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Polish archbishop resigns over secret police connection

 
 
nimh
 
Reply Sat 13 Jan, 2007 05:43 pm
Quote:
Warsaw archbishop resigns over secret police connection

Sunday, January 7, 2007 | 10:04 AM ET
CBC News

The newly appointed archbishop of Warsaw resigned on Sunday, less than an hour before his scheduled installation, after admitting he had co-operated with Poland's communist-era secret police.

Stanislaw Wielgus announced his decision at Warsaw's St. John's Cathedral, packed with worshippers gathered for a mass that was to have marked his formal installation. The congregation included President Lech Kaczynski.

Though some in the congregation, including Kaczynski, applauded the announcement, others shouted that Wielgus was welcome to stay.

In his resignation letter to Pope Benedict XVI, he said his past actions had "gravely compromised his authority" in the Roman Catholic homeland of the late Pope John Paul II.

The admission that he collaborated with the former communist regime, which ended in 1989, is a major embarrassment for the Vatican and the powerful Polish Catholic Church.

His resignation reportedly came at the request of Pope Benedict, who appointed him just a month ago.

Wielgus, 67, is believed to have informed on fellow clerics for around 20 years, from the late 1960s, according to allegations raised in a Dec. 20 article by the weekly Gazeta Polska newspaper.

He initially denied any collaboration, but the scandal widened when church officials on Friday said that documents at a historical institute showed Wielgus had willingly co-operated with the secret services, and the Polish media intensified calls for his resignation.

Wielgus has since issued statements acknowledging that he signed an agreement in 1978 promising to co-operate with the security force in exchange for permission to leave Poland to study in West Germany.

However, he stressed that he did not inform on anyone or try to hurt anyone, and he expressed remorse for both his contacts with the secret police and his failure to be forthcoming from the beginning.


Quote:
Vatican blames old foes amid spy scandal

January 07 2007

The Vatican hit back at its Polish critics on Sunday after Warsaw's new archbishop resigned in a spying scandal, saying the Catholic Church had been the victim of a vendetta from its old communist foes. [..]

Father Federico Lombardi said the episode was a "moment of great suffering for the Church" but that Wielgus was not the first and probably not the last Polish Church figure to be attacked on the basis of documents from the communist era. [..]

"The wave of attacks on the Catholic Church in Poland, rather than a sincere quest for transparency and truth, has many aspects of a strange alliance between the persecutors of the past and their adversaries and a vendetta on their part," Lombardi told Vatican Radio.

The incident is seen as a major embarrassment for Poland's powerful Catholic Church and for the Vatican which appointed Wielgus to the post just a month ago and stood by him while the allegations grew.

The Church was a key support for Poland's pro-democracy Solidarity movement during the 1980s but historians say as many as 10 percent of the clergy could have cooperated with the Soviet-backed regime. [..]
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Joe Nation
 
  1  
Reply Sat 13 Jan, 2007 08:12 pm
I'm worried. I don't think it's possible for the Roman Catholic Church to continue to build on the list of incredible moral failures they have achieved thus far in the modern age.

I know they are trying to outdo the atrocious of the past, the murder of millions of AmerIndians, the persecutions of the Inquisition, the defenses of slavery throughout the Western World, but although they have made a lot of people horrified by the pedophilia committed by hundreds of priests, the theft of millions in Church funds by various bishops trying to cover up those dreadful and abhorent acts and now the revelations of complicity with the Communist Secret Police, they still haven't reached the depths of what could be achieved if the mental cripples we call Cardinals really try.

Don't you think?

Jesus wept.

Joe(And now we know why.)Nation
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nimh
 
  1  
Reply Sat 13 Jan, 2007 09:04 pm
Hmm.. well, although "historians say as many as 10 percent of the clergy could have cooperated with the Soviet-backed regime", the majority of Polish clergy was still very much a driving force in the dissident movement, often at great personal risk. It should still be honored for that.

In other communist countries though, its true, the Church did not play such a major role in resistance to the regime, with the top clergy sometimes actively complicit, and the local clergy often passively detached. Same for the Protestants - an active role in dissidence, as in East-Germany where some church communities helped pave the ground for the 1989 revolt, was the brave exception. The Orthodox churches (Russia and the Balkans) did worst.

But the question whether you could reasonably expect the Churches and their clergy, which were under attack from the regimes right from the start, to openly or even hiddenly defy them, is a difficult one, thats hardly black or white. Outright collaboration with the secret police, though, is hard to excuse - especially if, as in Poland, many other men of the clergy did not steep to that, and were actually out risking harassment or worse - and its good that these things now come out in the open after all.
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dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 13 Jan, 2007 09:47 pm
This Gus avatar thing renders me unable to read anything you guys post as though it is serious.



I was left reeling and shocked by Gus' attitude to homosexuality on another thread, and it took me ages to recover.


It is oddly disconcerting...


Ok...that out of the way, I will try to read seriously.
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 13 Jan, 2007 09:49 pm
See?
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Wed 17 Jan, 2007 08:02 pm
Interesting take on the Pope's personal involvement and perspective in this..

"Stanislaw Wielgus, a conservative, was not on the first list of those considered for the job of Archbishop of Warsaw: his name was added, according to [..] the Vatican correspondent for La Repubblica newspaper, because the Pope favoured him. [..]

Approving the selection of Bishop Wielgus, the Pope had declared his "full confidence" in him, taking account of "all his life circumstances, including those connected with his past". The implication was that he knew Bishop Wielgus had skeletons in his closet, but chose to overlook them.

A member of the Nazi Youth as a young man in Bavaria, Benedict seems to believe it is better to forgive and forget awkward episodes in the past. [..] "Ratzinger is not a courageous man," said one Vatican specialist, "he didn't stand up to the Nazis, and he doesn't expect others to be courageous."

Here's the full story:

Quote:
Pope furious as Polish launch new priest spy inquiry

The Independent
13 January 2007

Pope Benedict XVI is reported to have been left "furious" and "isolated" by events of recent days when the man he approved as the next Archbishop of Warsaw was exposed as an agent of the Polish secret police.

After warmly approving the choice of Bishop Stanislaw Wielgus, Benedict was forced by the furore surrounding his candidacy to accept his resignation only hours before his installation.

The Vatican is alive with rumours that Giovanni Battista Cardinal Re, head of the Council of Bishops, will be the next victim of the affair, and that a satisfactory way to boot him upstairs is being contrived. After Bishop Wielgus's resignation, Cardinal Re declared: "We knew nothing about his collaboration". He was frankly not believed. "That was obviously rubbish", said one Vatican insider.

In Warsaw, Polish bishops have agreed to investigate the involvement of Catholic priests with the Sluzba Bezpieczenstwa (SB), the secret police in the communist era. "The bishops have confirmed the will to carry out a full verification of the truth about ourselves," said Jozef Michalik, head of Poland's conference of bishops. Historians and church officials say up to 15 per cent of priests were pressured into co-operating with the SB.

The Pope's decision to accept Bishop Wielgus's resignation was hailed by the Polish media with headlines such as "rescued by Rome". But Vatican observers say the German Pope has been badly damaged by the latest scandal to hit his papacy, following the clamour last autumn over a speech condemned as anti-Islamic.

In the latest case, it is not his words that have tripped him up but his judgement. Stanislaw Wielgus, a conservative, was not on the first list of those considered for the job of Archbishop of Warsaw: his name was added, according to Marco Politi, the Vatican correspondent for La Repubblica newspaper, because the Pope favoured him.

Bishop Wielgus first denied co-operating with the SB, despite revelations in a Polish weekly that his name figured in documents found at the National Remembrance Institute. He then admitted it, but said: "I never informed on anyone and never tried to hurt anyone."

But if Bishop Wielgus was the first victim of the scandal, Benedict was not far behind. Approving the selection of Bishop Wielgus, the Pope had declared his "full confidence" in him, taking account of "all his life circumstances, including those connected with his past". The implication was that he knew Bishop Wielgus had skeletons in his closet, but chose to overlook them.

A member of the Nazi Youth as a young man in Bavaria, Benedict seems to believe it is better to forgive and forget awkward episodes in the past.

During a visit to Warsaw last year, he warned about coming down heavily on collaborators. "We must guard against the arrogant claim of setting ourselves up to judge earlier generations who lived in different times and in different circumstances," he told clergy, who applauded the words.

"Ratzinger is not a courageous man," said one Vatican specialist, "he didn't stand up to the Nazis, and he doesn't expect others to be courageous."

But Benedict once again appears short on wise advisers or - worse - is being deliberately led into error by forces in the Vatican who are out of sympathy with him.

In public, the Pope takes aim at the media. "I think the Pope believes the media is responsible for much of his problems," said Robert Mickens, the Vatican correspondent of The Tablet. During his Epiphany sermon last week, the Pope warned against the "immense expansion of the mass media which, on the one hand, multiplies information indefinitely and, on the other, appears to weaken our capacity to make a critical synthesis."
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