| Two New Books Reveal the Dark Heart of the Francis Papacy: Sex Abuse
By Betty Clermont
The Open Tabernacle
December 4, 2017
https://opentabernacle.wordpress.com/2017/12/04/two-new-books-reveal-the-dark-heart-of-the-francis-papacy-sex-abuse/
Emiliano Fittipaldi’s Lussuria. Peccati scandali e tradimenti di una Chiesa fatta di uomini (Lust. Sins, Scandals, and Betrayal of a Church Made of Men) chronicles Pope Francis’ personal involvement in the global sex abuse of children.
Gianluigi Nuzzi’s Peccato Originale (Original Sin) recounts how Pope Francis was personally informed of alleged sex abuse of minors in the Vatican’s preseminary where boys aspiring to become priests serve as altar boys for papal Masses in St. Peter’s Basilica. The pope did nothing to stop it.
From the beginning
Fittipaldi relates how, a month after his election in March 2013, Pope Francis appointed a council of eight cardinals to help him govern the Church. Three had protected and covered-up for pedophile priests.
Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga is the pope’s close friend and he named Rodriguez Maradiaga as coordinator of the group. “Maradiaga had protected a pedophile priest from Costa Rica, a fugitive from Interpol, who was found in bed with an eight-year-old child by her mother,” according to Fittipaldi.
Prior to his selection by the new pope, Australian Cardinal George Pell had made national headlines for years. He was called a “sociopath” by relatives of children sexually abused by priests for his callous and combative treatment of the survivors and their families. When John Ellis, a former altar boy, sued Pell and the Sydney archdiocese, Pell “instructed his lawyers to crush this victim.”
Pell recently returned to Australia to defend himself against accusations of “historical sexual assaults” involving “multiple complainants” in the state of Victoria. “Up to 50 witnesses could give evidence.”
Another member of the pope’s new council, Cardinal Francisco Javier Errazuriz Ossa, the retired archbishop of Santiago, had made headlines in Chile for protecting the serial pedophile, Fr. Fernando Karadima. According to civil court testimony, Errazuriz, tried to shame accusers into dropping claims, refused to meet with them or failed to carry out formal investigations for years.
When Pope Francis appointed Errazuriz as one of his closest advisers, a victim of Karadima called it “a shame and a disgrace.”
On September 21, 2013, Pope Francis approved Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Muller as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), the Vatican department that has dealt with all sexual abuse cases since 2001. Pope Francis elevated Muller to cardinal in February 2014.
When Muller was bishop of Regensburg, Germany, in 2004, he appointed a convicted pedophile, Fr. Peter Kramer, as pastor of a parish. “Kramer sexually abused more children in his new assignment and was again convicted of child abuse.”
Pope Francis replaced Muller on June 30, 2017, with his CDF deputy, Archbishop Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer. Fittipaldi reported that Ladaria “two years ago, had dismissed a pedophile priest [Gianni Trotta], but when he sent the letter to the Bishop of Foggia to give the news, told him not to tell anyone to avoid a scandal among the faithful. This former priest became coach of a children’s soccer team and raped half of the team.”
Fittipaldi:
“My feeling is that even today in the Vatican there are letters that say ‘keep quiet.’ This is not only an immoral matter, but a legal and criminal matter, because in these scandals not only will the victims not have their justice, but pedophiles who are still at liberty will have the possibility of making new victims ….
In the Church with Pope Francis, it is necessary to wash the dirty clothes inside the Vatican, without anyone seeing. If it’s a mafia attitude, I do not know, but it’s certainly a disgusting attitude, especially when we’re dealing with children’s lives ….
Sexual abuse of children is not an outdated phenomenon. In the first three years of the pontificate of Bergoglio, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith noted 1200 allegations of ‘probable’ abuse of little boys and girls assisted by the Vatican guideline, which still do not require compulsory denunciation [to civil authorities] for the sexual violence of priests … Changing this law would take a minute for Pope Francis, but he does not do so ….
I give an example. In 2014, two UN commissions, the Commission Against Torture and the Commission for the Defense of the Child, asked the Vatican to disclose information about the ongoing proceedings in the Congregation regarding children and priests, asked them to withdraw the obligation of silence in relation to this type of process, because if one speaks of these secret processes [he] risks dismissal and excommunication, and did not get any answer. We know nothing about the 1200 trials that were opened in these three years of this pontificate on pedophile priests around the world ….
There is always less talk about pedophilia now because the Vatican propaganda is very strong, but the official figures I publish exclusively show that the phenomenon is even more serious than before.
[Benedict XVI] was very traditionalist and conservative, and so the journalists did not like him, but he did important things. The things he did in relation to pedophilia, which was not much, but double the time for prescribing crimes in the Vatican, sent away almost 600 priests in a few years. The incredible thing is that Francis did a lot less.
More lack of concern in the U.S. media
Just last August, the U.S. State Department requested the Vatican waive diplomatic immunity for Msgr. Carlo Capella, one of Pope Francis’ senior diplomats who he posted to the Vatican embassy in Washington D.C. in 2016. Capella was accused of collecting child pornography.
“Granted, this priest is not known to be accused of directly abusing children. But if he is in possession of child pornography, as the United States alleges, he might as well be, since child pornography is almost always filmed under horrific circumstances,” noted journalist, Barbie Latza Nadeau.
Capella was “secretly swooped back to Rome” where “he won’t face any secular charges any time soon because he is safely inside the fortified walls of Vatican City,” noted Nadeau.
The next month, police in Windsor, Ontario – connected by a tunnel to Detroit, Michigan – accused Capella of “accessing, possessing and distributing child pornography.” Robert Talach, an Ontario lawyer, said Capella should be extradited back to Canada. “If Pope Francis has been nothing but a PR exercise this will prove it,” he said.
One can only imagine the response of the rest of the U.S. media if Pope Benedict had done the same.
Again, Pope Francis fails to take action
Nuzzi reported that Kamil Tadeusz Jarzembowski, who entered the St. Pius X preseminary at the age of 13, wrote a letter about the sexual abuse of minors and handed it directly to Pope Francis.
After Nuzzi’s book and a Italian television reported on the abuse, the Vatican said it opened an investigation on Nov. 18.
This is the seventh time that we know of where Pope Francis was directly informed about sexual predators and took no action until forced to, in some instances, by the foreign media. The current case of Fr. Corradi is especially egregious.
By open letter and video message “handed to Pope Francis” in May 2014, former students at the notorious Provolo Institute for the Deaf in Italy begged the pope for justice. More than one hundred deaf and mute children had been sexually abused at the boarding school.
The letter told Pope Francis that three of the accused Italian perpetrators – including Fr. Nicola Corradi – held current positions at the Provolo Institute in Argentina. The pope took no action to stop them.
Corradi and four others in the Argentine school were arrested in November 2016 and charged with raping and molesting at least 22 children. Other reports poured in and “it’s now thought that as many as 60 children fell victim to abuse.”
Prosecutors said the alleged anal and vaginal rapes, fondling and oral sex took place in the bathrooms, dorms, garden, basement and chapel. “Victims said they were taken to the Casita de Dios (the little house of God) where they were forced to perform sexual acts on one another and made to watch other students being abused.”
“One of the alleged victims said she witnessed how a girl was raped by one priest while the other one forced her to give him oral sex.” Another accused a nun “of making her wear a diaper to cover up a hemorrhage after she was raped by a priest” when she was five years old.
“The tormentors” knew “the other children wouldn’t hear the screams as they were deaf.”
Pope Francis leaves complicit bishops in place
Pope Francis has taken no action against any of the 14 other bishops accused of complicity with abusive priests. A recent investigation in France exposed five additional pedophile-protecting bishops still in office.
Pope Francis has no problem acting against people for reasons other than sex abuse.
He removed Cardinals Gerhard Muller and Raymond Burke from their Vatican positions. He removed Fra’ Matthew Festing as Grand Master of the Knights of Malta, a position equal in status to cardinal in the Catholic Church. He removed the “Bishop of Bling.”
He ordered that three priests be fired from the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith without explanation. Although religious orders usually select their own superiors, the pope dismissed the head of the Order of the Franciscans of Immaculata.
Pope Francis excommunicated Fr. Greg Reynolds for advocating for women’s ordination. He excommunicated Martha Heizer, head of the reform international movement We Are Church, and her husband, Gert Heizer, for celebrating Mass in their home with a small group of friends.
This past June 10, Pope Francis gave priests in the Diocese of Ahiara, Nigeria, “30 days to write a letter promising obedience to him and accepting the bishop appointed for their diocese; priests who do not write will be suspended.” According to a press release issued July 3, “all priests have written their letter of apology to the pope.” Fr. David Iheanacho said that every priest complied because the pope doesn’t “joke around” with threats of sanction.
Unfortunately, Pope Francis doesn’t make a similar effort to save children’s lives.
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