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A Year
after Resignation, Ex-Pope Benedict Has No Regrets
By By Philip Pullella | Vatican City Al-Arabiya
February 9, 2014
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/perspective/features/2014/02/09/A-year-after-resignation-ex-Pope-Benedict-has-no-regrets.html
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“Pope Benedict is at peace
with himself and I think he is even at peace with the Lord.”
(File photo: Reuters)
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A year after his shock resignation, Pope Emeritus
Benedict has no regrets and believes history will vindicate his
tumultuous and much-criticized papacy, the man closest to him
told Reuters in a rare interview.
Archbishop Georg Ganswein, who now works for the former
pope as well as being the head of Pope Francis’s household, shed
new light on how Benedict spends his days, his health, his
feelings about his momentous decision and the relationship
between the two popes.
“Pope Benedict is at peace with himself and I think he
is even at peace with the Lord,” said Ganswein, whose twin roles
bring him into contact with the current and former pope daily.
Benedict announced his decision to resign, the first
pope to do so in 600 years, on Feb. 11, 2013, citing the physical
and psychological strains of the papacy. He stepped down on
February 28 and Francis was elected on March 13 as the first
non-European pope in 1,300 years.
His eight-year papacy was marked by mishaps and
missteps, often blamed on a dysfunctional Vatican bureaucracy,
and intrigue befitting a Renaissance court. The “Vatileaks”
scandal, in which Benedict’s butler was arrested for leaking the
pope’s private papers to the media, alleged corruption in the
Holy See, something the Vatican denied.
A rigorous theologian-teacher and reluctant chief
executive, he was often vilified by some in the media for a style
seen as distant and aloof.
Ganswein, who has been at Benedict’s side since before
his election in 2005, said the former pope had no regrets about
leaving office and held no resentment against his critics who the
Vatican says misunderstood him.
“No. It’s clear that humanly speaking, many times, it is
painful to see that what is written about someone does not
correspond concretely to what was done. But the measure of one’s
work, of one’s way of doing things, is not what the mass media
write but what is just before God and before conscience.”
The judgment of history
“I am certain, indeed convinced, that history will offer
a judgment that will be different than what one often read in the
last years of his pontificate,” Ganswein said in a telephone
interview.
Benedict, who now resides in a former convent in the
Vatican gardens, said before he left office that he would live
out his days “hidden from the world” in prayer and isolation. He
has been photographed only four times since then.
“Indeed, he is far from the world but he is present in
the Church. His mission now, as he once said, is to help the
Church and his successor, Pope Francis, through prayer. This is
his first and most important task,” Ganswein said.
Benedict was cheered by conservatives, who have not
taken to Francis’ more open, informal style, for trying to
reaffirm traditional Catholic identity, while liberals accused
Benedict of turning back the clock on reforms and hurting
dialogue with Muslims, Jews and other Christians.
When Benedict decided to stay in the Vatican, there was
much speculation that the decision could have a destabilizing
effect on the Church but the fears did not materialize.
“From the very start there was good contact between them
and this good beginning developed and matured. They write to each
other, they telephone each other, they talk to each other, they
extend invitations to each other,” Ganswein said.
He said Benedict spends his time studying, reading,
handling correspondence, receiving visitors, playing the piano
and praying while taking walks in the Vatican gardens.
“He is well but certainly he is a person who carries the
weight of his years. So, he is a man who is physically old but
his spirit is very vivacious and very clear,” Ganswein said.
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