Tag: Vatican

  • Archbishop emeritus under fire for sex abuse

    Archbishop emeritus under fire for sex abuse

    The Vatican is stepping up investigations against the archbishop emeritus of Gdansk, Slawoj Glodz, after reports emerged of sexual abuse by priests in his diocese.

    This is contained in a diplomatic statement published on Wednesday.

    The Holy See deputised the Archbishop of Warsaw to investigate allegations of negligence by Glodz in view of the reports, the statement by Poland’s papal nuncio said.

    An initial probe at the lower diocesan level has already been completed, according to the statement.

    In November 2019, the faithful of the Gdansk archdiocese staged a protest in front of its headquarters, demanding Glodz’s resignation.

    The protesters accused him of an inadequate response to accusations of the sexual abuse of children by some priests in his diocese as well as bullying priests subordinated to him.

    Glodz is one of Poland’s most prominent bishops.

    He served as the bishop responsible for the military between 1991 and 2004, where he was also appointed general.

    He served as archbishop of Gdansk in the years 2008-20.

    In August, he retired upon turning 75.

  • Pope Francis gets stuck in Vatican elevator

    Pope Francis gets stuck in Vatican elevator

    Pope Francis said Sunday he was late to his weekly Angelus prayer by 7 minutes because he was stuck in a Vatican elevator and had to be freed by firemen.

    “I have to apologise for being late. I was trapped in a lift for 25 minutes, there was a power outage but then the firemen came,” the smiling 82-year old pontiff told the people in St. Peter’s Square.

    Apparently referring to electric power, Francis said a “drop in tension” caused the elevator to block. He said that Holy See firefighters rescued him and asked the people in the square to applaud them.

    Also on Sunday, Pope Francis challenged governments to take “drastic measures” to combat global warming and reduce the use of fossil fuels, saying the world was experiencing a climate emergency.

    Francis issued his appeal, a written message for Sunday’s World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, ahead of the United Nations Climate Action Summit this month in New York, a follow up to the 2016 Paris Agreement to curb global warming.

    Calling the U.N. summit “of particular importance,” he added:

    “There, governments will have the responsibility of showing the political will to take drastic measures to achieve as quickly as possible zero net greenhouse gas emissions and to limit the average increase in global temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius with respect to pre-industrial levels, in accordance with the Paris Agreement goals.”

    Francis has made many calls for environmental protection and has clashed over climate change with skeptics leaders such as U.S. President Donald Trump, who has taken the United States out of the Paris accord.

    “We have caused a climate emergency that gravely threatens nature and life itself, including our own,” the leader of the world’s 1.3 billon Roman Catholics said in the message for the prayer day, which is marked by various Christian Churches.

  • Pope names Venezuelan archbishop as new Vatican ‘chief of staff’

    Pope names Venezuelan archbishop as new Vatican ‘chief of staff’

    A Venezuelan archbishop, who served as Pope Francis’ ambassador to Mozambique was named on Wednesday as the Vatican’s new substitute of the Secretariat of State.

    The head of the Secretariat of State is considered the Vatican’s unofficial prime minister, and the substitute can be compared to a chief of staff position.

    Monsignor Parra, 58, will start his new job on Oct. 15, the Vatican said in a statement.

    He has been a Vatican diplomat for 25 years. His previous diplomatic posts include Pakistan, Kenya, South Africa, Mexico and UN offices in Geneva, the statement added.

    Parra replaces Italian Giovanni Becciu, who resigned as substitute in June, when he was made a cardinal and promoted to head the Vatican’s department on causes for sainthood.

     

  • Vatican speaks on Pope Francis ‘Hell does not exist’ comment

    Three days before Easter, the Vatican tried to tamp down a firestorm over a comment attributed to Pope Francis that hell “does not exist,” which would mark a historic break with teachings of the Catholic Church.

    The Vatican on Thursday rebuked Eugenio Scalfari, 93, a well-known Italian journalist who is the founder of Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper.

    When asked where “bad souls” end up, according to the article in Thursday’s La Repubblica, Francis reportedly said that those who repent can be forgiven, but those who don’t repent simply “disappear.”

    And then came the four words heard ’round the world: “Hell does not exist,” the article quoted the pope as saying. “The disappearance of sinful souls exists.”

    The Vatican issued a statement after the comments spread like wildfire on social media, saying the pope never granted the interview and the story was “the result of (the reporter’s) reconstruction,” not a “faithful transcription of the words of the Holy Father.”

    Scalfari, an atheist, is known for not using tape recorders or taking notes during interviews.

  • Vatican debunks ex-pope Benedict suffering from debilitating disease

    The Vatican on Thursday denied a German magazine report that claimed that former Pope Benedict was suffering from a paralyzing disease of the nervous system.

    A Vatican spokesman said a report in the German magazine Neue Post quoting Benedict’s older brother was false.

    The magazine quoted Georg Ratzinger, 94, who is a priest, as saying: “The greatest fear is that the paralysis could at some point spread to his heart.

    “Then it could be over quickly”.

    A Vatican statement said the “presumed news of a paralyzing degenerative disease are false.

    “In two months, Benedict XVI will turn 91, and as he has said himself, feels the weight of his years, which is normal at that age.”

    Benedict, a German who in 2013 became the first pope in six centuries to resign, said earlier this month he was in the last phase of life and on a “pilgrimage toward home”.

    He is 90 years old.

  • China says diplomatic ties with Vatican inevitable

    China says diplomatic ties with Vatican inevitable

    China and the Vatican will establish formal diplomatic relations sooner or later because Pope Francis has the “wisdom” to resolve problems between the two sides, a state-run Chinese newspaper said on Tuesday, amid increasing controversy over the issue.

    A framework accord between the Vatican and China on the appointment of bishops is ready and could be signed in a few months in what would be an historic breakthrough in relations, a senior Vatican source said.

    On Monday, Cardinal Joseph Zen, 86, the outspoken former bishop of Hong Kong said the Vatican is selling out China’s underground Catholics and “forcing them into a bird cage,” raising the ante in his recent criticisms which had already sparked a rebuke from the Vatican.

    An even partial resolution of the thorny issue of who gets to appoint bishops could open the way for a resumption of diplomatic relations nearly 70 years after they were cut during the Communist takeover of China, when missionaries were expelled from the country.

    Beijing later established the official Catholic Patriotic Association, which does not recognise the Pope, while “underground” Catholic communities that remain loyal to the Vatican have been systematically persecuted for decades.

    China has so far said little about the talks.

    However, the widely read tabloid the Global Times said a deal between Beijing and the Vatican would be “tremendously beneficial to Catholics”.

    “In spite of the difficult process, China’s vast numbers of non-Catholics have never been strongly against the Vatican.

    “The Chinese public generally respects each Pope,” it said in an editorial in its Chinese and English-language editions.

    “Beijing and the Vatican will establish diplomatic relations sooner or later … Pope Francis has a positive image with the Chinese public.

    “It is expected he will push China-Vatican ties forward and solve related problems with his wisdom,” it said.

    The newspaper is published by the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily but, unlike its sister publication, does not speak for the party or the government.

    The moves have not been without controversy in the church.

    “Our brothers in mainland China are not scared of losing all their fortunes, being thrown into jail or even bleeding.

    “Their greatest pain is from being betrayed by their ‘family members,’” wrote Zen, who vowed to keep speaking out despite the Vatican’s rebukes.

    He also said the Pope had, during a meeting with him three years ago, agreed that the official Catholic community run by the Chinese Communist Party objectively represents a schism.

    Another source of friction with China is the Vatican’s maintenance of official ties with self-ruled Taiwan, which Beijing sees as a wayward province to be taken back by force if necessary.

    “The Taiwan question isn’t Beijing’s top concern in handling its relations with the Vatican as the mainland has many tools to pressure Taiwan,” the paper said.

    The Vatican is Taiwan’s sole remaining European diplomatic ally.

    China has been ramping up the pressure on Taiwan since Tsai Ing-wen of the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party won presidential elections in 2016.

     

  • Pope to visit Russia – Vatican

    Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin said on Tuesday that there was “positive momentum” behind the idea of Pope Francis visiting Russia, but suggested there was more work to be done if it were to happen.

    Parolin, speaking at a joint news conference in Moscow alongside Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, did not give any date for such a possible visit.

    The Eastern and Western branches of Christianity split apart in 1054.

    The pope, leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics, is seeking to improve ties, and last year in Cuba held what was the first ever meeting between a Roman Catholic pope and a Russian Orthodox patriarch.

    Parolin said he had also used his talks in the Russian capital to also raise certain difficulties faced by the Catholic Church in Russia.

    He said that Moscow and the Vatican disagreed about the plight of Christians in certain parts of the world.

    He did not elaborate.

    Parolin, who is due later on Tuesday to meet Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, said he also believed Russia could play an important role when it came to helping solve a crisis in Venezuela because of its close relations with Caracas.

     

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • PHOTOS/VIDEO: Fire outbreak near Vatican City amid reports of explosion

    PHOTOS/VIDEO: Fire outbreak near Vatican City amid reports of explosion

    A large fire broke out near Vatican City on Thursday.

    According to witnesses, explosions were heard before thick black smoke began rising near the Vatican.

    At this time, the cause of the black smoke near the Vatican is unclear. Some updates suggest that the explosion and the fire happened in a neighborhood just behind the Vatican.

    Reports are beginning to indicate that the black smoke near the Vatican is not due to an explosion or bombing, but rather due to a fire in Rome.

    According to witnesses, explosions were heard before thick black smoke began rising near Vatican City.

     

    PHOTOS/VIDEO: Black smoke fills the sky above Vatican amid reports of explosion

    At this time, the cause of the black smoke near the Vatican is unclear. Some updates suggest that the explosion and the fire happened in a neighborhood just behind the Vatican.

    Reports are beginning to indicate that the black smoke near the Vatican is not due to an explosion or bombing, but rather due to a fire in Rome.

    Details later…

     

    See Video:

  • Vatican open emails for 80th birthday wishes to Pope Francis

    Vatican open emails for 80th birthday wishes to Pope Francis

    The Vatican on Tuesday says people who want to wish Pope Francis happy 80th birthday can do so via the emails which it opened, as the pontiff turn 80 years on Saturday.

    The Vatican said people may even write their messages in Latin.

    According to it, seven email accounts have been opened to receive messages in Latin, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, English, French, German and Polish.

    The English-language email is PopeFrancis80@vatican.va.

    There will also be a hashtag for birthday messages on Twitter, namely #Pontifex80.

    The Vatican said Francis was on Saturday, expected to celebrate special service in the Pauline Chapel, next to the Sistine Chapel, with the cardinals who live in Rome, but was otherwise going to spend a “normal’’ day.

    The work agenda on his birthday was said to include meetings with: the Maltese president; the head of the Vatican’s bishop congregation; a bishop from Switzerland; and representatives of the Nomadelfia Catholic community from Tuscany.

    In previous years, the Argentine-born pontiff has been feted with tango flash mobs and public serenades outside the Vatican.

    He had shared his birthday cake with homeless people and members of a Catholic youth organisation in the past.