II?

His good humor. This is something seen in many of the pictures of John Paul II, when he was performing ceremonies or addressing people. But working with him was very easy; it was wonderful because he always had a very good sense of humor.

Even in difficult situations?

Even in difficult situations, yes. Certainly, if we got into the sanctity of his personal life, we could go on for hours — many hours. And this is something which, in a way, every single person who has known John Paul II, and even people who haven’t had the opportunity to meet him personally, are aware of.

Like working with a saint?

Yes.
20/02/2006 00:01
 
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LEVADA RECONSIDERED
From www.newoxfordreview.org/article.jsp?did=0106-bethell
Tom Bethell, contributing editor to the New Oxford Review*, writes an unusually lengthy piece looking into Archbishop Levada's tenure as Archbishop of San Francisco and raises some questions of concern.
----------------------------------------------------------------
"THE EXACT MIDDLE OF THE ROAD"
Archbishop Levada: Advancing on the Chessboard

By Tom Bethell

Probably most American Catholics had never heard of Archbishop William Levada. But Benedict XVI's decision, soon after he was elected Pope, to promote Levada to Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith came as a surprise to insiders, including some cardinals. Levada had taken what could only be called a modest view of his role as Archbishop of San Francisco. Then, out of the blue, he was elevated to the highest Church position ever held by an American. As Archbishop, first of Portland and then San Francisco, he had shown little inclination toward leadership. An intellectual with Hamlet-like qualities, he was surely not cut out to be the Prefect.

Under the regime of Archbishop John Quinn, his predecessor in San Francisco for 18 long years, Catholicism in "the City" (as San Francisco is called by locals) continued its prolonged decline. Mass attendance, which had fallen by over 60 percent since the late 1960s, showed no sign of recovery. At least 10 churches were closed. When Levada arrived, the main issue stirring up activists was the closure and threatened sale of St. Bridget's Church on valuable real estate. That was put on hold -- bishop seemingly riding to the rescue! -- but its sale was announced the moment he left San Francisco. That summarized his tenure. Oil on troubled waters, but beneath the surface there was no change.

The quality of episcopal appointments in California, dismal before Levada's arrival in San Francisco, showed no improvement after it. Patrick Ziemann, the Bishop of nearby Santa Rosa, had a two-year sexual relationship with one of his priests and had to resign after accusations of assault made the immoral relationship public.

Meanwhile, homosexual activism in the area went from strength to strength. Despite, or more likely because of AIDS, homosexuals acquired ever greater political power. The local episcopacy, under both Quinn and Levada, were too timid to say much of anything about that dangerous topic. The ever-present risk of retaliation -- who knew which closeted homosexuals within the clerical ranks might be outed? -- ensured that silence remained the preferred policy. More than anything, that accounts for the almost inaudible response by the Catholic hierarchy, and not just in San Francisco but almost everywhere, to one of the great moral issues of our time.

Levada behaved as though he had been parachuted into a minefield and his job was to emerge without setting off any mines. He referred to the "hot button" issues that pressed against him -- hot buttons being the horns of the mines. Somehow, he seemed to avoid them. He made no waves. He construed his job as one of avoidance, of steering clear, hanging back, treading softly, and certainly carrying no stick. And in the end, at the age of 69, he was airlifted out by his old friend Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI.

Levada stayed on the good side of Don Lattin, the San Francisco Chronicle reporter capable of generating hostile headlines at 24 hours' notice. He stayed on the good side of the liberal Jesuits at the University of San Francisco, whose enmity might have hurt fundraising. He stayed on the good side of his own senior cabal of priests, who wanted to pursue their easygoing agenda without too much interference from the Chancery. He stayed on the good side of the liberal Sulpicians and the Rev. Gerald Coleman, who ran St. Patrick's Seminary in Menlo Park, 30 miles to the south of the City.

Levada didn't pay much attention to the handful of conservative Catholics remaining in the City, because he didn't have to. Largely powerless, they could be ignored. They wrote articles for San Francisco Faith, but its circulation was tiny. Ron Russell came along and did his independent digging for SF Weekly, just as he had done two years earlier with his alternative-press exposés of Roger Mahony's borderline criminal operations in Los Angeles. But the status quo was never threatened in San Francisco the way it was in Boston, and indeed Los Angeles. (The Boston Globe and later The New York Times only became involved in serious coverage of Cardinal Law and the Boston scandals after another "alternative" paper, the Boston Phoenix, published story after story about the Church scandals in 2001.)

Levada's ability to skirt controversy won him admirers in Rome. At a time when press coverage of the American hierarchy was turning into a nightmare, unfriendly headlines rarely made their way from San Francisco to Rome. To a Curia that has long seemed to value diplomacy above all other skills, and prudence above all other virtues, Levada's quiet tenure in the hot-button City by the Bay surely marked him as a master navigator of the American scene.

In an article published by San Francisco magazine just as Levada set off for his new assignment, the Catholic writer Jason Berry pointed out that Levada had escaped unscathed even though he had used the same tactics that had caused other bishops to be vilified in the press. Levada had "hidden the identities of accused predators, recycled some after sending them for a bout of therapy and left others in their posts, including one who became a top consultant on the abuse scandal. He also punished whistle blowers. Yet with the exception of recent cover stories in SF Weekly, Levada has largely escaped banner headlines. Had Levada been subjected to the sustained scrutiny that Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston was, he might have been passed over for the new job."

In his first interview in Rome, Levada told Vatican Radio in late October that he brought to his new job "a sense of the complex pastoral realities that a bishop faces." Realities is an interesting word, implying something so large and entrenched -- a whole anti-Catholic culture out there -- that no mere bishop can be expected to change or even challenge it. That, at any rate, was how Levada proceeded. The culture, dominated in San Francisco by activist homosexuals and their supporters, was simply there -- a reality. Short of putting one's head in a news-media noose -- not Levada's style -- there wasn't much that could be done about it. (And was that not Rome's will? That any bishop's moves on the cultural chessboard should be made as diplomatically and inconspicuously as possible? That was Levada's style.)

Levada added in his radio interview that the Congregation's new responsibility "for dealing with issues of sexual abuse of minors by priests, by clergy," may also have been a factor in his selection by the Pope. Given "the explosion of that on the American scene over the past few years," he added, the Pope may have seen his "experience with that" as a useful qualification.

I would amend that only to say that it's not so much the sexual abuse that has exploded as the public revelation of it. That really is new. But cases have been reported in Europe, too, suggesting that the real difference in America is the press, which is more aggressive and less subject to external pressure. That is what the Vatican has been unprepared for. A smattering of morally delinquent priests is nothing new. The regular broadcasting of their misdeeds is new.

Entrenched Vatican policy seems to have been based on the idea that publicity about an abusive priest only makes a bad situation worse. Therefore, bishops are expected to cover up such things as a matter of course. But that strategy is useless today, or worse than useless. Bishops have to assume that the story will come out, and that they themselves will appear as accomplices rather than leaders if they attempt concealment. To make matters worse, the trial lawyers will come after whatever cash they can lay their hands on. As far as Rome is concerned, the media realities may not have sunk in. Levada is well positioned to tell the Pope how the press works here. In San Francisco he made a point of keeping abreast of developments in The New York Times. "Where's The New York Times?" he would often ask aides. (Which of his brother bishops was in trouble today?)

In December 2002 Cardinal Ratzinger was quoted by the Catholic news agency Zenit as saying: "I am personally convinced that the constant presence in the press of the sins of Catholic priests, especially in the United States, is a planned campaign, as the percentage of these offenses among priests is not higher than in other categories, and perhaps it is even lower."

But in the realm of premeditated sexual assaults by clerics on minors, surely, the expectation is that it would be lower -- a lot lower. The question is not whether the news media undertook a "planned campaign" but whether the articles were true. All the indications are that they were true, and further, that such exposés have been minimized -- confined to the narrow category of criminal activity, involving minors. The press has shown hardly any interest in the far broader category of immoral relationships involving consenting adults -- especially homosexuals.

As to Levada's appointment, the following should also be noted. From 1976 to 1982, he worked in Rome for the Congregation he now leads. Cardinal Ratzinger got to know him well during that time, and it is reasonable to assume that today Benedict XVI has a good understanding of the workings of Levada's mind.

It is said that Levada is moving to this "powerful" position in Rome, but as Prefect he will surely have less freedom and independence than he enjoyed as Archbishop of the remote province (from Rome's point of view) of San Francisco. He will be hemmed in, not least by the Pope himself, and what one knows or suspects of Levada's character suggests that a loss of independence is something that he won't mind in the slightest. Constitutionally, he seems better suited to the Congregation job than to the Archdiocesan minefield.

At the time of his San Francisco appointment in 1995, Levada was identified in the media as a conservative. He was the "conservative Portland prelate," a "rising conservative force." He "fits the pattern of conservative postings by the Pope." He was a "theological conservative." And so it went. One former priest in San Francisco, identified in the Chronicle by name, said his colleagues in the City who were still on the job, still pastoring away, were worried about this new conservative arriving from Portland. "This guy is going to come in and demand obedience to the system," he said. Imagine that! That's how bad it could have been.

Eventually, Levada came out with his hands up. He granted an interview to the Chronicle's Don Lattin.

Lattin: You're coming to a city with a reputation for liberalism, spiritual and ethnic diversity, and tolerance for gays and lesbians. You arrive with a reputation as a conservative man and theological hard-liner. Do you come to San Francisco with a bit of trepidation?

Levada: …With regard to reputations about conservative or hard-liner, I consider myself to be in the exact middle of the road as to where I should be as a bishop. I have a responsibility to uphold the teaching and tradition of the church. I would hope that I would be compassionate, interested in people's situations, their problems, their difficulties -- listen to them, dialogue with them.

In May, after Levada's appointment to Rome was announced, The New York Times called him "A Theological Hardliner with a Moderate Streak." In a retrospective assessment, also published in May, the Rev. Richard P. McBrien of Notre Dame's Theology Department summed up Levada's tenure with considerable accuracy: "A number of people were apprehensive about his coming there as an archbishop and were relieved to find out that he was much more hands-off in many respects than what they expected."

Hands-off. One hopes that that reaches the Pope's desk. If Levada skirted the mines and the headlines, and therefore was viewed as a success, at least at the level of diplomacy, it was because he had been hands-off rather than hands-on. Levada's own self characterization, as "more of a cocker spaniel than a rottweiler" (as Cardinal Ratzinger had been called), was itself quite perceptive.

The National Catholic Reporter's John Allen said that Levada "is seen as somebody who is very clear in his principles but very flexible in his application of those principles." Conflict is something that he tries to "defuse." That, too, was on the mark. Levada was "flexible" and saw conflict with the secular world as something to be finessed. But doctrine, even when enunciated correctly, cannot be conserved for long if leaders turn a blind eye to practice. Orthodoxy without practice is like faith without works. Principles espoused on paper but applied flexibly soon resemble dead letters.

That has been the fate of the Church's teaching on abortion. The U.S. hierarchy has been less than enthusiastic about transmitting it, not because they don't believe it, necessarily, but because they don't want to offend the secular culture -- influential politicians in particular. Until Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis took action in 2004, the silence of the bishops had shown that politicians who loom large in our lives could ignore the Church's teaching without cost. The teaching survived in principle, but a flexible hierarchy had blurred it with "seamless garment" messages and the indulgent embrace of such figures as Sen. Edward Kennedy.

A politician who actively opposes all anti-abortion laws and then conspicuously receives Communion on Sunday sends a plain message to the faithful: "It's O.K. to support abortion. If I were doing anything wrong my bishop would have said something by now. But he hasn't."

Levada skirted this hot-button issue. When he returned from a trip to Rome in May 2004, and was asked about giving Communion, he had "no comment" for reporters. House Minority leader Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco, a Catholic, was one of 48 representatives who wrote a letter to the U.S. bishops warning them that the "threat of withholding a sacrament will revive latent anti-Catholic prejudice." (A religion that can only avoid prejudice by refusing to take itself seriously is not long for this world.) San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom had already made headlines by issuing same-sex "marriage" licenses at City Hall. Newsom calls himself a Catholic, but, according to the Chronicle, said he "fundamentally disagrees with Catholic Church teachings on stem cell research, abortion rights, same-sex marriage and birth control." He had received Communion just the other day, he added, although he declined to say where. "I have lots of priests who are family friends." But his conscience was "clear."

Levada issued an on-the-one-hand, on-the-other-hand statement, clearly hoping the issue would go away. He called abortion evil, but stressed the intention of politicians -- did they intend to promote the killing of innocent life when they voted for abortion. He thereby revived the alibi of Catholic politicians who say they are "personally opposed" to abortion. Later, in an interview with the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Levada threw in the towel, saying: "Many of us as bishops are newly committed to seeking a path of dialogue on these areas," and "you don't start that dialogue by telling them you are going to refuse them Communion."

In effect, he had teamed up with Washington, D.C.'s Theodore Cardinal McCarrick, who sometimes gives the impression of loving power as much as he loves the Church. At Mass in St. Matthew's Cathedral the day after Pope John Paul died, McCarrick went out of his way to embrace Ted Kennedy and at the end of Mass went down the aisle practically arm-in-arm with him.

One wonders if Levada said anything to Newsom and Pelosi. When Levada's promotion to Rome was announced, Newsom was full of admiration for the departing prelate. "When he disagrees with a particular issue, he sees the bigger picture," Newsom told The New York Times. "Clearly in San Francisco he has seen the bigger picture."

What was this bigger picture? If I may interpret, Levada had seen that in a place like San Francisco, the Catholic Archbishop is not expected to insist too strongly on the practice of what he preaches. He can make creedal statements if he wishes, but decisive action will be taken as a declaration of war. That was the reality, and if Levada tried to change it, he did so inconspicuously. He stated Church teaching but sought to stay on good terms with Catholic pols who scorned it. He lacked fortitude, in short, and to that extent he exemplifies the present-day weakness of the Church and her inability to confront the popular culture by which she is besieged.

Earlier in his tenure, the issue of "domestic partners" benefits came up. In 1996 a city ordinance required all firms doing business with the city to provide such benefits for employees' "domestic partners." Catholic Charities, in receipt of $4 million from the city, faced budget cuts if they didn't treat same-sex partnerships the same way as marriage. At first, Levada seemed to hold the line -- long enough to win a favorable write-up on the Wall Street Journal editorial page. Then he accepted a compromise that allowed employees to designate anyone -- parent, sibling, friend, homosexual live-in -- as beneficiary. In effect, he gave away the store. Dollars took precedence over doctrine. John Cardinal O'Connor of New York had already shown that such ordinances could be resisted, but (O'Connor told friends) here was Levada capitulating without even phoning him or asking for his advice. As Phil Lawler wrote in The Catholic World Report: "By accepting this compromise in 1996 -- relatively early in the nationwide drive by homosexual activists to secure spousal benefits -- the San Francisco archdiocese put pressure on other local churches and Catholic institutions to accept similar compromises." Levada here showed that he was quite eager to placate the secular powers that be. His first priority, it seemed, was the preservation of government funding.

[At this point, Bethell goes into a lengthy divagation on the queer conduct - no pun intended - of the Jesuit establishment in San Francisco, raising points far more troubling than any he has raised about Levada]:

One group not at all unhappy with the trends in the city are the Jesuits, who run the University of San Francisco (USF). Here they promise students a "Jesuit education," and as local conservatives joke, at least they have the decency not to call it a Catholic education. The Jesuits became more and more "gay"-friendly with each passing year, as traditional restraints broke down and their more orthodox senior brethren either died or were packed off to the Jesuit retirement community in Santa Clara, 50 miles to the south.

One old-timer who had managed to hang on was Fr. Cornelius Buckley, a Jesuit from the old mold who had not changed with the times. He taught history at USF and was conspicuous around campus in his clericals. He heard confessions, advised students, and by his own example and presence single-handedly reminded those who might otherwise have forgotten that once upon a time, and not too long ago, a Jesuit education was synonymous with a Catholic education. In short, he was a rock, but also a rebuke. He must have daily reminded his modernized, compromised, civilian-clad brethren of the extent to which they had abandoned their old mission.

Then he was asked to leave, or rather ordered to leave, the clerical discipline of obedience being invoked by superiors who themselves had shown little respect for the Jesuit tradition. It superseded any consideration of tenure, custom, decency, or respect for Fr. Buckley's near 50-year service as a Jesuit. He was sent to St. Teresita Hospital in Duarte, Calif.

Fr. Buckley didn't want to go, and especially didn't want to leave the city, but he told friends he still had a chance to stay, because Archbishop Levada could save him. But Levada did no such thing. A priest in San Francisco told me that Levada probably feared that the Jesuits would complain to wealthy friends and alumni in the City and that might hurt archdiocesan fundraising. To Duarte Buckley went.

Levada's weakness was also apparent in his dealings with the seminary within his jurisdiction, St. Patrick's in Menlo Park. Since 1995 former Archbishop Quinn has lived there in retirement. The Rector and President of this Seminary since 1988 had been a Sulpician priest named Gerald Coleman, who didn't hide his "openness" to seminarians of whatever sexual inclination. He stressed the "importance" of seminarians recognizing and accepting their own "orientation." One seminarian told Michael S. Rose in his book Goodbye, Good Men that before an earlier Vatican visitation, an elaborate charade was laid on; heterodox books replaced with orthodox titles, the seminarians dressed up in unaccustomed clericals, and classes toned down "to give the impression that the seminary was orthodox when we definitely were not." Rose also reports that one visitor, now a Byzantine-rite priest in Pittsburgh, visited St. Patrick's and looked for the liturgical schedule so that he could go to Mass.

When I went to the main chapel, no one was around and the doors to the chapel were locked. A man dressed in shorts and walking his dog came into the hallway and I asked him about Mass. He said that's where he was going at the moment, and he would show the way. It turned out that Mass was not offered in the main chapel, but in the nuns' convent in another building. This was the only Mass offered at the seminary each day. I went in and there were no seminarians at Mass…. There were only nuns present. The man who was walking the dog came out vested and celebrated the Mass, with his dog sitting in the corner. After Mass I went to the dining hall for breakfast, and I noted that the seminarians didn't fail to show up there.

A more recent story I heard from a former seminarian involved a homosexual from the Bay Area who showed pornographic pictures to an African seminarian. Upset, the African reported it to his (female) adviser, who told him he obviously needed treatment. He was packed off to Stanford Medical School for psychiatric evaluation and from there sent back to Africa. (This kind of thing has been frequently reported in U.S. seminaries, although more commonly the candidates likely to react as the African did are screened out by "gay"-friendly "discernment" committees before they are admitted to the seminary.)

In March 2000 the Academic Dean of St. Patrick's was arrested after he was caught soliciting sex on the Internet with someone (a police officer) posing as boys aged 13 and 15. Fr. Carl A. Schipper was placed on administrative leave, pleaded guilty, was sentenced to six months and registered as a sex offender. Earlier he had worked as Superintendent of schools for the Archdiocese. He had living quarters at the Seminary and spent most of his time there. The prosecutor said that Schipper "was writing graphic descriptions of what he would do sexually when he met the young boys."

The Rev. Gerald Coleman was on sabbatical when the arrest occurred. As to "gay"-oriented seminarians, a ban would be counterproductive, he told the San Francisco Chronicle, because "a guy who was gay could just lie. My fear is that he won't deal well with that area in his life." (The same argument could be used to oppose a ban on murderers becoming seminarians. They, too, could lie.) Coleman seemed to want an environment in which homosexuals were free to proclaim their "identity." But he did object to homosexual priests who were too blatant. "If people are identifiably gay in the way they walk and talk, do you want that element in the priesthood? No. Guys should not let their sexuality get in the way of their priesthood. I don't like guys to announce they're gay. Then they're known as 'a gay priest.'" (Here he seemed to be advocating a certain amount of deception.)

Time magazine sent a reporter to the Seminary, who found that Coleman's students "are expected to discuss their sexual attitudes and development, among other things, once a month with their advisers and must take three courses on sexuality: a class on overall human sexuality, another on intimacy and celibacy, and one on sexual abuse, which includes guest lectures by victims and perpetrators." The reporter sat in on one of these courses.

"At a recent meeting of Coleman's elective class, Homosexuality and the Church, words and phrases like penis, Freud, male rectum and Will and Grace are bandied about without embarrassment," he reported. "Coleman covers the scriptural teachings on homosexuality and the psychological impact of homophobia. At one point he says that gay teenagers suffer from a lack of role models. In the next moment, he says gay priests and teachers should not come out of the closet, lest they confuse children. It is an awkward balancing act, and a seminarian calls Coleman on the contradiction. 'How are young people supposed to work out their sexuality if they don't have role models?' asks Chris Sellars, 27, who is scheduled to be ordained next January. Coleman listens intently but stands by his imperfect position. 'Our fundamental role is to proclaim the Gospel,' he says. The other seven students around the table look slightly confused, but Coleman encourages them to accept ambiguity and just be aware of different perspectives."

It's worth noting that the Rev. Schipper's sex-writing (to police officers, inadvertently) got him sent to prison; the Rev. Coleman's sex-talk (to seminarians, deliberately) was part of the curriculum.

In a column for the San Jose Valley Catholic in 2000, Coleman wrote that he could see "no moral reason why civil law could not in some fashion recognize these faithful and loving [homosexual] unions by according them certain rights and obligations, thus assisting [homosexual] persons in these unions with clear and specified benefits."

Growing restless over Levada's inaction, conservative laymen attended a talk that Coleman gave at a Menlo Park church in 2002. In the question period that followed, Coleman agreed that a disproportionate number of homosexuals in the seminary probably did create an awkward climate and deter heterosexuals from enrolling. There have indeed been reports of conservative seminarian candidates in the Bay Area decamping to Denver, where Archbishop Chaput dealt more forcefully with his own "gay"-friendly seminary, closing it down and opening a new one.

One of those who had engaged Coleman in this colloquy then wrote to Levada informing him of what was said. The archbishop responded to the letter-writer, fairly well known in conservative circles, and asked if he (the letter-writer) couldn't make use of the letter in some way, so that he could try to do something about Coleman. It was as though Levada didn't really think of himself as vested with the powers of an Archbishop at all. By that time, word had arrived that Rome would once again be conducting an investigation of American seminaries.

Coleman duly left for a sabbatical, ensuring that he would not be on the scene when the new inspectors appeared. But a website reveals that the irrepressible Coleman will end his sabbatical in 2006, whereupon he will serve as the Vicar for priests for the San Francisco Archdiocese, and somehow find time to return to St Patrick's to teach moral theology.

The American bishops can be divided into three broad groups. The liberals want to change Church teaching to align it more closely with Western culture (Cardinal Mahony is their de facto leader, and before him Cardinal Bernardin of Chicago). The traditionalists are not afraid of resisting the culture, come what may (leaders today are Archbishops Chaput and Burke). Then there is the great middle ground of bishops, who repose their faith in diplomacy and ingenious compromises that paper over differences with the secular culture. They wish the problems and publicity, the process servers and the trial lawyers, would go away and the money would keep flowing in from the faithful in the pews. Levada and Cardinal McCarrick are their de facto leaders.

Levada, as he said of himself, is in the "exact middle," the middle of the middle. He has shown little inclination to innovate, or to revivify the practice of the faith. Both as regards doctrine and discipline, he remained a passive figure in San Francisco.

The process servers caught up with him shortly before he left for Rome.

The Portland Archdiocese (Levada is the former Archbishop of Portland) had filed for bankruptcy protection a year earlier. It was the first American diocese to do so, in response to lawsuits seeking $155 million in damages. Three of the plaintiffs had committed suicide, and several of the lawsuits involved priests "who were restored to parish work by Archbishop Levada after having been accused of molesting children, or protected from criminal prosecution when their misdeed came to the archbishop's attention," according to The Catholic World Report.

On August 7, just before he began his final Sunday Mass in San Francisco, Levada was subpoenaed to testify at a deposition requested by attorneys for 250 alleged victims in Portland. CBS News reported:

Cookie Gambucci, whose brother is one of the plaintiffs in the Portland case, served the court papers on Levada. She told KCBS reporter Tim Ryan the archbishop called her "a disgrace to the Catholic church." "That's what he said. Now I'm thinking about all the priests that have abused all those little kids, including my brother," said Gambucci, "and I'm thinking, let's define disgrace to the church."… She had tried unsuccessfully on several other occasions to serve Levada with papers.

A Portland attorney representing some of the plaintiffs said Levada had been avoiding the subpoena since May. Levada agreed to waive the diplomatic immunity that he will enjoy as a Vatican official, and will return to the U.S. for a one-day deposition in January. Then came Levada's $150-a-plate farewell dinner in a San Francisco hotel; Levada organized his own cheering squad by obliging parishes to buy a $1,500 table, and to then find 10 parishioners who would pony up. (I am told that one pastor flatly refused to go along with this arrangement.) Another process server showed up at this event, dressed up in a borrowed Armani suit. He handed Levada another subpoena to testify in a Portland case.

In his roundly applauded speech, Levada said that abuse by clergy is a "crisis in the United States." But -- things were looking up! "By and large the people in our parishes…think that the steps that our bishops of this country have taken have done a great job and are meeting the crisis and doing an outreach program trying to prevent any kind of abuse by clergy or anyone else." And at a news conference he said, "We have done our best to reach out." In a final irony he echoed what Mayor Newsom had said a year earlier. The Archbishop was leaving San Francisco "with a good conscience."
---------------------------------------------------------------

*The New Oxford Review is an organ published by people who consider themselves orthodox Catholics. This is how the magazine defines itself in its advertisements: "We were founded in 1977 as an Anglo-Catholic magazine, taking our name from the 19th-century Oxford Movement, and we immediately championed Pope John Paul II when he cracked down on dissenting theologian Hans Küng, although no leading Roman Catholic magazine was willing to do so. The novelty of Anglicans supporting the Pope attracted the attention of Newsweek, which did a story on us and predicted that we would, like John Henry Newman of Oxford Movement fame, become Roman Catholic, which we did in 1983. Our pioneering monthly magazine has led the way in the past, and we’re still blazing the trail — with “attitude” (says Karl Keating) and “cheek” (noted Newsweek)..."

Lately, the magazine's editor, Dale Vree, has generated much controversy because of his 'pit-bull' style of 'attacking' views he does not share - his targets have included Avery Cardinal Dulles and George Weigel, on specific points. Interestingly, our Christopher Blosser and his father Dr. Philip Blosser recently "agreed to disagree" about Vree, after an exchange about him over their respective blogs. Check out Chris's "Against the Grain" on 2/10/06 for the full account
...
www.ratzingerfanclub.com/blog/index.html
13/03/2006 04:05
 
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ALESSANDRA HAS A NEW BOOK
She hasn't written any articles lately, and in February, she launched her new book, Sete di Dio (Thirst for God), at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. The girls in the Italian forum who have read the new book say it's a good read, and she does write about her friendship with Cardinal Ratzinger. Below is a translation of a review of the new book that appeared in Corriere della Sera recently.

Her two books on finding faith - Sete di Dio and Con occhi nuovi (With new eyes)

Faith does one good. It helps in life, helps make it better. It is also the power that shapes the spirit. It is not the enemy of reason, as some think. When one falls down (as sooner or later one does), faith helps one to get up again. In short, it is not only indispensable but convenient for all the days we need to go through that we call living.

These are some notes I wrote on the margins while I was reading the new book by Alessandra Borghese, Sete di Dio (Thirst for God), a work that is not a tract but is rich with ideas, tesimonies, experiences. The public knows the author for the booklength essay, Con nuovi occhi (With new eyes, 2004), in which she wrote about her rediscovery of faith.

Now she continues with simple but effective tesiomny. “Going around and encountering so many people, I would ask people provocative questions…But most often I would be asked instead, How does one find faith? And each time, I find myself moved by this desire for God.”

Very readable, and recommended to all who keep questioning and try to “find a place for God”, in the words of the atheist Giuseppe Prezzolini (he tried to convert but never succeeded).

Borghese reviews some famous persons who were “struck like lightning” by faith, among them Louis Pauwels, Andre Frossard, Vittorio Messori [all writers, by the way]. She talks of obstacles that must be removed (“ideologies and prejudices”), of her own experiences, her encounters with other converts. She answers the question “Is chastity possible?” and she does not avoid questions on Christian morals.

The last part of the book is dedicated to a Church united with Crhist and with his Vicar on earth. The author was close to John Paul II, and of the present Pope, she speaks of the “glorious surprise to find that a friend has become Pope.”

It is a book that fits well in the current vast and varied line-up of spiritual writings. Let us not forget that a publishing house like Citta Nuova has just come out for the first time with all the works of Augustine in Italian translation, and never before have three major publishing houses – Morcelliana, Paideia and Queriniana- been engaged at the same time in publishing religious books of high quality. [Queriniana is one of Joseph Ratzinger’s Italian publishers.] A miracle? No. It speaks of people needing God.
[As this review was published 2/26/06, it is glaring that the reviewer failed to cite the enormous success of Deus caritas est!]

The book on good manners by Alessandra Borghese and Gloria von Thurn und Taxis

14/03/2006 05:47
 
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BROTHER GEORGE

Has anyone heard how he is doing? Has he been released from the hospital?

14/03/2006 06:39
 
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Brother George
Papa's brother George has been released from the hospital yesterday. I'm so eased he is feeling better. As I read in the newspapers last weekend about the cardiac arrhythmias I was totally shocked. It's so sad Papa can't be around to stand by George.
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Die Liebe ist ein Anspruch, der mich nicht unberührt lässt. In ihm kann ich nicht einfach schlicht ich bleiben, sondern ich muss mich immer wieder verlieren, indem ich zugehobelt werde, verwundet werde. Und gerade dieses, denke ich, gehört auch zur Größe, zur heilenden Macht der Liebe, dass sie mich verwundet, um meine größeren Möglichkeiten hervorzubringen.
Joseph Kardinal Ratzinger - Papst Benedikt XVI
14/03/2006 08:37
 
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"HALLO, JOSEPH!"
Yes, the German press carried brief items today that the Monsignor went home Monday morning after 4 days on hispital. His doctors continue to say everything is all right with him, that the recurrence of irregular heartbeat was not grave or life-threatening, and that it is not unusual at his age (81 going on 82).

One newspaper said that on Thursday, the day he was admitted to teh Hospital of the Merciful Brothers in Regensburg, the Pope telephoned him, and the patient was heard taking the call with a "Hallo, Joseph!"
16/03/2006 03:10
 
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THE FAMILY GUY

Defense of family life crucial, says head of Vatican's family council

By John Thavis
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Colombian Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo spends most of his days behind a desk, but he says he feels like he's "in the eye of the hurricane."

As president of the Pontifical Council for the Family, Cardinal Lopez Trujillo has denounced proposals in several countries that would authorize same-sex marriage and adoption.

He has helped local churches oppose legislation to legalize abortion or make it easier to obtain and has called promotion of contraceptives a form of "biological colonialism" by drug companies and wealthy nations.

He has described drug addiction as a modern "form of slavery that oppresses the whole world."

Two years ago, he went on British television to warn that condoms were not an effective barrier against the AIDS virus and suggested condom packets should carry a warning to that effect.

Cardinal Lopez Trujillo is convinced that the family risks destruction today and that the church must lead an "evangelical struggle" to defend it.

"People don't realize the human tragedy they are preparing," Cardinal Lopez Trujillo said in a recent interview with Catholic News Service.

"If you look at Europe or the Americas, there's not a parliament where these issues are not being debated. I think it's providential to have a pope who speaks with courage and clarity -- and to have a curial agency to lend help when needed," he said.

The cardinal's comments came as Pope Benedict XVI was considering ways to streamline Roman Curia departments. One rumor was that the family council would be reorganized as a part of an enlarged Pontifical Council for the Laity.

In the interview, however, Cardinal Lopez Trujillo said his council's role was more important than ever. It is currently preparing the Fifth World Meeting of Families in Valencia, Spain, in July; the pope is expected to attend.

The meeting, the cardinal said, will bring together Catholic pro-family advocates from around the world to exchange experiences, to proclaim and defend church teachings, and "to bring fire" to the movement.

"In this sense, the pope's presence is unique," he said.

Cardinal Lopez Trujillo sees Pope Benedict as a natural successor to carry on Pope John Paul II's strong pro-family agenda.

"The pope has chosen this as one of the human priorities of his papacy, a historic priority. Because if the family collapses, the world collapses," he said.

He noted that already in his papacy, some of Pope Benedict's sharpest comments have focused on threats to the family. The pope's first encyclical defended the dignity of marriage as the true expression of love between a man and a woman, he said.

Cardinal Lopez Trujillo, the former archbishop of Medellin, has headed the family council since 1990. The 70-year-old prelate has never shied away from making news, and Pope John Paul gave him the freedom to speak loudly and clearly whenever the family was in danger.

"As the pope would say, these are decisive battles, and we want to be in the middle of them," the cardinal said.

Under Pope Benedict, Cardinal Lopez Trujillo has continued to speak his mind on topics ranging from divorce to gay adoption.

At the Synod of Bishops last October, he urged a firmer line on the issue of Communion, politics and abortion. In his view, he said, politicians who promote unjust legislation must "remedy the evil committed" before they receive Communion.

When Spain approved gay marriage last year, Cardinal Lopez Trujillo said Catholic civil officials should conscientiously object to taking part in such ceremonies, even if they lose their jobs as a result.

On several occasions, he has praised the Bush administration for its opposition to abortion and its positions on a range of pro-life and family issues.

In the interview, the cardinal freely acknowledged that his council engages in political questions. But he said that while Pope Benedict has cautioned church leaders against involvement in partisan politics, the council is simply "enlightening politicians and saying what the values are ... as a service to society."

"It's a different kind of politics," he said. "Those who are afraid of this are mistaken."

Over the years, the council has sponsored six important dialogue encounters with politicians and legislators in Europe and the Americas. In all these efforts, he said, the council tries to speak with "love and charity, but also with clarity," explaining the church's positions and its vital interest in the family.

The family council was established by Pope John Paul May 13, 1981 -- the day the pope was shot by a Turkish assailant in St. Peter's Square.

"That's why we say we were born with a baptism of blood," Cardinal Lopez Trujillo said.

The council has a presidential committee of 15 cardinals and 12 archbishops and bishops, 19 married couples from various countries who serve as members, and 39 consultors. Its permanent staff of 12 officials is small by Vatican standards.

The council studies demographic issues, bioethical challenges, the impact of the mass media, and devotes considerable resources promoting family education and family spirituality for parents, children and couples preparing for marriage. It has strongly supported the teaching of natural family planning methods.

In 2003, the council completed one of Cardinal Lopez Trujillo's pet projects, a lexicon of what he considers ambiguous terms in discussions of life and family matters. It said terms like "gay marriage," "reproductive rights" and "emergency contraception" are really euphemisms used to promote practices that deny the natural truths about sexuality, marriage and the dignity of human life.

More recently, Cardinal Lopez Trujillo personally wrote two pamphlets on "What Is and What Is Not Safe Sex?" and cloning versus natural paternity.

Cardinal Lopez Trujillo said one thing he likes about Pope Benedict's approach to family issues is that he addresses them in broad terms, using philosophical and anthropological arguments as well as church teachings to make his points.

The pope is emphasizing that it is in humanity's best interest to examine questions like same-sex marriage more carefully, so that traditional values are not jettisoned, the cardinal said.

The stakes are high and the questions raised by the pope are crucial, Cardinal Lopez Trujillo said.

"Will the future have a human heart, or will it be dehumanized? And will the family be destroyed in some countries by unjust laws, hastily approved laws that show a real misunderstanding of society?" he said.
20/03/2006 17:18
 
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LEVADA'S PRE-CONCLAVE THOUGHTS

Photo: The Tidings

From
www.time.com/time/europe/magazine/article/0,13005,901060327-1174661...
for the March 27 issue of Time's Europe edition.
---------------------------------------------------------------
On Friday, William J. Levada, former Archbishop of San Francisco, will become the first new Cardinal to be elevated by Pope Benedict XVI at a Vatican ceremony. Levada already has the Pontiff's old job maintaining Roman Catholic orthodoxy as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, making him the most influential U.S. prelate in history. He spoke with Time's Jeff Israely.


How will you feel when you get your red hat from the Pope?
Of course, I'm honored. But you also want to make sure your hat is on straight.

Your new job places you in the top ranks of the Vatican hierarchy. Does the responsibility of your new office feel overwhelming?
I can say that I'm past the deer-in-the-headlights phase. The biggest challenge now is the amount of reading — not only of new material, but rereading documents and decisions taken by the Congregation.

How do you respond to the spread of violence in the name of another world religion, Islam?
If a religious leader is preaching violence, he has mistaken his religion. Religion is about our vision and worship of God, and recognition that we are part of God's family. Violence cannot be a religious tenant. The Holy Father made an important declaration to Muslim leaders, that we need to hear them telling their people that God does not sanction violence.

The roman Catholic Church is akin to an absolute monarchy. Should the Vatican be more democratic?
The question presumes that there is not open discussion in the Vatican. The Pope expects us to give him our best insights. You must remember that, yes, this is a monarchy, but the monarch is elected.

Is this Pope especially open to debate?
Benedict introduced for the first time a "free discussion" period in the Synod of Bishops. We also adopted it in our meetings at the Congregation [for the Doctrine of the Faith], and the members appreciate it. The Congregation has members who are like a board of trustees, and I'm the equivalent of the chairman.

You raised the issue in the synod about whether politicians should be granted communion if they support policies counter to Church teachings.
There are certain teachings that as Catholics we have to accept as part of Jesus' Gospel. When you see Catholic politicians who favor abortion rights ... you have to ask yourself how this person squares this with his personal faith. Catholic politicians need to take this seriously. Maybe they need to say I'm not able to practice my faith and be a public representative.

As doctrinal chief, can you explain the recent instruction on whether a gay man can become a priest?
The document is very clear. It says a person with deep-seated homosexual tendencies is not suited for the priesthood. Somebody who comes to the seminary from a gay lifestyle cannot be a priest. But if you can show us after five or 10 years that you have been able to live a celibate life, it could be possible. But there would need to be spiritual and psychological evaluations.

Is ending the celibacy requirement the only real way to address the shortage of priests?
In the Western church [as opposed to the Eastern rite church], celibacy is a discipline from the invitation of Christ to "follow me." He is the model. But we also need to be more creative about finding new ways to get men to step forward to the priesthood. There should be a greater sharing of priests — from places that have many, to places that have fewer.

As a bishop, you had to deal with cases of sex abuse by priests. Now you are final arbiter on some of the more difficult cases from around the world.
My experience in the dioceses gives me a firsthand perspective from direct contact with the people affected by these cases. You learn the details of what has happened, and how cases can differ from one to another. We have to keep our eye on what justice requires.

When Papa Ratzinger welcomed you to the new job, did he have any advice on how to handle such a responsibility?
No [laughs]. He just smiled, and said: "Go to it."

From the Mar. 27, 2006 issue of TIME Europe magazine

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 20/03/2006 17.29]

22/03/2006 14:51
 
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after interview with Piero Marini on italian net newspapers ... check out this


LITURGY AND BEAUTY

Experiences of renewal in certain Papal Liturgical Celebrations

by
† Piero Marini
Titular Archbishop of Martirano
Master of the Liturgical Celebrations
of the Supreme Pontiff
22/03/2006 18:51
 
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Thanks for the lead, Maklara. I will read the document carefully. It is obviously recent, as it refers to the 40th anniversary of a Vatican-II document, but it is frustrating that for an official document, it does not have a date. I also wonder (and how strange Sandro Magister did not refer to it in any way!) whether Marini was authorized by the Pope to publish the document on the Vatican website, and what other outlets he has used.
P.S. I will re-post your item in the NEWS ABOUT THE CHURCH section so any further discussions on Marini and liturgy can be done there, OK?

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 22/03/2006 18.52]

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