But there is more that Mr. Agnew chooses to ignore. The author of the article is Mrs. Concita De Gregorio, she was the editor of L’Unita from 2008-2011 (a paper founded by Antonio Gramsci, famous Italian communist). During her tenure as editor it was owned by the Democratic Party of the Left. All of this should urge some caution.
Any pause yet, Mr. Agnew? None at all. This man is supposed to be an experienced journalist?
Back to Mr. Agnew’s article in the Irish Times. “Furthermore, the Cardinal’s report claimed…” Really? The readers of the Irish Times can rest assured that the claim that Mr. Agnew has access to the contents of this Vatican report is completely impossible. The report of which Agnew speaks, was the result of an investigation the Vatican conducted regarding the leaks that took place at the Holy See. There were no copies made of the report, and the one final report was handed directly – and only – to the Pope himself.
Mr. Agnew knows he never saw the report. He further should know, if he has any serious experience in Rome, or has ever talked to anyone who does, that the three cardinals who were tasked with the investigation – Cardinal Julian Herranz, Joseph Tomko, and Salvatore De Giorgi – beyond reproach and would never speak to Paddy Agnew, about this. In fact, they did not speak to Mr. Agnew nor to anyone to whom Mr. Agnew spoke. It is also ludicrous to imagine that La Repubblica’s De Gregorio (Mr. Agnew’s only “source” for his story) read the private Vatican report or was given an audience by any of the cardinals who wrote it. So much for sources.
Now, the original source for the Repubblica story, was an article written by Ignazio Ingrao, in Panorama magazine. Had Mr. Agnew read this article, his role as a copyist would have been halted. For nowhere in the original source of the story does Ingrao, claim that a homosexual lobby, blackmailed the Pope and forced him to resign. In fact, he never levels the accusation of money being stolen from the Vatican bank, as Agnew so brazenly does.
To imply that the Pope left to cover up names of people mentioned in the dossier regarding the Vatican leaks is a pure invention and fantasy of Mr. Agnew.
The further claim that the shock was so violent and the Pope was under pressure to reign flatly contradicts what Ingrao reports, “The Pope knows well the misery and weakness of the curia.” The accusations which are nothing but innuendo, as Mr. Ingrao has also not seen the report. He clearly states, in his own writing that the report exists in one copy and was handed directly to the Pope. He further states that the three Cardinals in charge of the investigation are, “ … respected and feared because they are above any political games in the curia.”
In a Feb. 22 interview with Mr. Ingrao, the Repubblica article is characterized as an “instrumentalization (of Mr. Ingrao’s story) to attack the Pope.” It is further affirmed that the Repubblica article is not based on an “… original investigation (done by La Repubblica), as the article leads readers to believe…”
In it he affirms, “ Certainly it cannot be said that the Report on the situation of the Curia was the only motive for the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI… it was a decision that was maturing for some time…for a multiplicity of reason.” (My translation). Ingrao also states in the interview, that “he does not wish for people to think that all this has to do with the Vatican curia.”
Mr. Ingrao has also not seen the report, claims that it has leaked are blatantly false. Ingrao affirms, “What I did was to reconstruct the methodology followed by the three cardinals.”
Furthermore, to claim that the Pope decided to resign on the day that he received the cardinals’ report is the work of amateurs or ill will toward the Holy See.
(Column continues below)
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And we now see the result. Agnew simply regurgitated salacious unfounded accusations and innuendo, having done no research into the matter and ignoring the plain and obvious fact that no one could have seen the Vatican report described by Mrs. De Gregorio.
But there was more that should have given Mr. Agnew some pause – and that concerns the slurs regarding the Vatican Bank. Agnew writes that, “… the report claimed… the stealing was in particular related to the Vatican Bank…” Along with this text, La Repubblica publishes three pictures, two of young individuals working in different capacities with the Vatican and one of Mr. Rene Bruelhart, Director of the Authority of Financial Information for the Holy See. This placement of course suggests that these three individuals were somehow identified with the irregularities at the Vatican Bank or the so called gay lobby. But none of the three is mentioned in the article.
That would give me pause as well, if I were Mr. Agnew. The La Repubblica article does not even mention the reason for having the picture of these three important figures in the Vatican under a title that speaks of gay lobbies and stealing money.
Now, I say these attempts are ideologically driven and Mr. Agnew cannot be such a simpleton as to not realize this.
Mr. Rene Bruelhart, far from stealing money, is known in the international banking community as the “anti-money laundering guru.” He was the head of the Liechtenstein’s financial task force and was brought in by the Vatican to help the Holy See comply fully with international standards on financial transparency. Could Mr. Agnew not see that the innuendo on stealing money from the Vatican, with Bruelhart’s picture under such a title, is absurd? This is propaganda at its worst.
To his credit, the American journalist who was with Mr. Agnew that morning when Agnew was merely copying from La Repubblica the salacious details for his story, applied his critical thinking and journalistic ability to retell the story.