Pope Benedict XVI delivers his blessing after
an audience with the Roman clergy in the Paul VI Hall at the Vatican, Thursday.
VATICAN CITY—For an institution devoted to eternal light, the Vatican has shown
itself to be a master of smokescreens since Pope Benedict XVI's shock
resignation announcement.
On Thursday, the Vatican spokesman acknowledged thatBenedict hit his head and bled profusely while visiting
Mexico in July. Two days earlier the same man acknowledged that Benedict has had a pacemaker for years, and underwent a
secret operation to replace its battery three months ago.
And as
the Catholic world reeled from shock over the abdication, it soon became clear
that Benedict's post-papacy lodgings have been under construction since at
least the fall. That in turn put holes in the Holy See's early claims that
Benedict kept his decision to himself until he revealed it.
Vatican
secrecy is legendary and can have tragic consequences — as the world learned
through the church sex abuse scandal in which bishops quietly moved abusive
priests without reporting their crimes.
And the
secrecy is institutionalized from such weighty matters to the most trivial
aspects of Vatican life.
“You have
to understand that actually every Vatican employee and official takes an oath
of secrecy when they assume their job,” said John Thavis, author of the Vatican
Diaries, an investigation into the workings of the Holy See. “And this isn't
something that is taken lightly. They swear to keep secret any office matters
and anything pertaining to the pope.”
One of
the most famous cases of Vatican secrecy was the Holy See's efforts to cover up
the fact that Pope John Paul I's dead body was discovered by a nun. The
eventual revelation helped fuel conspiracy theories over the death of the pope
who ruled for only 33 days in 1978.
The
Vatican is so obsessed with secrecy that the first and only official
confirmation that John Paul II had Parkinson's disease was in his death
certificate.
The
Vatican justifies itself by arguing that its officials are holders of the
divine truth, unaccountable to worldly laws. In particular, the pope's word is
the final say on any issue — infallible on some doctrinal matters. But groups
representing sex abuse victims, and other Catholics angered by the scandal,
have been demanding modern standards of accountability and calling for reforms.
The
Vatican brushed aside criticism for keeping quiet about the pope's December
pacemaker procedure, on grounds it was “routine.” One Vatican official said
making the operation public would simply have led to a big and unnecessary
commotion about the pope's health. “You can imagine the satellite dishes in St.
Peter's square,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because
he is not authorized to speak to the media.
The
front-man for the church's dance of concealment and disclosure: Vatican spokesman
The Rev. Federico Lombardi. In his briefings, Lombardi has been forced into the
uncomfortable situation of keeping silent on aspects of the pope's health and
future, only to backpedal when confronted with reports in Italian newspapers.
In the
latest disclosure, Turin's La Stampa newspaper reported Thursday that Benedict
hit his head on a sink and bled profusely when he got up in the middle of the
night in an unfamiliar bedroom in Leon, Mexico. The report said papal blood
stained Benedict's hair, his pillow and the floor.
Lombardi
confirmed the incident but denied it played any role in the pope's resignation.
Still, suspicions are bound to be whetted, since the Vatican newspaper
L'Osservatore Romano reported this week that Benedict had taken the decision to
resign after the Mexico-Cuba trip, which was physically exhausting for the
85-year-old pope.
Then
there's the question of how many people knew of Benedict's decision to retire.
On the
day of the announcement the Vatican cast it as a bolt from the blue, saying
almost nobody knew but Benedict himself. Soon, however, prominent clergymen —
one not even Catholic — began changing the tone and saying they were not
surprised.
“Knowing
the pope well, there was something in the air that this decision of the pope
was possible,” said Archbishop Piero Marini, master of papal ceremonies under
Pope John Paul II. “So it was not a shock.”
Even the
retired Arcbishop of Canterbury, Bishop Rowan Williams, says that based on his
last meeting with Benedict a year ago he was not surprise at the decision to
step down.
“Because
of our last conversation I was very conscious that he was recognizing his own
frailty and it did cross my mind to wonder whether this was a step he might
think about,” Williams told Vatican Radio.
Renovation
work on a convent previously occupied by cloistered nuns has been going on in
secret since at least last fall, an issue apparently causing grumbling among
cardinals about the choice of arrangements and whether Benedict's presence on
Vatican grounds will allow the retired pope to wield too much influence on his
successor.
“I don't
think there was a consultation of the College of the Cardinals about this,”
Lombardi said Wednesday, deflecting questions about Benedict's living
arrangements. “The decision and the process of the decision was very limited in
the number of persons involved.”
That
points to another aspect of Vatican secrecy: The habit of different wings of
the Holy See jealously concealing information from one another.
“There is
very little cross communication within Vatican departments,” Thavis said, “so
one department may know something but that does not mean that the Curia office
down the hall knows about it as well.”
___
AP writer Daniela Petroff and AP Video Producer Tricia Thomas
contributed.

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