By JIM YARDLEY and ELISABETTA POVOLEDO
Source: The New York Times
ROME — The unexpected leak of Pope Francis’ much-anticipated environmental encyclical has meant the return of something that not long ago was fairly common around the Vatican but had become often dormant during the two-plus years of Francis’ mostly charmed papacy: intrigue.
Who leaked it and why? Was this the work of frustrated conservatives in the Vatican,
as some experts have speculated? Does it portend big fights at a
pivotal October meeting in which church officials are expected to
grapple with homosexuality and divorce? Or is it just a tempest in a
teapot?
“Somebody
inside the Vatican leaked the document with the obvious intention of
embarrassing the pope,” said Robert Mickens, a longtime Vatican expert
and editor of Global Pulse, an online Catholic magazine.
The Vatican press office was tense on Tuesday. Hours after a draft of the encyclical was published Monday
on the website of L’Espresso, an Italian magazine, the Vatican
indefinitely revoked the credentials of Sandro Magister, the journalist
who wrote a short introduction that accompanied the magazine’s
publication of the draft. Vatican officials say the leaked draft is not
the final version of the encyclical, which has been barred from release
until Thursday.
Leaks
are hardly uncommon in journalism — some would consider them sustenance
— and Vatican journalism has been no exception. Most recently, Pope
Benedict XVI’s papacy was undermined when his butler leaked documents,
in an episode known as VatiLeaks, that exposed infighting and discord in
the Vatican. The scandal is considered one of the reasons that Benedict
resigned, leading to the March 2013 election of Francis.
With
global interest in the Francis encyclical — titled “Laudato Si’,” or
“Be Praised” — the Vatican had prepared a major media rollout, with a
news conference on Thursday morning and the release of the final
document. That has now lost some of its steam. Tempers flared inside the
Vatican press office on Tuesday, both among staff members and among a
handful of reporters, who criticized others for breaking what they saw
as an inviolable promise not to publish before Thursday.
The
immediate focus of attention was Mr. Magister, who writes a widely read
blog about the Vatican on the L’Espresso website and is known as one of
Francis’ toughest critics. Mr. Magister said he was simply following
orders: He wrote a short introduction to the draft after his boss, Luigi
Vicinanza, L’Espresso’s editor, got a copy and decided to go public.
“Sure,”
Mr. Magister said in an interview, “I’m the one who got suspended. I
violated a pledge not to break the embargo. So I didn’t object to the
suspension.”
Mr.
Vicinanza said he had written on Tuesday to the Rev. Federico Lombardi,
the Vatican spokesman, explaining that he, not Mr. Magister, was
responsible for posting the draft. Mr. Vicinanza told the Vatican
spokesman that he did not feel bound to respect the embargo because he
had not received the text from the Vatican. He declined to say where he
had gotten it.
“There’s no intrigue, just journalism,” Mr. Vicinanza said in a telephone interview.
Many
journalists agreed that under similar circumstances, they, too, would
have posted the draft. But several Vatican analysts on Tuesday also
argued that it was no coincidence that the draft had found its way to
Mr. Magister. He wrote a June 1 column that criticized the alleged
“inspirers” of the encyclical as being advocates of abortion. He has
characterized the Vatican news media as being soft on Francis, while
also criticizing the pope on foreign policy and as being overly fixated
on himself.
“The light is all for him, the pope,” Mr. Magister wrote in April 2014. “Not the institution, but the person.”
Giacomo
Galeazzi, a Vatican expert who writes for La Stampa, a Turin newspaper,
said the leak could have come from prelates in the Roman Curia, the
governing body of the Vatican, which Francis is trying to reform. In an
interview, Mr. Galeazzi argued that the pope’s enemies on the outside
“want to weaken the encyclical’s message, while those inside want to
weaken the figure of the pope.”
Mr.
Galeazzi also noted that L’Espresso had published several critical
articles of the encyclical in recent weeks, which he called “a
pre-emptive strike to an encyclical that has already broken one record:
It is the first to be attacked even before it has been published.”
Alberto
Melloni, a liberal scholar and Vatican historian, said the leak
reflected the continuing tension inside the Vatican, where some
entrenched members of the Curia remain resistant to changes that Francis
is trying to pursue. Leaking the draft was a way of demonstrating that
the Vatican remains in some ways dysfunctional while also tainting
Francis’ reformist credentials, Mr. Melloni said.
“This shows the daily fight he has to fight,” he said.
The
big showdown is expected in October, when Francis will convene a major
synod at Vatican City to discuss issues related to the theme of family.
Much is under discussion, including the question of whether divorced
Catholics should be allowed to receive communion. The synod is expected
to be a hotly contested event, and many analysts saw the leaked
encyclical as a piece of this larger struggle.
Marco Politi, a Vatican analyst and author of “Pope Francis
Among the Wolves,” said tensions had been steadily rising in recent
months, especially since Francis delivered a stern address in December,
accusing members of the Roman Curia of careerism and hypocrisy. A few
months later, Mr. Politi noted, documents were leaked showing the
expenditures made by Cardinal George Pell, the man appointed by Francis
to tighten control of the Vatican’s budgets.
“This was a sign of this inner battle over the policies of Pell to control all the budgets of the departments,” Mr. Politi said.
Despite
it all, most analysts doubted that the leak would bring much, if any,
damage to Francis. One senior Vatican official took it in stride,
playing down conspiracy theories while pointing out that journalists
just want scoops.
“It
has happened before, and it will undoubtedly happen again,” the Vatican
official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss
internal matters. “It is not the best situation, but it is not the end
of the world.”
Nor
is Francis alone. In July 1968, Time magazine got a leaked copy of Pope
Paul VI’s much-hyped encyclical on birth control, “Humanae Vitae.”
According to the book “Keepers of the Keys,” by Wilton Wynn, a former
Time bureau chief in Rome, an “unknown man” arrived at the Time office
with a copy for sale. Mr. Wynn said his staff verified its authenticity
and gave the man about $500, “which he gladly took and scampered away.”
Time then had a world exclusive: Paul VI had said no to birth control pills.
Gaia Pianigiani contributed reporting from Rome.
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