Archive for August, 2008

Was Pope John Paul I Murdered? (Part II)

As I said in the first installment, understanding the origins of the controversy surrounding the Pope’s death requires me to backtrack a little to the morning his body was discovered. I am attempting to write this account chronologically as much as possible, however difficult it might be, because this is the best way to understand the origins of the conspiracy theory and the way it snowballed, beyond all the evidence, into certainty into so many people’s minds. In this installment, I will start with the events of a morning that aroused shock, grief and above all confusion all over the world, not the least in Vatican City itself, and how they gave rise to doubts and suspicions. Following that, I will go back and analyze what happened, and what the actual evidence is.

Many people don’t remember it well after thirty years, but the people of the world, and especially the people in Rome, felt Pope John I’s death deeply: the whole spring and summer of 1978 had been filled with an atmosphere of gloom in Italy because of the clash of left and right, and the terrorist attacks, especially by those of the Red Brigades who had kidnapped and executed Italian politician Aldo Moro just that May. And then John Paul I had been elected, and his smile, his joyful manner and his captivating words had dispelled the gloom. He was the Pope, the teacher, even the saint people had been waiting for. They reacted to him with instant love. Long-time Vatican watchers were amazed at his radiance. Father Diego Lorenzi, the new Pope’s secretary, who had come with him from Venice, vividly recalls a journalist who wrote for L’Osservatore Romano saying to him: “However did you manage to hide this man from the whole of humanity for so many years?”(1) No one could have remotely imagined what was to become of this bright beginning. And the reaction to what happened next was explosive.

From around 6:00 a.m. on the morning of September 29, 1978, early risers began to notice some unusual activities in St. Peter’s square, including prelates going in and out of the Apostolic palace at a very early hour, the arrival of a doctor, the movements of the Swiss Guards and the closing of the bronze doors of St. Peter’s basilica.

At 7:30, Vatican Radio interrupted its programming with the incredible news: The new Pope was dead, after just 33 days in office. Italian radio and TV gave the news at the same time. Within ten minutes wire services all over the world were typing out the news. Nothing but the bare fact of the Pope’s death was known until 7:42, when the Vatican Press Office distributed the following bulletin:

This morning, September 29, 1978, about five-thirty, the private secretary of the Pope, when contrary to custom, he had not found the Holy Father in the chapel of his private apartment, looked for him in his room and found him dead in bed with the light on, like one who was intent on reading. The physician, Dr. Renato Buzzonetti, who hastened to the Pope’s room, verified the death, which took place presumably toward eleven o’clock yesterday evening, as “sudden death that could be related to acute myocardial infarction.”

The declaration was also published on the front page of that day’s Osservatore Romano in a story “Pope John Paul I in the Peace of the Lord.” The accompanying story said: “The first person to become aware of the Pope’s death was his private secretary, Father John Magee, who immediately informed the Secretary of State by telephone.” (2).

People were incredulous because the Pope’s health had seemed perfect at the audience just two days before. The people of Rome, who had immediately loved the Pope, were devastated. And in accordance with the general atmosphere I mentioned, some suspected a dark plot. In the neighborhood of Albergone in Rome, where a Communist youth had been shot to death the night before by a right-wing youth, a 16-year-old student said of John Paul, “He was a revolutionary Pope who wanted to get closer to the people. That’s why they eliminated him.”(3). Who “they” were didn’t really matter. It could have been any number of corrupt “higher-ups.” People didn’t need any evidence to suspect that their beloved Pope had been murdered.

Vatican Radio and various news agencies later announced that the Pope was reading the devotional classic The Imitation of Christ when he died. The next day, however, the Pope’s other secretary, Father Diego Lorenzi said that he was looking at some of his old sermons while working on his Sunday Angelus address. This seeming contradiction with the official source aroused suspicion. Father Andrew Greeley, an American priest in Rome, writing a book about the election of the Pope, told his tape-recorded diary: “If they [the Vatican] lie about little things, they’ll lie about big things. There’s no reason to trust anything they say’ (4). There was mounting talk about having an autopsy on the Pope.

By October 3, some of the common people of Rome were convinced that the Pope was killed by the Curia – or by whoever else they blamed for all the problems in the world. They cried out as they walked by his bier: “Who did this to you?” (5)

On October 4, John Paul I’s funeral Mass was celebrated in St. Peter’s Square in the pouring rain, amid universal grief. On October 6, Civilta` Cristiana’s spokesman Franco Antico said that his organization had “concrete evidence” to back up his calls for an investigation into the Pope’s death. Perhaps it was no coincidence that same day, a number of major papers published a story which the Italian news agency ANSA had obtained the day before from what it called a “good source.” It gave an account of the events surrounding the Pope’s death which seemed to suggest that he had spent his last hours in conflict with Villot and other members of the Curia. It said, without giving specific details or names, that John Paul was about to make some important personnel changes in the Curia and among the Italian bishops. and hinted that some in the Curia were opposed to these changes. It also said that the Pope had argued about them at length with Cardinal Villot on the day of his death, and that he had also spoken about them with Cardinal Colombo of Milan that evening. It was not a discourse nor notes for a homily, but four sheets of paper, containing notes for one of these executive acts, the source said, that the Pope took to bed with him that night, and which were found in his hands when his lifeless body was discovered in the morning.

The source also gave an account of the discovery of the Pope’s body that differed in many respects from that given by the Vatican’s official statement. It said that the first person to discover the Pope’s body was not Father Magee, but Sister Vincenza, a nun in the papal household, who then ran to wake up Father Magee, and that the discovery took place at 4:30 a.m., a whole hour before the time given in the Vatican press statement. (6). Before publishing the story, ANSA obtained from the Pope’s brother, Edoardo Luciani confirmation of the fact that Sister Vincenza had discovered the Pope’s body, which had been relayed to them by Don Diego Lorenzi when he gave them the news of his death. This apparently convinced the agency that the rest of the account was accurate, and it decided to publish it. (7). Of course, it caused a sensation in the world press.

This story about a disagreement between the Pope and Villot, and plans to remove some highly-placed prelates from their posts, seems to have come from a traditionalist source. Is there any direct link between it and Civilta Cristiana? In their popular 1983 book about the Vatican, Pontiff, Gordon Thomas and Max Morgan Witts state that Antico received a very similar story early on September 29 in a phone call from “someone with good Vatican connections” and that he immediately afterwards phoned the story to ANSA. (8). Considering the notorious inaccuracy of this book, (for one thing, it gives the wrong date for the news story), I am cautious about accepting this at face value. However, I believe that it is quite possible some members of Civilta` Cristiana were the source behind the story. Did Antico’s statement that the “concrete evidence” could not yet be released perhaps mean that he thought that the news agency was still hesitating over whether to publish the story? However, the source may equally well have been another similar group of traditionalists.

In a 1981 interview, Giovanni Gennari, a former priest and a member of Italy’s leftist Catholic dissent, gave some details about the changes that the Pope was supposedly planning which he said he had obtained in 1978 from some Vatican employees. Like many other leftist Catholics, Gennari believed that Luciani was an extreme conservative. Unlike the traditionalists, Gennari had actually known Luciani personally. But, since he was also affected with ideological presuppositions — this time those of the left — he is scarcely the type of person to give an objective opinion of his views. Nevertheless, Gennari believed that Luciani was “the man most congenial to the Old Curia’s hopes for a restoration.” (9). In other words, he was going to replace all the liberals in the Curia and the Italian hierarchy with men who were favored by the most conservative faction in the Curia.

According to Gennari’s sources, Villot and Casaroli were among those to be removed. Another was Ugo Poletti, the vicar of Rome, who was known for his concern for the city’s working class population. Villot was to be replaced by Cardinal Benelli and Poletti by Cardinal Felici. When Villot heard of the proposal he became alarmed and told the Pope that such changes would be “a betrayal of the legacy of Paul VI, the end of Ostpolitik, and the complete triumph of the restoration.” Cardinal Colombo was also supposed to have strenuously opposed these plans during his telephone conversation with the Pope on the night of September 28. Gennari did not say that the Pope was murdered, but he said that he was “profoundly shaken” by the controversy, and hinted that the stress may have led to his death a few hours later.

Unfortunately, while the above story was given wide publicity, most journalists who speculated about it were ignorant of the real motives of Civilta` Cristiana and the other traditionalist groups who originated it. But Church officials understood these motives very well. While the controversy was raging in the days after the Pope’s death, Cardinal John Krol of Philadelphia explained that Civiltà Cristiana was trying to prove that some “unidentified leftists, inside or outside the Vatican” had murdered the Pope, and as a result, suspicion was spreading like “a subtle poison” among people who did not know the group’s motive. “The American public has a right to know how the rumors started, and how the rightists used them to advance themselves and their cause,” Krol said. (10). But the damage was already done. His explanation was largely ignored while the press had a field day with the theory that the Pope was murdered.

The story that originated in this fashion has had a long and fruitful life in the past thirty years. Several books have been published amplifying the traditionalists’ beliefs about the Pope’s death. In 1984, Jean Jacques Thierry, who had been a correspondent for L’Aurore, the French newspaper that had launched accusations of Freemasonry against much of the Church hierarchy, published a novel called La vraie mort de Jean Paul Ier (The True Death of John Paul I), in which he suggested that if Villot was guilty of the substitution of a double for Paul VI, then he could well have been guilty of murdering John Paul I, and then covering up the murder, when the new Pope found out about him and his Freemason friends. (11). There have been other recent books, articles and even Internet pages, which I will discuss later.

In Pontiff, Gordon Thomas and Max Morgan-Witts give Civilta Cristiana` as the source for their account of the discovery of the Pope’s body. Their account agrees in many details with the ANSA story. Although the authors do not say directly that the Pope was murdered, they do say that Cardinal Villot lied about who discovered his body and about what he was reading at the time of his death. Though they follow the traditionalists’ story closely, the authors do offer a different explanation of the mysterious papers the Pope was holding: they contained a severe condemnation of the Jesuits, and their General, Father Pedro Arrupe, for their disobedience to the hierarchy and their support of Marxism and liberation theology. They add that Cardinal Villot was determined to conceal this condemnation, so he forbade its release and instead concocted the story that the Pope had been reading The Imitation of Christ (12).

Either version would certainly be pleasing to the right, where theories of conspiracies among the Jesuits are also common. For instance, in his book The Jesuits, Malachi Martin, who is famous for his accusations against those in the Church whom he believes to be leftists, insinuates that the Jesuits were in league with the Freemasons who worked in the Vatican, and that John Paul I planned to “liquidate” the Society of Jesus if it did not reform itself immediately. Nothing would be more natural to those who believe in these theories than to suspect Cardinal Villot of obeying Masonic orders to prevent the condemnation of the Jesuits from being publicized. (13).

Now for the analysis. First, and most important, the motives for the murder are all utterly without credibility, because the picture of John Paul I presented in this theory is completely at odds with his real beliefs as evidenced by his actions and writings as a bishop and cardinal (This is what my whole book is going to prove). He was a strong supporter of all the Vatican II reforms and Pope Paul’s Ostpolitik as well. There is no way he would have been responsible for the “restoration” of the pre-Vatican II Church some were hoping for. Second, he was anything but sympathetic to the traditionalists’ claims against Paul VI and the Church hierarchy, and began speaking out against them, especially after the Lefebvrites began spreading their accusations against the hierarchy in his diocese. When in 1977 Lefebvre launched accusations against some bishops he considered leftists or outright Communists, Cardinal Luciani responded in an article in the city newspaper of Venice, Il Gazzettino, in which he pointed out that Lefebvre’s statements about leftist bishops were “not backed up by any proof.” Besides, he added, “isn’t the French prelate aware of the almost daily accusations [of the left] against the episcopate in Italy because it declares that Christianity and Marxism are incompatible?” He also expressed his pain that the French archbishop had launched similar charges against Pope Paul VI, “to whom Lefebvre professes himself, in words to be so devoted. I said ‘in words’; in deeds, he aligns himself with Voltaire, who used to say: ‘The Pope is a holy person; therefore let us kiss his foot, but tie his hands.’” (14). When a Lefebvre supporter wrote a letter to the editor criticizing his article, and denouncing Pope Paul for receiving Hungarian Communist Party Secretary Kadar at the Vatican, Luciani replied, “I simply cannot understand this criticism from Catholics. With his mandate to evangelize the world, and with two-thirds of which is under the influence of Communism, the Pope must try every means. There are some risks, and he knows it better than we do; let us help him, not by criticizing him, but by praying for him and supporting him.” (15)

Luciani was well aware, as were all other sensible Catholic bishops, of the fanaticism exhibited by many of Lefebvre’s followers. It is absurd to suggest that as Pope he would have actually believed the accusations of Masonry that they directed at their enemies.

Nor did John Paul have any animosity against the Jesuits or their leader. In fact, when he was still studying at the seminary, he had ardently desired to enter the Jesuits himself, but his bishop would not allow it, because of the great need of priests in the diocese. He had had a Jesuit confessor, Father Leandro Tiveron, in Venice. The activities of some Jesuits may have caused problems, but John Paul was sensible enough not to apply them to the order as a whole, or to Arrupe. In fact, a few days after becoming Pope, he had written a warm letter to Arrupe, in which he recalled that he had admired the Jesuit General’s intervention at the 1977 Synod enough to personally ask him for a copy of it. (16) The Pope had indeed been planning to deliver an address to a meeting of the Jesuits in Rome on Saturday, September 30. However, no one in the Vatican ever tried to conceal the text of this speech. In general, undelivered or unpublished documents that a Pope leaves at his death are not made known unless his successor wishes it. What happened here was no different. Father Arrupe had asked Cardinal Villot if the Jesuits could have the text of John Paul I’s talk, and the cardinal, now John Paul II’s secretary of State, delivered it to him on November 18, 1978, with the approval of the new Pope.

The address was published in the Acta Apostolica Sedis, which contains all the official papal texts. There is no condemnation in it, and certainly no hint of the immediate demise of the order. It did warn the Jesuits against secularist tendencies and abandoning the order’s spiritual mission for tasks that could be better left to the laity, but it also said that the Jesuits should concern themselves with social problems, and urged them to announce the Christian message with fidelity, but also in a language adopted to the modern mentality, something that neither Martin or the traditionalists would agree with. (17).

So whatever the Pope may have had in his hands, he most certainly would not have been holding papers detailing the suppression of the Jesuits or a traditionalist restoration in the Church. So why all the discrepancies in the Vatican accounts? And why the lie about who discovered the Pope’s body?

The first official statement, which witnesses later said that Villot put together, said that a secretary discovered the body, when it was really Sister Vincenza. According to Father Magee (now the bishop of Cloyne, Ireland), who had been alerted by Vincenza, he insisted that his name not be put into the statement, because he didn’t want to be a party to the fabrication. But Villot insisted that he couldn’t release the information that a nun was in the Pope’s bedroom. (18) This might seem surprising to American readers, but the Vatican is very straight-laced. It would be regarded as scandalous to admit that a woman had been in the Pope’s bedroom at that early hour of the morning. And in fact, there was actually some reason for this uneasiness. If the frequently anti-Catholic secular press in Italy, or, much worse, the Communist press, got hold of the facts, they would make the most of it. When questioned, the Vatican had to admit that the secretary in question was Fr. Magee. This is an attempt at a cover up of sorts, the truth of which was not admitted by the Vatican until much later. The issue of who discovered the Pope’s body certainly does not offer any evidence that the Pope was murdered; it only evidence that Cardinal Villot wanted to protect the Pope’s memory from salacious gossip.

How did the Imitation of Christ story begin? It was later traced it to speculation among the journalists from around the world who are accredited to the Holy See to cover Vatican events for their periodicals back home. (19). The speculation eventually found its way onto Vatican Radio as a news report, as well as out to wire services. After it was given on Vatican Radio, it erroneously acquired the status of an official Vatican statement and was cited as such. Contrary to what many people think, Vatican Radio does not get all of its news from directly inside the Vatican. It uses all the regular news sources as well. The important thing to notice is that in these stories, the book was not said to be in the Pope’s hands, but open on the bed beside him; so that there is no real contradiction with Fr. Lorenzi’s statement (20). On October 2, Vatican Radio announced that “after making the necessary inquiries,” it was able to state that the Pope was holding his personal notes and homilies, as Don Diego had said (21). At any rate, the Imitation of Christ story was nowhere given in an official statement by the Vatican, and can in no way be traced to Cardinal Villot.

In fact, even though it may have been speculation the story was certainly credible. The Pope loved the Imitation of Christ, he had been making his morning meditations on it in the papal chapel with Fr. Magee, and all the listening world had heard him quote from it in his last general audience just two days before, on September 27. (22) In fact, the story may even have been based on a genuine piece of information leaked from inside the Vatican, for according to Sister Vincenza, in a later statement, when she found his body, the Pope, in addition to the papers on his hand, did have a book open beside him on the covers, though she didn’t identify it as The Imitation of Christ (23).

The accusation that Villot was trying to cover up what the Pope was holding in his hands simply don’t hold water. If he had wanted to conceal that the Pope had controversial changes in his hands, he certainly did a very poor job of it. The first official statement, reproduced in full above, states only the bare fact that the Pope was reading. Instead of being a well-concocted cover-up story that placed something definite in the Pope’s hands we have a vague statement of the type that could only give rise to endless speculation, which is in fact, what happened. Nor, as we have seen, was the Imitation of Christ story traceable to any official Vatican statement that Villot would have been responsible for. In fact, two days later, on October 1 – thus even before Vatican Radio’s correction of its earlier story — Villot told a French journalist that the Pope had the text of an upcoming discourse in his hands, certainly reasonably close to what Fr. Lorenzi said (24). Oddly, everyone seems to have overlooked this article, and Villot’s actual statement on the matter.

The ANSA story said that Vincenza said that the Pope’s body was discovered at 4:30, which it said was the hour the Pope normally went to the chapel. This is also in total contradiction to what the eyewitnesses stated about what time he normally rose. I will discuss this, as well as the question of the autopsy more in the next installment, when I discuss Yallop’s claims.

The fantastic nature of these stories certainly calls into question the conclusions of any author who makes use of them. David Yallop is one of these authors. In his book In God’s Name, he states that it was several members of the group that was the source for the ANSA story who convinced him to undertake his investigation into the death of John Paul I. (25). His claims will be the subject of the next installment.

NOTES

(1) Diego Lorenzi, “Luciani, una lezione vivente per il mondo,” interview in Gente Veneta, September(?) 2003; this article is online in Italian at www.amicipapaluciani.it/dondiego.htm.

(2) L’Osservatore Romano, September 29, 1978, p. 1.

(3) Corriere della Sera, September 30, 1978, p. 3.

(4) Andrew Greeley, The Making of the Popes 1978: The Politics of Intrigue in the Vatican (Kansas City: Andrews and McMeel, 1979), p. 182

(5) Greeley, Making of the Popes, p. 181.

(6) Corriere della Sera, October 6, 1978, p. 2.

(7) Chicago Tribune, October 7, 1978, p. 2.

(8) Gordon Thomas and Max Morgan-Witts, Pontiff ((Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1983), pp. 267-68.

(9) Giovanni Gennari, “Papa Luciani mori` cosi`,” L’Espresso, 25 October 1981, p. 24.

(10) Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, 11 October 1978; see Supplement to the New York Times News Service, 12 October 1978, p. 54.

(11) Thierry, La vraie mort, especially pp. 149-153.

(12) Thomas and Morgan-Witts, Pontiff, pp. 255, 263.

(13) Malachi Martin: The Jesuits: The Society of Jesus and the Betrayal of the Roman Catholic Church (New York: Linden Press, 1987), pp. 43-48, 76

(14) Il Gazzettino, June, 1977.

(15) Il Gazzettino, June 14, 1977

(16) The letter to Arrupe is in Nicolini, Trentatre Giorni, p. 49.

(17) The text of the address was also published for the Jesuits in the Notizie dei Gesuiti d’Italia, 79, no. 1, pp. 3-7.

(18) John Cornwell, A Thief in the Night (New York, Viking, 1989), p. 196.

(19) Giulio Nicolini Trentatre Giorni: Un pontificato, 3rd ed. (Bergamo: Editrice Velar, 1983), p. 180-81. This was some five years before John Cornwell carried out a similar investigation and reached the same results.

(20) See, among others: “Open on the becovers was a copy of the bok The Imitation of Christ,” Chicago Tribune, September 30, 1978, p. 1; the Pope “lay with The Imitation of Christ open beside him” Time, October 9, 1978, p. 68; the book “was at his side,” The Brazilian magazine Veja, October 4, 1978, p. 28.

(21) David Yallop, In God’s Name: An Investigation into the Murder of John Paul I (New York: Bantam Books, 1984, p. 236.

(22) The passage goes: “The one who loves, runs, flies and is happy.” See L’Osservatore Romano, September 28, 1978; I also used the actual recording of the talk: Ricordo di Papa Luciani. Vatican Radio “Quattro Voci” program, 28 September 1979.

(23) The recollections of Sister Vincenza, as given to Sister Irma Dametto, can be found in Saverio Gaeta, “La profezia di Papa Luciani,” Jesus, September 9, 1998. This is one of several written versions of the oral accounts that Sister Vincenza gave about her discovery before her own death in 1983. She spoke at various times to Fr. Mario Senigaglia, Luciani’s secretary in Venice, to the Luciani family, to Sister Irma, and to Venetian author Camillo Bassotto; but this is the only version that contains this detail.

(24) Robert Serrou, “J’ai vecu aupres de Jean-Paul Ier ma plus riche experience spirituelle,” Paris Match, October 13, 1978, p. 89; the date of the interview is given by Villot’s friend Fr. Antoine Wenger, who was present, see his Le Cardinal Jean Villot: secretaire d’etat de trois papes (Paris: Desclée de Brower, 1989), p. 238. Wenger notes that Cardinal Villot carefully reviewed the text of the article for accuracy.

(25) Yallop, In God’s Name, p. 241-42

John Paul I One Step Closer to Beatification

Here is the article. You can find the Italian original here.

TOWARDS THE BEATIFICATION OF PAPA LUCIANI

The Decree de validitate has been signed and the relator of the positio has been named.

On June 27 (2008), the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints has signed the decree of validity on the acts of the diocesan process for the beatification of Papa Luciani (according to canonical terminology, this is the decretum de validitate, about the validity of the acts of the diocesan investigation).

The diocesan investigation, which was carried out, exceptionally, in the diocese of Belluno-Feltre, instead of in Rome (usually the investigation takes place in the place where the Servant of God died) lasted from 2003 to 2005: 170 testimonies were collected in Belluno, Venice and Rome, in 203 sessions.

The cause also involved the nomination of a group of experts and theologians, who expressed an opinion on the published writings of the Servant of God, and the work of a historical commission that tracked down all the unpublished documents on the life and work of Papa Luciani, and has drawn up a spiritual and pastoral profile of his life.

At the same time that the decretum de validitate was issued, the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints name the relator in this phase of the process: the relator is Father Cristoforo Bove, from the Order of Friars Minor Conventual. “To use a comparison,” says Fr. Giorgio Lise, the vice-postulator of the cause of John Paul I, “the relator has at this moment a task similar to the director of a doctoral thesis: he follows the iter of the preparation of the position and then, before a plenary meeting of the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints, made up of cardinals, bishops and officials of the congregation, presents for examination to positio, a critical study of what has emerged from the instructory and historical commissions; this should bring forth the proofs that the Servant of God has exercised the Christian virtues in an heroic manner.”

In the document nominating Father Bove, signed by Cardinal Saraiva Martins, his collaborator in drawing up the position was also named: Dr. Stefania Falasca, of Rome, a journalist who works for the monthly magazine 30 Giorni: She is the author of the recent book Mio fratello Albino, made up of the recollections of [John Paul I's sister] Antonia Luciani.

Father Bove, born in 1948, is a native of the province of Naples: a teacher of Church history at the Pontifical Gregorian University and at the Pontifical Institute Antonianum, was the relator of the cause of beatification of Padre Pio de Pietrelcina, and of other servants of God, including the Franciscan Cardinal Massaia, a missionary in Africa.

From the Vatican also comes the news that the postulator of the cause, the Salesian Don Enrico Dal Covolo, has been invited to Puglia to the closing of the process on the miracle attributed to the intercession of Papa Luciani: this miracle, as is well known, is in regard to the cure from malignant lymphoma of a Catholic man from the Puglia area. “The process came to an end,” Msgr Lise says again, “in May in the diocese of Altamura-Gravina-Acquaviva delle Fonti, where this man cured of cancer lives. In this case as well, many testimonies were collected, in addition to the examination of the medical documentation.”

How will the closing of the process on the miracle take place?

“In September, Msgr Lise answers, “the whole of the documentation gathered will be sealed before the bishop of that diocese, Mario Paciello, and the witnesses, and then sent to Rome. The closing will take place along the lines of what took place in the Cathedral of Belluno on November 10, 2006. The Congregation will also have to make a pronouncement of the validity of the process on the miracle.”

The 30th Anniversary of John Paul I

Today is the 30th anniversary of John Paul I’s election. For me, a momentous day. I hope for other Catholics, it will be a chance to learn more about him.

I may not be able to finish writing my next installment about his death today, so I will put up a few links here.

A couple of good websites about John Paul I, which have versions in English as well as other languages:

Gloria Molinari’s website is particularly packed with information.

This website is run by a Belgian priest who owes his priesthood to Papa Luciani’s example.

Here’s a Catholic News Service article, from August 22 (rather superficial, but some lovely quotes from the former Cardinal Razinger).

Right now I’m translating an article from Humilitas: Papa Luciani, the online version of a journal devoted to him in Italian, with many more details about the progress in his beatification process.

Humilitas is also published in an English print version by the Missionary Servants of John Paul I. It regularly translates his writings. You can subscribe to this free newsletter by writing to Ray and Lauretta Seabeck, 22 Boyd Hill Rd., Gilford, NH 03249.

The translation of that Italian artilce should be up before too long. And I will post other updates too. So keep coming back!

Was Pope John Paul I Murdered? (Part I)

Here is the first part of the discussion of the Pope’s death I promised. Much of it is only slightly rewritten from the book that I tried to have published back in the 80’s and early 90’s. It will, however, include a discussion of the second (2007) edition of David Yallop’s book In God’s Name. In time, I hope to do more research and put together the definitive treatment of the subject.

Many of the people who were close to Pope John Paul I have always been reluctant to talk about the controversy surrounding his death. This is not because they want to conceal anything, but rather because they are weary of being questioned on the subject. They wonder why there is so much interest in the theory that the Pope was murdered and so little in his life. They feel betrayed by those who have distorted the facts they have provided in order to write scandalous books, and angry because those who read these books seem to be more interested in sensationalism than they are in the truth. When I spoke with the Pope’s brother and sister-in-law and his secretaries, Father Lorenzi and Father Senigaglia, about his death back in 1985, they told me that they were afraid that attempting to refute these lies would only add to the furor, and that no one cared about the truth anyway.

I am sure that Senigaglia and Lorenzi’s feelings are the same today, though the Pope’s brother Edoardo and his wife Antonietta are now dead (Antonietta died in 2006 and Edoardo in March 2008). I am not dwelling on the details of John Paul’s death out of any love for sensationalism, but only out of love for the truth. In this case the truth is not difficult to determine. There is not a shred of evidence to support any of the claims that Pope John Paul I was murdered on the evening of September 28, 1978.

The most famous of these claims is contained in David Yallop’s sensational international best-seller In God’s Name: An Investigation into the Murder of Pope John Paul I (Bantam Books, 1984, 2nd ed 2007), in which the author claims that several people actually living inside Vatican City told him that John Paul I was murdered, and gave him evidence to prove it. Who exactly are these people, and why would they make such an extraordinary accusation? This is the most important question, because the credibility of these sources is vital to the credibility of Yallop’s book. Explaining the nature of these sources is the best refutation of Yallop’s claim that some highly placed cardinals, the Grand Master of an illegal Masonic Lodge and some corrupt Italian financiers plotted together to murder a Pope.

While Yallop’s book is perhaps the most famous, there have a dozen or more other books in different languages exploring the same territory, including both support and refutation. The most famous of the latter is John Cornwell’s equally scandalous best-seller A Thief in the Night (1989). He does poke holes in the murder theory, but then he comes up with an almost equally scandalous theory of my own. I will have more to say about Cornwell’s book later on.

But most of the treatments of the Pope’s death are ultimately based on the same story, or some version of it, that was told to Yallop by his sources, a story that goes back to the morning of the Pope’s death. That’s why I want to begin by tracing the origins of this story as fully as possible, so that the strength or weakness of the evidence it presents will be clear. Its origin lies with some followers of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, the traditionalist leader who was in conflict with the Vatican at the time. In order to talk about them, I will first have to sketch in some background.

The Traditionalists and the Freemasons

Catholics in the U. S. are familiar with the refusal of Lefebvre and his followers to accept any aspect of the Second Vatican Council, and their belief that those who accept it are heretics. But in Europe, especially in France, the traditionalists, or “integralists,” as they are often called, also refuse to accept anything that has happened in social or intellectual history since the French Revolution. Many of them still believe in absolutist government in both Church and state and are opposed to modern democracy. Archbishop Lefebvre himself showed sympathy towards the cruel right-wing dictatorship in Argentina and the Franco dictatorship in Spain. One of the beliefs that the traditionalists share with others on the extreme right is their hatred of Masonry because to them it represents everything wrong with the modern world.

The organization that the traditionalists find so evil actually began in the Middle Ages as a perfectly respectable Catholic stonemasons’ guild. In later centuries, the Masons began to develop strange religious rituals at variance with Catholic teaching. As a result, beginning in 1738, the Church forbade Catholics to become Masons. Some branches of Masonry, particularly those in Italy and France, were sympathetic to Enlightenment thought, Deism, and anticlerical and revolutionary movements. In 19th-century Italy, many Risorgimento leaders belonged to Masonic Lodges of the “Grand Orient” Rite, which were famous for their attacks on the papacy. Because of this, Masonry became a hated word to many Catholics. For the Catholic ultraconservatives in France who refused the accept the French Revolution in the 18th century, and their descendants, who reacted the same way to the beginnings of modern democracy in the 19th and 20th, Masonry remains the root of all evil.

In line with these beliefs, the followers of Lefebvre attribute not only the Council but all of modern thought to the workings of a sinister Masonic plot. Lefebvre himself has described it as “a secret pact, which existed even before the Council, between high dignitaries in the Church and in Masonic Lodges.” (1)

Even before the Council was over, a number of conservative Catholics began claiming that there was clear evidence of connivance between some members of the Vatican Curia and the Freemasons. The charge was repeated again in the 1970’s, based on a distorted version of events that were then taking place in the Church. What actually happened was this: It was generally recognized that Masonry in England and the United States has not been revolutionary, and hostility towards the Church among Masons in these countries has always been much rarer. For a long time many Masons, particularly in England, have said that the Church was misrepresenting them when it called them anti-Catholic. Some Church officials, including the well-known Italian Jesuit, Giovanni Caprile, also urged a re-examination of the Church’s attitude toward Masonry. Cardinal Villot was also said to be in favor of this idea.

The re-examination of the question resulted in a confidential letter written in July 1974 by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to the episcopal conferences of England and several other countries, explaining that the provision in canon law which stated that Catholics who join Masonic Lodges are to excommunicated should be interpreted to mean only those Lodges that were anti-Catholic or plotted against civil governments. This was in line with the modern policy of the Church to reduce as far as possible the number of automatic excommunications in canon law, and was also a gesture of good will towards Masons. Soon, however, the English hierarchy, as well as Father Caprile and other writers, suggested that the ending of the automatic excommunication could be taken to mean that Catholics could, under certain circumstances, be Masons and still good Catholics. This idea was never officially adopted by the Church, and in fact was eventually rejected by Pope John Paul II. (2) The Church still insists that because of Masonry’s beliefs and rites, it is incompatible with Catholicism. But for the traditionalists, the very fact that some prelates were even considering a re-examination of the Church’s attitude towards Masonry meant that those in power in the Church had totally abandoned the Catholic faith and sold out to the ideas of the modern world. All of this is the sole basis for the accusation that some Vatican prelates themselves were Masons. It obviously has no basis in fact.

The accusation erupted again with surprising force in 1976, when Pope Paul began warning Lefebvre that he was heading for schism and asked him to stop ordaining priests. It was at this time that articles began appearing in several right-wing periodicals, including the Italian journal Il Borghese, and the French newspaper L’Aurore, accusing a number of Curial cardinals and even Pope Paul himself, of secretly belonging to Masonic lodges. The authors of these accusations naturally thought that this persecution of themselves, the only remaining faithful Catholics, could only be due to Masons infiltrating the Vatican. The accusations were largely directed against the members of the Curia who were loyal to the Council and Paul VI’s policies, especially those who carried out the Pope’s directives against Lefebvre and his movement.

Among the accused were Cardinal Villot, the Vatican’s Secretary of State, who had sent to Archbishop Lefebvre the ultimatums of the Pope telling him to stop his unauthorized ordinations of priests at his seminary in Econe, Switzerland, and Cardinal Sebastiano Baggio, who as head of the Congregation of Bishops, had suspended Lefebvre from his faculties as a priest and a bishop in 1976 when he refused to comply with Pope Paul’s orders. Also among the accused was Archbishop Agostino Casaroli, then the Secretary of the Council for Public Affairs of the Church, and later Cardinal Secretary of State. The traditionalists believed that Casaroli was in league with the Communists because he was implementing the Ostpolitik, that is, the Vatican’s policy of negotiating with East European Communist governments to obtain religious freedom for Catholics in those countries. (3)

Many traditionalists wanted to believe that it was not really Pope Paul who was responsible for the condemnation of Lefebvre, but the supposed Masons in the Curia. It was a very important point, because papal authority is, after all, infallible. Very elaborate theories were developed to prove that the “real” Pope had not condemned Lefebvre. In 1977, a man named Theodor Kolberg published a pamphlet The Deception of the Century, in which he claimed that in 1975 Cardinals Villot, Casaroli and Benelli had imprisoned Pope Paul in the Vatican and put in his place an exact double who was responsible for the actions taken against Lefebvre. Kolberg and others reasoned that the Pope’s infallible authority was not behind these actions, since it was not the real Pope who was taking them. The author relied in part on the revelations of Veronica Lueken, a supposed visionary of Bayside, New York, who claimed that the substitution of an impostor for Pope Paul had been revealed to her by the Virgin Mary. (Lefebvre himself is said to have rejected this absurd story). After Pope Paul’s death, Kolberg claimed that his body had not been embalmed and he been buried in the bare ground instead of a stone sarcophagus so that his body would decay more quickly and no one would discover that it was really the double in the grave!

Of course, all traditionalists do not believe in this type of story. But there are a few of them — and they are certainly to be pitied — who are so emotionally and mentally affected by their distress over changes in Church and society that they cannot accept that they fail to distinguish fantasy from reality. This is exactly what happened to them in the case of John Paul I.

Origins of a Conspiracy Theory

When John Paul I was elected, many Catholics on the extreme right expressed great hope in him. The Italian right wing paper mentioned above, Il Borghese, hoped that Cardinal Luciani’s election would “bring Catholics to a new commitment in the battle [against Communism] as militant disciples of the Church of Rome . . . not as followers of Popes enslaved to an Ostpolitik pleasing to Pravda.” (5) Even though Archbishop Lefebvre was suspicious because John Paul I had taken the names of the Popes of the Council, many traditionalists in Rome were pleased at his election. Later Franco Antico, the secretary of the Rome-based traditionalist organization Civilta` Cristiana, would say that he believed that John Paul I would have reversed many of the changes in the Church under Paul VI, and that he was “deeply displeased” that Lefebvre had not sought an audience with him before his death. (6) It was with similar hopes that the believers in the Masonic conspiracy had stepped up their campaign by sending lists of curial “Freemasons” to the Vatican, hoping that this would persuade John Paul I to discharge the culprits.

However, if these traditionalists believed that Pope John Paul I shared their views, then they could have known very little about him. He was a great supporter of the Council and Paul VI’s reforms. It is true that he was denounced by the leftist Catholic dissent in Italy as a reactionary because he had taken a strong stand again Christian activists who adopted Marxist ideology, and because he had tirelessly fought against the legalization of divorce and abortion. It was also said that several conservative cardinals in the Curia had supported his election, including cardinal Felici and Vagnozzi. This, plus a great deal of wishful thinking, may have led some traditionalists to believe that John Paul I would champion their cause. He was actually anything but sympathetic to their views. In fact, he had already written a number of articles while he was Patriarch of Venice refuting the beliefs of Lefebvre and his followers, and decrying their disobedience. (I will go into this more later). Nevertheless, the ultra-traditionalists’ belief that Luciani was favorable to them was so strong that when he died, some of the more extreme began to claim that he was murdered by leftists in the Vatican.

It began almost as soon as the Pope’s body was discovered. The Abbé Ducaud-Bourget, an associate of Archbishop Lefebvre, said in Paris on the morning of September 29: “Perhaps agents of Satan in the flesh is what was the cause of the two heart attacks in such a short time in the Vatican” [i.e. those of Paul VI and John Paul I]. He later elaborated: “It is hard to believe that the death was natural, considering all the creatures of the devil that inhabit the Vatican.” (7). For Ducaud-Bourget and some of the more extreme traditionalists, “creatures of the devil” could be none other than Cardinal Villot and the other prelates in the Curia who they suspected of destroying the Church simply because they were faithfully carrying out the reforms of Vatican II. Now they suspected these prelates of murdering Pope John Paul I. Then Rafael Gambra, a professor at the University of Madrid, wrote a letter to the conservative Spanish newspaper El Imparcial saying that John Paul had been planning to bring “discipline” back to the Church, and may have been murdered by those who wanted to prevent him from carrying out his plans. He called for an autopsy. (8) Fuerza Nueva, a Spanish religious group with ties to the Franco regime, made similar accusations. But a traditionalist organization in Rome, Civilta` Cristiana, was the most persistent one.

When the spokesman for this group, Franco Antico, met with the press on October 3, 1978, he said that his organization was considering charges that “a person or persons unknown” had murdered Pope John Paul, and that he was going to ask the Vatican to start an inquiry. “We have information we will put at the disposal of the authorities, if they decide to make an inquest,” Antico said. He would not discuss this information, but he did say that the circumstances of the Pope’s death gave rise to doubts. Why was there no doctor on duty in the Vatican that night? he asked. Why had the light continued to burn all night in the Pope’s room, with no one apparently noticing it? And why had the Vatican failed to issue a death certificate? (9)

Antico seemed to be hinting that the Pope’s murder was an “inside job.” If that is the case, it is not hard to guess who the suspects were: the evil Masonic Cardinals in the Vatican. Some French-speaking Catholic journalists covering the story quickly concluded that Civilta Cristiana’s insinuations were directed mainly at Villot, whom they described as “the be^te noire of Msgr. Lefebvre’s Roman friends.” (10) The traditionalists seem to have particularly hated the French cardinal because he was among the more liberal minded prelates in the Curia, and because he had defended his fellow French bishops in their struggle to restrain Lefebvre and his followers. The rumor that Villot was supposed to have urged allowing Catholics to become Freemasons only added fuel to their suspicions. It certainly would have fueled those of Antico, the author of a pamphlet attacking Masonry. (11)

On October 6, Antico presided over a press conference in which he further described the charges that his organization was making. He continued to insist that the Vatican’s version of events surrounding the Pope’s death was “full of holes.” He added, “We have concrete evidence to back up our demands for an investigation, but we can’t release it at this time.” (12)

What was this concrete evidence? It was revelation that was to be at the origin of much of the controversy. Understanding it will require a discussion of what happened on the morning of John Paul I’s death.

(To be continued)

NOTES

(1) Yves Congar, OP, Challenge to the Church: The Case of Archbishop Lefebvre (Huntingdon, Indiana: Our Sunday Visitor Press, 1976), p. 92
(2) Stephen Knight, The Brotherhood: The Secret World of The Freemasons (New York: Stein and Day, 1984), pp. 252-53.
(3) Congar, Challenge to the Church, p. 92.
(4) Theodor Kolberg, Der Betrug Des Jahrhunderts (Munich: Privately published, 1977); see Jean Jacques Thierry, La Vraie Mort de Jean-Paul Ier (Paris: J.C. Godefroy, 1984), pp. 17-24.
(5) Monthly Review (July-August 1982), p. 34.
(6) Chicago Tribune, October 4, 1978, p. 2.
(7) Correio do Povo, 30 September 1978. p. 2, Yallop, In God’s Name, p. 239.
(8) Washington Post, 2 October 1978, p. 10.
(9) Ibid.
(10) “The bête noire of Msgr. Lefebvre’s Roman friends,” Jean Bourdarias, Bernard Chevalier and Joseph Vandrisse, Les fumées du Vatican: De Paul VI à Jean Paul II (Paris: Fayard, 1979), p. 151; see also Robert Serrou, “Jean Paul II: Tous les chemins de L`Eglise passent par l’homme,” Paris Match, 23 March 1979, p. 72.
(11) Franco Antico and Franco Andreini, La Massoneria (Palermo: Thule n.d.).
(12) Chicago Tribune, 7 October 1978, p. 2.

John Paul I on Love - September 27, 1978

Another Pope John Paul I video of mine. His great spiritual testament from the day before he died. And one of the very few times he spoke in English as Pope.