This week’s INM/Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column
Tuesday, February 28, 2023
The bond of all companionship is conversation
Monday, February 27, 2023
The bishop who as hustled out of a Catholic hospital
“The pandemic had exposed all the old divisions - the struggles, the hostilities, the madness. And that was just between the bishops.”
And his comment having been hustled out of a Catholic hospital by security guards.
“If this is what a Catholic hospital does to a Catholic priest, what are they doing to the workers.”
Bishop David O’Connell, Auxiliary bishop in Los Angeles, who was murdered in his home on Saturday, February 18.
Sunday, February 26, 2023
Putin takes page after page out of the Hitler copy book
German built battle tanks have arrived in Ukraine. The first of the Leopard 2 tanks have been supplied by Poland to the Ukrainian Army,
Last week German chancellor Olaf Scholz has said that Germany will now send an extra two Leopards to Ukraine, bring the number of Bundeswehr tanks on Ukrainian soil to 15.
The last German tanks left Ukraine in 1943 as the Red Army headed for Berlin.
President Putin has taken so many pages out of the Hilter copy book that he is turning history upside down.
Poland sending German tanks to Ukraine must be truly mind boggling to octogenarian and nonagenarian Poles.
Between 30,000 and 50,000 people demonstrated in Berlin yesterday against German involvement in the war, demanding that Ukraine and Russia sit down and talk.
Left wing German politician Sahra Wagenknecht spoke at the meeting. It has been noted by many politicians and commentators that the far right and far left have united in opposing the German government in supporting Ukraine as it currently is.
Saturday, February 25, 2023
The wonder and mystery of friendship
The Thinking Anew column in The Irish Times today.
Michael Commane
When two colleagues asked me in early February what I was doing for Lent I was taken aback, indeed, surprised. Before I had time to reply, they told me they were going to put a kernel of a popcorn in their shoe.
I still don’t know if they were being serious. Perhaps they were testing me? Checking if I knew the song from the musical Godspell: “Let me skip the road with you/I can dare myself/I can dare myself/ I'll put a pebble in my shoe/ And watch me walk.”
Over the years I’ve done the ‘usuals’ but in recent times I’m not sure if I’ve done something or given up anything. Lent provides a good opportunity to live our faith in practical ways, for people to stop smoking or drinking alcohol. In the past large numbers attended church services during the 40 days of Lent.
It’s a fortnight since I saw The Banshees of Inisherin and there are themes of the film still racing through my head, but one idea stands out, and it is that of friendship.
Friendship is an extraordinary phenomenon. I’m not sure that’s the best word to use. Is there any word that can pin down friendship? There are myriad friendships. Think about it, friendship is essential to our lives. And most times it begins in the most accidental of ways.
Friendship can bring great delights into our lives, but it also can bring us down the road of profound darkness and sadness. When friendship works it is truly extraordinary.
We can so easily say that God loves us. Honestly, I have little or no understanding of the word God. I have at last got the courage to say exactly that. I often hear the word being used.
Just as there is an underlying mystery in all friendships so too is there a mystery about our relationship with God. Christians believe that Jesus Christ is God and one of the important features of the man God Jesus is his sense of kindness and friendship with those with whom he is associated.
To use the word mystery yet again, one of the great mysteries of Christianity is the idea of the Trinity, three persons in one God. What at all is it about?
Here’s an idea: it hints to us how union can lead to such perfection that there is a oneness about it.
Communion is a big word in the Christian vocabulary. Holy Communion is at the centre of our faith. It is about our being in union with one another and with God, and our lives are leading us to perfect union.
Sometimes we need to pause and think about what we are doing. I’m surprised by how we, especially in Ireland, make the Sign of the Cross, or bless ourselves as we say. Too often, the words are mumbled, and the action is done with a quick move of the hand. Why do we treat such an important prayer as ‘In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit’ so casually, when it is at the centre of our faith? It is a statement of the perfection of God, a perfection beyond our understanding. One slight insight into that idea is our belief that the union of the three persons is so perfect it forms one being.
I’ve decided this Lent, whatever about putting a popcorn kernel into my shoe, to spend more time thinking and maybe even praying about the mystery and wonder of friendship that finds its perfection in God. Having said that, I greatly admire my work colleagues for their selflessness, indeed, I see the living spirit of God every day in the people with whom I have the good fortune to work. For me, pausing to recognise what friendship truly means may be enough for my Lent 2023.
Martin McDonagh’s The Banshees of Inisherin has reminded me of the wonder and mystery of friendship, the sadness and darkness of it too. But also, how ultimately it can lead us to God.
Tomorrow’s Gospel (Matthew 4: 1- 11) is more of the story about the dark side of friendship, what happens friendship when it breaks down. The story of good and evil?
Friday, February 24, 2023
“For all who take the sword will perish by the sword"
A reader of this blog posted a comment quoting the New Testament. It is a major dilemma that must face all pacifists. If the people of Ukraine had not opposed the Russian invasion what would have been the outcome? Most likely there would now be a puppet government in Kyiv, and as in Russia, people would be denied their freedom.
Had the Soviet Army not defended Stalingrad in 1942 what would have been the outcome?
Russia has broken international law.
If Russia feels it has an existential link with Ukraine could Poland or Germany not claim that Kaliningrad/Königsberg should return to its motherland?
The world is a fragile place and international borders should be respected.
Link below is worth a read.
Thursday, February 23, 2023
Germany faces down its demons
Derek Scally in The Irish Times yesterday.
It is an insightful piece on the dilemma facing Germany. And President Putin will milk it for all its worth. Within days of Germany agreeing to send their Leopard 2 battle tanks to Ukraine Putin pointed out that once again German tanks with iron cross marking would be once again churning up Ukrainian soil.
If you want to know how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has changed Germany, and how Germany is helping Ukraine’s fightback, it’s worth heading to a military town like Munster.
Hidden in a brown, marshy woodland midway between Hanover and Hamburg, Munster is home to Germany’s largest army base; nearly half of the 15,000 residents here are soldiers.
At the town’s main intersection, a bronze embracing couple beneath a lantern recreates the longing and parting of military life immortalised in the wartime anthem Lili Marleen. Opposite, a sniper rifle with accessories is for sale in the window of a “Nato Shop” selling fatigues, flasks and helmets.
When Russia invaded Ukraine a year ago, Germany’s first offer of assistance to Kyiv was 5,000 helmets. For Vitali Klitschko, the ex-boxer and mayor of the Ukrainian capital, the offer was a “bad joke”.
A year on in the drizzle of the Munster army base, his brother Volodymyr seems much happier. As his eyes run approvingly over the sharp lines of a Leopard 2 battle tank, a half-smile plays on his lips.
After a slow start, Klitschko says, Berlin is now “one of our greatest supporters”. Germany is ranked third – behind the United States and the UK – in military and humanitarian supplies to Ukraine. In its greatest leap yet, Germany agreed last month to deliver 14 Leopard 2 battle tanks.
Klitschko lived for years in Germany and speaks the language. What does he think changed minds here? He thinks for a moment, then says that many Germans have overcome their history, their instinctive postwar fears.
“Weapons were a difficult topic in the German mentality. More and more I think they accept that sometimes supplying weapons can save more lives than not,” he tells The Irish Times. “Hopefully these tanks are going to be on the front lines in Ukraine sooner rather than later.”
In a landmark post-invasion speech last year, Chancellor Olaf Scholz – barely two months in the job – described Moscow’s war on Ukraine as a Zeitenwende – a watershed or turning point in history. That was an understatement, in particular for his own country.
In the months since, Germany has broken with decades-old certainties – in particular any lingering respect for Russia and an addiction to cheap Russian energy – and embraced far-reaching new realities at speed. First came a €100 billion defence fund aimed at rectifying years of military underinvestment. Then came floating LNG terminals and other deals to fill energy needs. Berlin took in more than a million Ukrainians and passed two inflation-fighting packages worth €300 billion. Beyond material and technical concerns, the Ukraine war has sparked a lively, emotional and soul-searching debate in Germany over its role and responsibilities in Europe given its size, location – and its past.
Do 22 million Soviet Russian war dead preclude it from acting? Or is Germany, of all countries, morally obliged to defend the postwar, rules-based democratic order that rose from the ruins of the Nazi dictatorship?
Overnight, Germany’s postwar pacifist culture ban on weapons exports to war zones went out the window. Berlin insists it will not be dragged into the conflict; it has supplied Ukraine with ammunition, missiles, air defence systems with training for 1,200 soldiers so far.
Many on Germany’s left are increasingly uneasy with this shift, demanding more is done to push for peace talks. But the 93-year-old philosopher Jürgen Habermas attracted considerable blowback for warning that, unchecked, German support for Ukraine could “drive us more or less unnoticed beyond the threshold for a third World War”. German economics minister Robert Habeck, who has to sign off on all tank and arms exports, says it is not something “done lightly”.“Sometimes I have the feeling that the whole thing is seen by some as a game,” he told Die Zeit weekly. “We are talking about weapons of war, produced and maintained in Germany . . . yet at the same time it’s also true that we cannot leave Ukraine alone just because of our own fears.”
In the chilly drizzle of the Munster army base, Ukrainian soldiers Vitalii and Anatolii are among those taking a tank crash course. The fatigue from the last year of battle is written in their tired eyes and lined faces, obscured with ski masks and orange visors to protect their identity. “We’re not on holiday here,” said 33-year-old Vitalii. “Hopefully this will help a Ukraine victory, or at least bring us a little closer to that goal.”
Both men are used to ageing Soviet-era equipment and praise the modern Marder 1 A3 and Leopard 2 A6 on which they are training as “incredible”.
“It’s like the difference between a Mercedes and a Zhiguli,” says fiftysomething Anatolii, name-checking the Soviet-era Lada rival.
Anatolii says his family is praying for his safe return, though he knows safety is relative given that his training means that the eastern front beckons. “We are all afraid but it’s about how you deal with it,” he adds. “How, despite fear, you fight.” Their tank-training programme in Munster has been compressed into five weeks of 12-hour days: six days a week of technical and tactical instruction, regular recaps, simulator work and practical war games with real tanks and live ammunition. This is Germany’s contribution to the European Union military assistance mission (EUMAM), established last October with 24 participating countries. By March some 15,000 Ukrainians will have completed their training across Europe; that target has now been doubled to 30,000 and Germany – ahead of schedule in training 9,000 people this year – is ready to take on more if necessary.
German army officials in Munster say just one in five of the Ukrainians here to date have had any sort of military background, but all are highly motivated and anxious to learn as much as possible, as quickly as possible.“They suck up everything like a dry sponge,” says first lieutenant Peter, who would rather not give his surname. “It’s shocking sometimes to hear their stories but emotion is part of being a soldier and it gives an extra motivational push.”
Though cautious about details, German army officials say they have trained 16 tank crews so far. The current Ukrainian trainees will be sent back east with 14 Leopard 2 tanks and 40 Marder armed transport vehicles. In addition, Germany is ready to hand over 80 older, decommissioned Leopard 1s to Ukraine, once it finds trainers still familiar with the older tanks.
Visiting the Munster base, Ukraine’s ambassador to Berlin Oleksii Makeiev says “Germany’s leadership role in the tank coalition should not be underestimated”. For him the key figure – “a man of his word” – is defence minister Boris Pistorius.
A month after replacing his luckless predecessor, Pistorius has hit the ground running. “We have cleared the way now but see that not all who made demands then are acting now,” he said in Munster, a dig at those who demanded Germany deliver tanks and accused Berlin of blocking deliveries from others. Asked last Friday about this sudden role reversal, with Germany now leading on battle tanks while waiting for others to catch up, Chancellor Scholz exhaled loudly and said: “Tja” – which translated roughly as: “Ah, sure.” After a year-long baptism of fire, Scholz is now performing at least three balancing acts simultaneously: co-ordinating supplies with EU Nato partners to avoid solo runs; ensuring backing of German voters who – according to opinion polls – remain deeply sceptical that arms supplies will help secure Ukraine victory; and balancing a three-way coalition that has held together far beyond its comfort zone.
A year on, Russia’s war on Ukraine has ended Germany’s three-decade post-cold war era with a bang. Forced to face down its historical demons, Germany is now driving by sight and hoping for the best.
“It’s one thing to talk about war,” argued Pistorius in Munster on Monday, “and something else entirely to look into faces of people who have come from war for training and will be going back to war.”
Words like that chime with Ukraine trainees and their German trainers. They are effectively embedded together: they eat breakfast and dinner together, discuss what has happened in the last year and what is to come when the Ukrainians return to the front.
“We can only wish them well, knowing we are making an important contribution here,” said Capt Stefan, a 30-year-old German trainer. As old certainties slip away, he senses a shift in German society towards its armed forces. “When times are peaceful people don’t want to think about us,” he said, “but the need for us has been made clear – in a shocking way – with Russia’s attack on Ukraine.”
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Wednesday, February 22, 2023
Vladimir Putin in the morning Joe Biden in the afternoon
In the morning it was President Putin speaking for close to two hours in the Kremlin. In the afternoon it was President Biden speaking in Warsaw for approximately 20 minutes. Great if they would speak in the same room to each other.
President Putin spoke to a crowded hall of well picked people. It was a wandering speech covering many aspects of life in Russia. No mention of how many lives have been lost in the ‘Special Military Operation’.
President Biden stressed the importance of freedom and how Ukraine was still a free land after a year of Russian aggression. He stressed how Nato has been more united than ever and promised Kyiv that the Western alliance would stand by then in their hour of darkness.
He spoke about how Ukrainian flags fly all over the US but he never said his country has given refuge to 70,000 Ukrainians, approximately the same number as small Ireland has taken in.
Fintan O’Toole in his column in The Irish Times yesterday writes: "Putin has inadvertently made the US military-industrial complex an offer it finds almost impossible to refuse. Supporting Ukraine is costing the US a mere 5.6 per cent of its annual military budget. In return it gets to degrade Russia’s military capacity by 50 per cent – so far.
"It’s a fabulous calculus if you’re playing the great power game: no boots on the ground, no serious domestic political risk and no influx of refugees.”
Tuesday, February 21, 2023
The Banshee points the finger of death
This week’s Independent News&Media/Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column
Michael Commane
If a film becomes a subject of conversation does that mean it’s a work of art? Does art conspire to make us think? Having seen The Banshees of Inisherin I found myself talking to people about it and asking them what they thought of it. I’m no film critic but surely that does not prohibit me from making a comment or two about the film.
I’ve heard myriad comments, reports and opinions on the film. I even heard someone say it was the ‘usual auld stage Irish stuff’. I heard someone say it was funny.
Many people used the word ‘dark’ to describe it. Isn’t it interesting how people can take so many meanings from the film. But isn’t that part of the human condition, how we can see reality from varying viewpoints.
It’s now close to two weeks since I saw the film and I’m finding I’m thinking more and more about it with the passing of every day. Of course that means it has left a deep impression on me. And it certainly has. In so many ways I felt the film was speaking directly to me, talking to me about who I am and what I do.
There are layers to The Banshees of Inisherin. And prominent in those layers for me is the idea of friendship. Friendship is simply extraordinary and there are so many facets and angles to it that might even make it impossible to speak about it.
Has it ever crossed your mind how accidental a friendship is? We meet someone on the street, at a party, on a train, in our family circle, anywhere and it can develop into a lifelong friendship. Friendship can and does lead us on journeys away beyond our understanding.
Friendships can break down, they can be the source of unbelievable joy and happiness and they can cause extraordinary pain and suffering. And there are so many different types of friendship. I’ve often heard people say about their spouses that they are their best friend. Surely that should go without saying, but it doesn’t and doesn’t that give us a hint of the intricacy of friendship.
Why does Colm Doherty (Brendan Gleeson) break his friendship with Pádraic Súilleabháin (Colin Farrell)? Is it that Doherty has got bored with Súilleabháin? He finds him ‘dull’.
We fall out with people over so many issues but often they are catalysts for the break up. Or are they?
And then the violence that ensues as a result of the collapse of their friendship. I’m always asking the question, what’s it all about and this film makes me even ask the question with more intensity.
On the same day that I saw the film I read that the the previous day the Russian Army lost over 1,000 soldiers in Ukraine. The backdrop in the film of our civil war is another reminder of how friendships break. More violence, and all for what? What is anything for? Life is never a dress rehearsal.
Had Colm and Pádraic never met they would never have suffered the pain and horror they did. I’m reminded of what Tennyson said: ‘Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.’ Friendship/relationship is essential to our existence.
I highly recommend you see the film. It sure will give you a lot to think about.
Monday, February 20, 2023
Antony Blinken worried China may support Russia at war
Military experts believe the Russian Army is losing between 700 and 1,000 troops every day. There is no mention of the numbers the Ukrainian Army is losing.
While Nato and the Western alliance are running short of ammunition, the Russians are now in war mode and are producing ammunition around the clock just as they did in World War II.
It so happens on this day, February 20, 1933 Adolf Hitler met German industrialists to arrange for financing the Nazi Party’s upcoming election campaign.
Have we learned nothing from history?
The link below is from the Guardian:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/feb/19/china-may-be-on-brink-of-supplying-arms-to-russia-says-blinken?CMP=share_btn_linkSunday, February 19, 2023
Meditating on abuse and repenting
This is an interesting read by the late Jesuit priest Joe Veale.
https://dominicanpublications.com/blogs/dominican-publications-blog/meditating-on-abuse-and-repenting-by-joseph-veale
Saturday, February 18, 2023
Holy war in the Vatican
The article below is taken from The New European newspaper
Paola Totaro
“Say it to my face”. It is the sort of line that might be uttered by a defiant crime boss in a gangster movie as his former allies begin to turn against him. Which makes it doubly astonishing that the man who actually uttered it was the 86-year-old Pope Francis, reacting to a chorus of criticism of his papacy from the Catholic church’s traditionalist, conservative wing. The whispers began well before the death of Pope Emeritus Benedict on New Year’s Eve, and have grown in volume and vitriol since official mourning ceremonies concluded.
In recent days, they have become so loud that Francis felt the need to address them, granting an interview to the American news agency, The Associated Press. Conceding he would prefer differences be aired in private for the sake of “tranquillity”, the pope compared divisions to “a rash that bothers you a bit,” adding: “The only thing I ask is that they do it to my face because that’s how we all grow, right?”
His remarks cannot have passed unnoticed by Vatican insiders openly critical of Francis’s liberal leaning agenda and plans for further reform. They include the hardline conservative German cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller and archbishop Georg Gänswein, Benedict’s personal secretary for almost two decades, whose newly published, tell-all memoir suggested Francis’ decision to limit the use of the traditional Latin mass had “broken the heart” of his former boss.
Another critic, the controversial Australian cardinal George Pell, died suddenly 11 days after Benedict, but not before writing a pseudonymous open letter in which he dismissed Francis’s papacy as “a toxic nightmare”. A fourth, US archbishop Timothy Broglio, has openly pondered Francis’ own resignation, while Italian newspapers have reported a “secret plan” by high-ranking cardinals to place the pope under such pressure that he will be forced to resign.
How could it have come to this?
The election of the first Latin American pope – the first non-European in 1,300 years – was supposed to usher in a new era of openness, tolerance and unity, yet a decade on, the church seems ever more divided. As I tried to understand the late Pontiff’s legacy and its effect on Francis’ increasingly vexed campaign to modernise the church, I thought back to 2008 and a bizarre moment in an aircraft high above the Australian desert.
I remember the order came without warning: “No pen, no notebook, no recorder: come with me.” A minute or two later, heart in mouth, I walked the length of a near-empty Qantas jet, through the curtains that shield first-class passengers, to be ushered into an audience with Pope Benedict XVI. It was an unforgettable, if brief, meeting with a white-haired old man with dark circles under his eyes who chatted benignly, held my hand gently like an ordinary grandfather and issued a sotto voce blessing as I left. Returning to my seat, I walked past a conclave of cardinals dressed in flowing, medieval garb, a surreal meeting of the 21st century with an ancient faith in a steel projectile hurting at 500mph above the earth.
Benedict’s visit to the Antipodes for World Youth Day, relatively early in his papacy, had been a global PR triumph. Footage of enormous crowds of young people thronging to see him on the shores of Sydney’s photogenic harbour were beamed all over the world, briefly reinvigorating his severe image. Not even a long awaited – and meticulously managed – meeting with angry survivors of sexual abuse in Australia could dampen his coterie’s ebullient mood. Benedict’s burial in the chasuble – the outer vestment worn by clergy – in which he celebrated Mass in Sydney says much about the success of the trip.
Fast forward just four and a half years and the old man who celebrated his last Christmas Eve Mass in Rome as pope looked exhausted and the media – from the New York Times to Der Spiegel in his native Germany – had become foes not friends.
Fate would have it that Benedict found himself at the helm of St Peter’s barque during the most shocking years of revelations of clerical sexual abuse of minors. Over eight years, leaked documents had also exposed a litany of scandal: financial corruption, blackmail of homosexual clergy, money-laundering schemes, allegations of a Vatican sex ring – much of it at the hands of what Benedict himself attributed to “the filth” in the curia – the central body through which the affairs of the Roman Catholic Church are conducted. And while supporters look back and insist that he moved decisively against Marcial Maciel Degollado, the serial bigamist and paedophile who founded the Mexican religious order, the Legionaries of Christ, his public downplaying of the seriousness and widespread nature of the crisis during his tenure as cardinal in Munich added a further, damaging layer to the ongoing controversies.
Pope Francis attends his weekly audience at the Paul VI Hall in Vatican City in October 2021. Photos: Franco Origlia/Getty
At the time of his resignation, speculation was rife that Benedict took the decision after receiving a comprehensive report on the so-called “Vatican (gay) lobbies” prepared by a special investigation team led by three cardinals, Josef Tomko, Julián Herranz, and Salvatore De Giorgi. The pontiff had ordered the inquiry in the wake of the first, so-called Vatileaks scandal which culminated in his personal butler, Paolo Gabriele, being convicted of stealing confidential documents from the papal apartments. After reading and digesting the report, Benedict is believed to have decided that he simply did not have the stamina, physical or mental, to truly clean out the curia.
Benedict VI’s papacy, Vatican observers agree, is marred by scandal but his theological legacy is significant, destined to enter the canon of study for future generations of religious scholars.
Matthew Schmalz, professor of religious studies at College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts, argues Benedict XVI’s legacy is dual and complex: one as pope and one as theologian. “As for his own personal legacy… that will be defined by the issue that concerned Benedict most – how the Catholic Church can still make a difference in the modern world”.
Ed Condon, canon lawyer and co-founder of The Pillar, takes this analysis one step further, arguing that Benedict’s greatest legacy is, in fact, giving Catholicism Pope Francis.
“It might seem counterintuitive but [this] is the most significant and defining legacy of Pope Benedict XVI as governor of the universal Church … that’s not to say he achieved little in office – on the contrary,” he says. “But from the moment that Benedict read out his resignation nearly a decade ago, many church watchers predicted that this would be the defining act of his reign.”
When Benedict announced his decision to step down willingly, the first pope to do so in 600 years, he is said to have favoured the conservative Milanese Cardinal, Angelo Scola, as his successor, setting the scene for an uneasy coexistence with the man elected, Pope Francis.
However, it was his 10, unexpected years of life as self-styled Pope Emeritus which underlined simmering internecine tensions between traditionalists and reformists within the Catholic Church – stresses that exploded into the public realm within days of his funeral.
The more Francis moved to broaden the church’s appeal and reform its social structures, from discussion of Catholic remarriage post divorce, contraception and even married priests, the more Benedict seemed to represent the embodiment of conservative Catholicism. Francis’ outreach to gay Catholics encapsulated by his “Who am I to judge?” comment during an inflight press conference not long after his election in 2013 stood in stark contrast to Benedict’s ban on gay people from seminaries and the priesthood.
A first major clash erupted in 2019 when the Pope Emeritus published a 6,000-word letter in which he attributed clerical sex abuse to a breakdown of church and societal moral teachings. Secularisation in the west and the sexual revolution of the 1960s, wrote Benedict, had resulted in seminaries filled with “homosexual cliques” – a statement in direct contradiction with Pope Francis’ view that sexual abuse by clergy is a product of power and corruption.
Last March, tensions emerged into the public arena when an anonymous memo ferociously critical of Francis’ papacy was circulated among cardinal electors – and was leaked and published in the Italian news magazine L’Espresso. The document described the current pontificate as “a disaster in many or most respects; a catastrophe” and accused Francis of staying silent in the face of evils, from homosexuality and promoting women priests to the possibility of married clergy.
“The silence is emphasised when contrasted with the active persecution of the traditionalists and contemplative convents,” the document stated, making direct reference to Francis’ 2021 decision to clamp down on the traditional Latin mass, a response to an issue the pontiff believed had become a rallying cause for conservative dissent.
This conflict, theological as well as cultural, took an unexpected turn just 11 days after Benedict’s death when Sandro Magister revealed that the author of the anonymous document was none other than the Australian cardinal, George Pell, who had also just died, unexpectedly, in the wake of a routine hip operation.
Pope Benedict XVI leads the First Vespers and Te Deum prayers at St Peter’s Basilica, December 31, 2009
The revelation shocked many as Pell, despite his theological conservatism, had been seen as a Francis ally and supporter of reform. Francis began his papacy by sacking a coterie of powerful, principally Italian cardinals from key posts and replacing them with a new breed of outsiders charged with new watchdog powers to root out corruption.
The brusque Australian was one of the first of these strategic appointments, effectively installed as the Vatican’s first financial tsar backed by a team of independent lay professionals, including the former Deloittes CEO, Libero Milone, and Italian audit and risk management specialist Ferruccio Panicco. Charged with leading the long-promised clean up and reform of the Vatican’s sclerotic financial and investment arms, Pell and his team would uncover a litany of irregularities which ultimately led investigators to the now infamous London property deal and its associated multimillion-pound financial corruption scam – but the two lay specialists lost their jobs for their trouble.
The fact that Milone and Panicco are now suing for wrongful dismissal – and 11 former Vatican officials associated with the deal and church funds are currently on trial for financial corruption – illustrates vividly that Francis’ reform program began with gusto but that his work is far from done.
Pell’s work on behalf of the traditionalists did not stop there and it was revealed that in the days prior to his death, he had penned a further, blistering article for the Spectator in which he described Pope Francis’ forthcoming Catholic Synod as a “toxic nightmare”. Cardinal Pell could not know he would die within days of Pope Benedict’s demise and must have been prepared to face the wrath not only of Pope Francis but the army of supportive reformist clerics – including in Benedict’s native Germany – who have spent the past two years working on a 45-page Synod booklet, dismissed disdainfully as one of the “most incoherent documents ever sent out from Rome”, couched in “neo-Marxist jargon… hostile to apostolic tradition”.
Francis knows that the programme of reforms that emerge from the consultation will undoubtedly be central to his legacy. It may be as radical as the council now known as Vatican II, which between 1962 and 1965 sparked some of the greatest confrontations between traditionalists and reformers in church history. Finally, it produced a vast programme of church renewal, from the new liturgy in local languages to replacing the Latin mass to a historic acceptance of dialogue with other faiths.
The current Synod working document, titled “Enlarge the Space of Your Tent”, is couched in characteristically Franciscan language and a spirit of mission, making room for diversity and “boldly proclaiming [Christ’s] authentic teaching while at the same time offering a witness of radical inclusion and acceptance….” The traditionalists, led by Pell and echoed by some Catholic news sites and senior US cardinals thundered: “What is one to make of this pot pourri, this outpouring of New Age goodwill?”
Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, in his speech to the 2005 conclave which elected him pope, struck a similar note, if rather more elegantly enunciated. Having a clear faith based on the creed of the church, he told the cardinal electors, is too often labelled as fundamentalism, while relativism – “letting oneself be tossed here and there, carried about by every wind of doctrine” – cannot be the only response to modernity. “We are building a dictatorship of relativism that does not recognise anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of one’s own ego and desires” he warned.
During the past year, and despite festering moral tensions and internal opposition, Pope Francis has managed to plough on with his financial reforms, ordering that all Vatican departments close their stock holdings and investment accounts in both foreign and Italian banks, transferring them to a central department known as the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See (APSA). He set strict deadlines and warned explicitly he would not tolerate the dragging of feet. All new investment proposals must now be examined under the new rules which also stripped all Vatican departments of the ability to invest their funds independently and without centralised scrutiny – opaque processes that led to the London property disaster among many others. Francis has also created a new committee including financial lay experts on investment ethics ensuring that Vatican money is used only for ethical, low-risk projects and examined for conflicts of interest such as weapons industries or pharmaceutical sectors involved in contraception, IVF, or stem cells.
Matthew Schmalz believes Pope Francis’ new investment reforms are significant and new limits on speculative investment fit better with his vision for a Catholic “church of the poor”.
Much more needs to be done, of course, particularly amid continuing evidence of a clutch of senior curia determined to hang on to their financial prerogatives. But for now, all eyes are on the Vatican tribunal which is pursuing three concurrent investigations: the notorious Sloane Avenue London deal; the alleged embezzlement by Cardinal Angelo Becciu of Catholic faithful funds in his native Sardinia; and the activities of his friend, Cecilia Marogna, a self-styled intelligence expert who says she was “hired” by the Holy See to negotiate the release of hostages – and is accused of spending ransom money on luxury goods.
Successful and just legal outcomes, says Schmalz, could pave the way for further real, economic reform.
Though he pondered retirement in his AP interview, Francis himself has said he wants to continue his campaign of change and plans to stay on for as long as his health allows.
However, behind the scenes, it is well known that the US bishops have already turned their attention to the next conclave, to be held when and if Pope Francis resigns – or dies. Led by the arch-conservative Broglio, they are hoping for a successor more in the mould of Benedict, one who will restore bishops’ authority to govern rather than democratising the church.
To date, however, Francis has made clear his path. Of the 113 cardinals he has appointed, 83 are qualified to elect the next pope – but just 28 of them are European. With Benedict gone, Francis has renewed impetus to continue to stack the College of Cardinals with reformists who will support his desire to broaden the Catholic tent.
In the end, Benedict’s unexpected decade living with the public spotlight trained on his past showed vividly that papal “retirement” is no walk in the park. As Condon wryly observed, “perhaps it’s better for a pope to die with his slippers on, still at the helm of Peter’s barque.”
Friday, February 17, 2023
The narrative of passing away
Why now do we pass away and not die?
How is it that every story has become a narrative?
Has it something to do with us all going forward?
Thursday, February 16, 2023
To stay aloof from evil is to be complicit with it
The article below by John Scally appeared in The Irish Times on Monday, February 13.
Back in the 1970s and ’80s Bonhoeffer’s works were popular among students studying theology, indeed, they gave great impetus for dialogue and camaraderie between Protestants and Catholics. Bonhoeffer was a Lutheran pastor and acclaimed theologian.
This year marks the 80th anniversary of the arrest of German pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer because of his opposition to Hitler’s regime. Coincidentally, it comes as a major movie about Bonhoeffer, called God’s Spy, is being filmed in Ireland by acclaimed director and writer Todd Komarnicki. Bonhoeffer challenged the exploitation of the poor and weak, all victims of injustice.
At the heart of his Christianity is a desire to explore the importance of Christ for the world as it now stands.
Bonhoeffer’s Jesus is not a distant God but a personal God who transcends space and time, context, race, language – an intimate God who is concerned about humanity. For Bonhoeffer, being in the world but not of the world meant following Christ to the cross and in the end, he gave his life for what he preached. He was executed in Flossenbürg concentration camp just two weeks before the Allied forces liberated the camp and three weeks before Hitler’s suicide.
Bonhoeffer witnessed the Nazi regime first-hand; in prison he ministered to the victims caught in this web of wickedness. He believed the meaning of history is tied up with a that which takes place in the depth and hiddenness of a man who ended on the cross.
The meaning of history is found in the humiliated Christ. Therefore, Christ is the “centre of history” but is “hidden” on the cross. Bonhoeffer witnessed “the world from the perspective of Christ, who came as the suffering God, who alone can help humanity in its tragic situation”.
He argued religion had become less relevant to the increasing secular and scientific world around him. The traditional Western concept of God was disengaged with a world that was becoming more secular. The problem was that many had come to view God as absent from the real concreteness of this world.
In the face of the atrocities of the Nazi regime, Christianity had failed for not speaking out against Hitler’s regime. Consequently, its voice became completely mired in its own antiquity.
The church’s failure to respond to the crisis highlighted the need for a complete re-evaluation of what the church should be and what the church should do.
In this ethical crisis, he called on Christians to act responsibly, to live a “costly” Christianity and not a “cosy” Christianity. Christianity in a world come of age no longer needs a powerful God who gives aid to human weakness. Instead, humanity come of age needs to be confronted by the weakness of God.
So where would we find Bonhoeffer in the Ireland of 2023? Were he still with us, he would be standing in the front row of the spate of protests about refugees in Ireland today. He would not tar all those in attendance with the same brush. He would be sympathetic to those who feel that their own communities have been subjected to economic and social neglect and would want to work with them to revive their neighbourhoods.
He would also be calling for the provision of much better channels of information and meaningful supports to those communities where integration is required for incoming refugees. However, he would literally walk up to the members of the far right who are using the fears of local communities to whip up division, prejudice, hate and intolerance and look them directly in the eye.
His message would be loud, clear and unflinching: that their actions fail every ethical and human audit and have no place in a just society. He would tell them bluntly that using refugees to advance their political agenda is profoundly unethical because it dehumanises people by treating them as a means to an end rather than as ends in themselves.
He would also work with individuals such as Peter McVerry to make a more effective practical response to the homeless crisis; collaborate with people with disabilities and their families so they can get the fair deal they are long overdue; stand with those who are experiencing discrimination or injustice in any form and offer tenderness and healing to the victims of clerical abuse.
When I enter the front gate of Trinity College and look to my left at the statue of Edmund Burke I often think of Bonhoeffer. His work is a potent reminder of Burke’s famous words: “All that is needed for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing.” Bonhoeffer’s life prompts us to believe that keeping aloof ultimately involves complicity. He remains the perfect antidote to lethargy or indifference.
Today more than ever, in a world rocked by violence and injustice, we still need to hear the essence of Bonhoeffer’s message: “We speak when we do not speak. We act when we do not act.”
John Scally is a lecturer in theology at Trinity College Dublin.
Wednesday, February 15, 2023
The terror of Ukraine, Afghanistan and Dresden
It is said by Western military experts that the Russian Army is losing in the region of 700 troops every day.
On this day, February 15, 1989 the Soviet Union announced that all its troops had left Afghanistan. The Russians lost 15,000 troops in Afghanistan with up to 35,000 injured.
February 15, 1945 was the last day of the three day bombing of Dresden where up to 25,000 civilians were killed.
Can nobody shout stop and see to it that the violence and horror of war be stopped?
Most soldiers are young boys in their late teens, early 20s. And what at all is it for? It is shocking.
While these ‘children’ are fighting in the dirt and grime of war those who sent them there live in great splendour and wealth.
Tuesday, February 14, 2023
But for Vladimir Putin we might never have met
This week’s Independent News & Media/Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column.
Michael Commane
I made a quick spontaneous decision, like so many of the decisions I make in my life, to travel from Dublin to West Kerry on Friday of the St Brigid’s Bank Holiday weekend.
I had originally planned to stay until Sunday but circumstances meant that I had to return to Dublin the following day, which was Saturday. A short turn-around trip. But I did manage to get a swim in in the Atlantic, which was invigorating, even intoxicating, honestly it was magic and certainly not as cold as I expected it to be. I had missed my Christmas swim. Friday’s swim made up for it in spades.
My home is approximately 30 kilometres to Tralee and I usually manage to get a lift from someone who is heading into town. Unfortunately this Saturday my luck had run out and no offers of a lift to Tralee. I had a seat booked on the 15.05 train. I decided it was time for Plan B so headed out the road to try my luck at hitching.
Within 10 minutes a car pulls up, ask me where I’m going, I say Tralee and they beckon me to hop in.
They are a young couple in their early 30s. Within seconds I realise that English is not their mother tongue.
They are from Russia. I’m immediately fascinated. Anyone who reads this column will know how interested I am in Russia and its history. It was one of those moments when people make some sort of magical connection and are immediately interested in each other, wanting to know so much about them, where they come from, what they are doing and why the are here.
From the moment we met I was taken by them. They exuded genuine friendship. I felt they were interested in me and I certainly was interested in them. They are a few short months in Ireland. They are learning English and one of them is now in a research programme and teaching.
We spoke about Putin and the war in Ukraine. They did not understand how it is possible to go to war, destroy the lives of people, even kill people. They blamed Putin for it all. They told me how they loved Russia and said: ‘We can’t live there and pretend that nothing is happening’.
Arriving in Tralee we had some time to spare so I invited them to coffee in the Daily Grind, which is a lovely spot in Tralee. It was their first time in the restaurant and were delighted with it.
Looking at them I kept thinking the young man could now be fighting in Ukraine, killing his fellow sisters and brothers, while she would be distraught at home near the Ural Mountains missing desperately her newly wed husband. We exchanged telephone numbers and email addresses.
To think what Vladimir Putin is doing. But also to realise how the far right and xenophobes in Ireland are attempting to stir up hatred and all sorts of vileness towards those who are seeking refuge in our country. But for Putin I may never have met my new Russian friends. Think of all the qualities this young couple bring to Ireland. Russia’s loss is Ireland’s gain.
Their kinsman Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote: ‘It takes a fool to rush off to war.’ How true.
Monday, February 13, 2023
All Quiet on the Western Front - a film not to be missed
All Quiet on the Western Front is a 2022 German anti-war film based on the 1929 novel of the same name by Erich Maria Remarque.
It follows the life of a young idealistic German soldier Paul Bäumer, played by Austrian actor Felix Kammerer, who made his acting debut in this film.
He was interviewed on BBC 2’s Newsnight last week where he spoke about the vileness and badness of war.
The film is a reminder to all of us of the horror of war. The wealthy powerful men, always men, the industrialists, the leaders, are always the ones who send young men and women into war.
What must it be like for Ukrainian and Russian soldiers as they fight in the dirt, filth and cold in Ukraine.
Can no one stop this war?
Sunday, February 12, 2023
What would Solzhenitsyn think of Ukraine?
On this day, February 12, 1974 Alexandr Solzhenitsyn was exiled from the Soviet Union. He moved to Berlin and lived in the home of Heinrich Böll in Langenbroich in North Rhine Westphalia.
During World War II he served as a Red Army commander and was twice decorated and was awarded the Order of the Red Star on July 8, 1944.
While in East Prussia as an artillery officer he witnessed war crimes against German civilians.
After the war he was imprisoned for his anti-Soviet writings.
During the Khrushchev years he was released from prison and exonerated but after the Khrushchev he was back in trouble and lost his citizenship
In 1990 his Soviet citizenship was restored, and in 1994, he returned to Russia with his wife, Natalia, who had become a United States citizen.
From then until his death, he lived with his wife in a Moscow
He as a staunch believer in traditional Russian culture, and expressed his disillusionment with post-Soviet Russia in works such as Rebuilding Russia, and called for the establishment of a strong presidential republic balanced by vigorous institutions of local self-government.
What would he think of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, his mother’s ancestral home?
Saturday, February 11, 2023
Wise words from Oscar Romero
Blessed the preacher
who does not put his trust
in the noise of his own words
even though they come wrapped in great human wisdom
- Oscar Romero, February 5, 1978
Friday, February 10, 2023
West should be slow in sending jets to Ukraine
This is an excellent article by Simon Jenkins why the West should be slow in sending jets to Ukraine.
Thursday, February 9, 2023
Three young Russians express different views on the war
The link below is certainly worth viewing. The Guardian interviews three young Russians in St Petersburg, a soldier home on holiday from the front, an artist, who is opposed to the war and an actor who is ambivalent about many things, including the war.
Wednesday, February 8, 2023
BBC throws an interesting light on Vladimir Putin
BBC 2 is currently showing a three part series on Vladimir Putin, it’s called Putin versus the West. The third and the last of the series will be screened next Monday at 9pm.
It is an excellent account of how and why Putin is where he is today. The programme interviews European leaders over the last 20 years and the consensus is that Putin does not tell the truth and has no regard for human life.
While it is generally accepted that truth is the first casualty in war and both sides in the current war in Ukraine are not slow in world of propaganda, this BBC programme seems to carry a sense of truth and authenticity about the machinations of Putin.
The Syrian Turkey earthquake is an example how nature has no respect for borders. The cruelty of the war in Syria is greatly exacerbating the suffering of thousands of people.
Tuesday, February 7, 2023
Great times for the armaments industry
Some days later I saw a distraught Ukrainian woman kiss her 20-year old dead son in his coffin before the priest said the prayers of final commendation. This young man had been killed by Russian artillery fire.
He was not a soldier. Since the war began it had been his job to collect body parts so that they could be repatriated with their families for some sort of dignified burial.
Her son is gone. She will spend the rest of her life without him.
During those same days there was the discussion as to whether or not the Germans would send their Leopard 2 battle tanks to Ukraine and if they would give permission to other countries who have Leopards to send their tanks to the war.
Eventually the German Chancellor Olaf Scholz gave the green light. There are approximately 2,000 of the tanks scattered around Europe and as soon as possible some of them will be in Ukraine.
The Leopard is made by the German company Rheinmetall, which was founded in 1889. It started off making steel products and armaments. After World War I, during the period of German disarmament, it moved away from armaments but by 1933 it was back making weapons.
Today the company makes tanks and armoured vehicles for Nato countries. Business is brisk. Since the Ukrainian war began the Financial Times reported that on one day’s trading on the Frankfurt stock exchange Rheinmetall shares rose more than 30 per cent. And it seems it’s good days for anyone who makes tools of war.
But if there were no western weapons’ manufacturers what then?
In recent days I have heard some whisperings about the numbers of Ukrainians we are welcoming to Ireland. There’s a suggestion we can’t take any more.
Is that the real question we should be asking?
Should we not be asking instead why the stock market is singing the praises of the manufactures of tanks and weapons? And no doubt it is a similar story in Russia. At least in a quasi-open democracy we seem to know a little more than what happens in Mother Russia.
Another question: are we simply robots or pawns, who are being pulled hither and tither by those who control the markets, the quiet, silent people, the moneyed people, who decide the way of the world? Do we really ever think for ourselves?
I’m back thinking of the bereaved mother and the young woman placing the flowers in Moscow but right now I’m also thinking of those who control the money that makes the tanks, Russian and Western weapons.
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