Pope Francis grants 4 audiences to transgender groups

Pope Francis receives a group of homosexual transsexual prostitutes on Wednesday for the fourth time this year.

There have been four meetings between the Pope and transgender prostitutes in recent months, the Osservatore Romano noted, in a bid to secure appropriate attention for the latest encounter.

Francis addressed the homosexual prostitutes with "love, paternity and simplicity", according to the Spanish daily ABC. This, it said, was in line with "the Church's goal of restoring dignity to these people by freeing them from the slavery that prostitution entails".

Already four transgender groups have been received by Pope Francis in 2022. The most recent encounter took place last Wednesday, 10 August, during the General Audience. The Osservatore Romano, the Pope's daily newspaper, which however prefers the left-wing La Repubblica. reported under the headline: "Revolution and hope". 

Under Francis, the left-wing vocabulary "revolution" is also being used hastily and in an inflationary manner in the ecclesiastical sphere. Yet nothing is more foreign to the Church than revolution, whose archetype, the French Revolution, became the catalyst for the most radical attacks against the Church and the Divine order and the model of state terror.

Wednesday's meeting came about through the Comunità della Beata Vergine Immacolata in Torvaianica, a Roman seaside resort where homosexual prostitution is rampant on its streets and beaches.

The French nun, Geneviève Jeanningros and the priest, Andrea Conocchia take care of the transgender prostitutes who are sought after by homosexuals. Homosexual prostitution in Rome, which is veiled under the term "transgender", briefly came into the limelight when in 2009 the then head of government of the Lazio region, the left-wing democrat Piero Marrazzo, lost his office after a sex and drug video of him with a homosexual trans-prostitute surfaced.


Sr Geneviève was also the driving force behind the previous meetings with Francis. She belongs to the Little Sisters of Jesus and has her base in Ostia.

In April 2020, a few months after the pandemic began, the Papal Almoner, Cardinal Konrad Krajewski sent help to the homosexual trans-sexual prostitutes of Torvaianica "because they had lost their clients due to Corona and were in a desperate situation", according to ABC.

However, the aim of the community around Sr Geneviève is to free the living "supply" for the homosexual market from the slavery of prostitution, as the Osservatore Romano points out.

"The Pope's attention to people who live in great suffering opens up unimaginable hopes."

The way Francis has received these people, Giampaolo Mattei said in the Pope's newspaper, could become "a spark that inspires a new life".

"And if that is not a revolution! The Pope who receives transsexual people in audience and addresses them with love, paternity and simplicity," Don Conocchia is quoted as saying.

"No human being should be singled out, everyone has the dignity of being a child of God," Sr Geneviève said.

The conversion of those concerned is the immediate pastoral aspect. But besides this, there are others: In sum, crucial things remain unsaid. Essential aspects of the problem of homosexual prostitution are not addressed. The desired androgyny of male prostitutes is a direct response to a demand from the homosexual clientele.

Sin is the great absentee. It no longer seems to exist. Conversion is also bashfully not mentioned by name, nor is witness given to it. Everything is reduced to the question of the "dignity" of the prostituted, who are presented as victims. They are undoubtedly victims to a certain extent, but this is only one side of the phenomenon, which cannot be done justice to if it is considered in isolation. The church degrades itself to a social welfare organisation when, in leftist diction, it stylises everything into a problem of oppression and discrimination and thus fades out the essence of man and sin.

In the climate of a forced homosexualisation of public life, comparable Papal initiatives can also send the wrong signals - if they are not even wanted.

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