Complicity of Pope and Archbishop Fernandez in systematic sexual abuse cover-up
NB: This is from a left-wing source; but still the catalogue of cases is damning.
From La Plata to Rome. Francis
rewarded Tucho Fernandez, someone who covered up paedophilia, with a central
position in the Vatican.
To confirm that his
Papacy is an accumulation of pure gestures, Bergoglio put a trusted bishop as
Prefect for the Doctrine of the Faith (the old Inquisition), the post held by
Ratzinger, among others, before he became Pope. As Archbishop of La Plata, Fernandez was noted
for his contempt for victims and his cover-up of abusers.
The Italian
correspondent of the conservative Argentine daily La Nación on Saturday called
it "bombshell news" and an "unexpected appointment". It probably is for those who align themselves
with the most reactionary, ultra-medieval and obscurantist sectors (they all
are) of the Roman Curia. But if one
considers the moves made by Jorge "Francis" Bergoglio in recent
years, it should not come as much of a surprise.
The news in
question is that the Vatican has just published in its Official Bulletin that
the Archbishop of La Plata Víctor Manuel "Tucho" Fernández has been selected
by the Pope as the new "Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the
Faith", as reported in the bulletin of the so-called Holy See. Fernández
will take up the post in September, replacing Cardinal Luis Francisco Ladaria
Ferrer.
The Dicastery is
the direct successor of the Holy Roman and Universal Inquisition, created in
1542 by Paul III, whose legacy for humanity was to have shed blood over part of
the world with its "witch" hunts, torture and humiliation of
"heretics" and other bloodthirsty methods to control the population
that was fractious with the "apostolic and Roman Catholic doctrine". Among some of its milestones, the Inquisition
tried and condemned Galileo Galilei for his heretical theories.
While modern
inquisitors no longer send their executioners to extirpate satanic confessions
under torture or burn women on bonfires set up in public squares - that is
nowadays done in a more civilised fashion by states and their governments - it
is still the Vatican "ministry" that controls, censors and sanctions
everything related to the "values" of official Catholicism. This
includes the systematic plan to cover up thousands and thousands of rapes of
children and adolescents in schools, institutes and parishes all over the
world.
Precisely, Tucho
Fernández is a specialist, among other things, in guaranteeing this systematic
cover-up while issuing communiqués and homilies in which, as Bergoglio
commands, he guiltily condemns the abuses committed by his cassock-wearing
employees. The few who manage to break
the silence of the ecclesiastical walls and leap into the public eye, of
course.
Valuable work
The Official
Vatican Bulletin publishes a letter that Francis sent to Tucho. There he says
that he entrusts him with a "very valuable" task, such as
"guarding the teaching that springs from faith in order to 'give reason
for our hope, but not as enemies who point out and condemn'". As if to "clarify", the Pope
acknowledges that the Dicastery "in other times came to use immoral
methods" and that "those were times when, rather than promoting
theological knowledge, possible doctrinal errors were pursued. What I expect from you is undoubtedly
something very different," he says to his partner.
Interestingly, the
Roman monarch makes explicit his intention to free the new Prefect from having
to "deal with" the complaints of sexual abuse that reach Rome. "Given that for disciplinary matters -
related in particular to the abuse of minors - a specific Section has recently
been created with very competent professionals, I ask you as Prefect to
dedicate your personal commitment more directly to the main purpose of the Dicastery,
which is to 'guard the faith'", he orders.
Strictly speaking,
this new "section" he speaks of is an office dedicated to receiving
the handful of "official" allegations against bishops, priests and
nuns that dioceses around the world feel the Vatican should
"investigate" and "pass judgement" on. But it is an office that answers directly to
the Dicastery soon to be headed by Fernández. Pure fairy tale.
Moving the chips
The Pope's move
seems to be in line with others in recent years in which the Argentine pontiff
has been placing men he trusts in key positions in the Vatican who, in
addition, adhere to his "theology of the people" (a doctrinal
approach that, appealing to populist clichés, distances itself aesthetically
from the most ultra-conservative sectors of the Church). Aware that his health is declining with the
passage of time, the so-called "Peronist pope" is already planning
his succession by filling St. Peter's Square with a devoted civil service.
The most emblematic
case is that of the former Bishop of Orán, Salta, Gustavo Zanchetta, a man of
extreme confidence in Bergoglio. Between
December 2018, when the allegations against him by two abused seminarians (the
victims could have been many more) and March 2022, when he was sentenced to
four and a half years in prison, the merciful pope sought to "save"
Zanchetta by putting him in charge of the Administration of the Patrimony of
the Apostolic See.
Better known as the
Vatican's "real estate", that office manages more than five thousand
properties around the world with an estimated value of US$3 billion. In the end, Zanchetta had to return to
Argentina to stand trial. However, he
now enjoys a house arrest that is denied to any Christian for much less serious
crimes.
So far it is not
known whether Tucho Fernandez directly abused minors, seminarians or students
at the Catholic University of Argentina when he was its Rector. What is known is that in recent years he was
in charge of covering up for any stray sheep that was denounced for these
crimes, doubly aggravated by the fact that they were representatives of a
religious organisation (with the level of vulnerability of the victim that this
implies).
In a special report
published by La Izquierda Diario last December, eleven of the cases denounced
so far in La Plata are detailed, in which, in different ways, "Tucho"
played a clear role in covering up for his priests. A cover-up that goes hand in hand with
dehumanisation and contempt for the victims and survivors.
The cases are those
of the former general chaplain of the Bonaerense Penitentiary Service, Eduardo
Lorenzo (who committed suicide in December 2019 in a Caritas headquarters
minutes after being arrested), the creator of the Miles Christi congregation,
Roberto Yanuzzi (the only one excommunicated by the Pope, although for his
doctrinal differences and not for his abuses), Héctor Giménez (denounced but
unpunished), Rubén Marchioni (publicly denounced but not judicially),
Maximiliano Di Virgilio (the family of his victim dropped a criminal
complaint), the former chaplain of the Gendarmerie in Misiones Raúl Sidders
(absurdly imprisoned under house arrest and close to a publictrial) and five
former priests of the Provolo Institute in La Plata (Nicola Corradi, Horacio
Corbacho, Giuseppe Spinelli, Giovanni Granuzzo and Eliseo Primati).
Along with
Fernández, the Auxiliary Bishop of La Plata, Alberto Bochatey, a servant
trained by the ultra-reactionary Héctor Aguer, "Tucho's" predecessor,
played a central role in the cover-up plans in almost all these cases. Although
there are no known allegations about him either, and despite the
"enmity" between Bergoglio and Aguer, in 2017 the Pope appointed
Bochatey "apostolic commissary" to investigate allegations of sexual
abuse at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza. He obviously did not investigate
anything, let alone collaborate in the judicial case that ended up condemning
Corradi and Corbacho to almost fifty years in prison.
"Tucho"
and Bochatey, among other aberrations, organised the "Homage Mass"
(and a Funeral Mass) for the suicide Lorenzo in the same Parish of Gonnet where
the priest, for years, abused teenagers whom he corrupted and extorted to
satisfy his oppressive desires.
One would expect no
less from the Pope himself. In addition
to having been an accomplice to several crimes of the last civil-military-ecclesiastical
dictatorship (when he already held a high position in the Argentinean Curia),
in his country he has been protecting criminals of the stature of Julio Grassi,
Zanchetta, Justo Illaraz, Agustín Rosa Torino and dozens of priests and bishops
for years with canonical investigations that only resulted in impunity. With the exception of the mafioso Yanuzzi, not
even the few priests criminally convicted were thrown out of the Church.
Another
characteristic of Víctor Fernández is his vocation to "mediate" in
social conflicts, when they threaten the political power of the day. For
example, in 2018 he rushed to the aid of the then governor María Eugenia Vidal
when hundreds of workers left from the entrances of the Río Santiago Shipyard
in Ensenada to occupy the headquarters of the Ministry of Economy in La Plata
in repudiation of the plans of adjustment and surrender of the company by the
Cambiemos administration. To do this,
the Archbishop devised a demobilising manoeuvre together with part of the trade
union leadership of the region that endorsed (by action or omission) Vidal's
plans.
Now, after five
years of "cleaning" (with liturgical cosmetics and silences bought at
a good price) the archdiocese of La Plata of the ultraconservative residues
left by Aguer, "Tucho" has to transfer part of his experience to the
Vatican.
Of course, to
occupy a position held by intellectuals such as Joseph Ratzinger, Fernández
does not lack a curriculum vitae. He
will become Prefect for the Doctrine of the Faith after having been Dean of the
Faculty of Theology in Buenos Aires, President of the Argentinean Society of
Theology and of the Faith and Culture Commission of the Argentinean Episcopate.
And before assuming the Archbishopric of
La Plata, he was rector of the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina. He is a true cadre for all the needs and
urgencies that the Vatican has at its particular Bergoglian stage.
Comments