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Chronology of Four Cover-up
Campaigns:
Persecution of Father
Gruner
A Fateful Step
Father Nicholas Gruner is a Canadian-born Catholic priest who was
ordained in Italy in 1976. When he returned to Canada with the permission of
his bishop, he was appointed Executive Director of the National Committee for
the National Pilgrim Virgin of Canada (NPV) in 1978. Little did he know he was
setting his foot on a path that would lead him into conflict with some of the
highest authorities in the Vatican.
A Decade of Growth
Over the next decade, Fr. Gruner built the NPV organization from a mere
handful of followers to the largest apostolate in the world devoted to
promoting the full Message of Fatima. In the process, Fr. Gruners work
came to the attention of certain Vatican officials who regarded the Message of
Fatima as "politically incorrect." Our Ladys request for the consecration
of Russia to Her Immaculate Heart conflicted with their "Ostpolitik," which
required muzzling criticism of Russian communism for "diplomatic" reasons.
Displeased officials began planting seeds that were to grow into an escalating
process of harassment.
A Disturbing Letter
These seeds began to bear fruit in 1989, when Fr. Gruner received a
surprising and disturbing letter from the new Bishop of Avellino, Gerardo
Pierro. Bishop Pierro was the successor to Bishop Pasquale Venezia, who had
ordained Fr. Gruner in 1976, and from whom he had written permission to work
outside the Italian diocese. Now, Bishop Pierro threatened to revoke that
permission. Saying he was responding to concerns expressed by the Vatican
Secretary of State, Bishop Pierro wrote to both Fr. Gruner and Bishop Thomas
Fulton of St. Catharines, Ontario the diocese where Fr. Gruner resides.
This prompted an offer of incardination by Bishop Fulton, but only if Fr.
Gruner abandoned his Fatima apostolate, a clearly unacceptable condition.
Vatican Intention: Be Silent, or Else
Obviously, this proposition did not originate with either Bishop Pierro
or Bishop Fulton; it came from the office of the Secretary of State, and it
laid bare the Vaticans real intentions. The objective was not simply to
arrange Fr. Gruners incardination in a Canadian diocese, which could
easily be done without any other terms or conditions attached. Nor was the
objective to return Fr. Gruner to Avellino to serve some useful purpose there.
In the context of the offer, returning to Avellino was not presented as a
useful alternative at all; rather, it was a potential punishment for failing to
comply with the real objective, which was to abandon the Fatima apostolate.
That, unmistakably, was the ultimate edict: be silent about Fatima, or
else.
An Illicit Intervention
Shortly afterwards, Fr. Gruner received another letter (apparently
written a month earlier), from Cardinal Angelo Innocenti, Prefect of the
Congregation for the Clergy at the Vatican. The letter threatened Fr. Gruner
with possible suspension unless he was either incardinated in Canada or
returned to Avellino immediately. Fr. Gruner responded with a letter pointing
out that the Cardinal had no right to intervene in this way, since the Bishop
of Avellino had issued no such orders of his own. In a further step, Fr. Gruner
also appealed to the Pope against the Cardinals abuse of authority.
Cardinal Innocenti never replied or wrote to Fr. Gruner again.
An Illicit Allegation
A few months later, Monsignor Allan McCormack, then chancellor of the
Archdiocese of Toronto, sent a notice to all priests of Toronto calling Fr.
Gruners status as a priest "irregular," and discouraging support of his
apostolate. As the chancellor of Toronto had expected, this led to reports in
some Catholic newspapers implying that Fr. Gruner was a "vagus," or renegade
priest. After being repeatedly frustrated in his attempts to meet with Msgr.
McCormacks superior, Torontos Archbishop (now Cardinal) Aloysius
Ambrosic, Fr. Gruner took the only action left to him, and filed a civil libel
suit in Toronto, which is still pending.
A Bureaucratic Attack
After failing in this attempt to silence Fr. Gruner, the Vatican waited
until 1992 to make its next move. The occasion was a conference of bishops at
Fatima organized by Fr. Gruners quarterly publication, The Fatima
Crusader. Vatican officials published false and misleading declarations in
LOsservatore Romano, claiming the conference was unauthorized,
even though authorization is neither required nor given for such events. Some
35 of the more than 100 bishops who had accepted invitations (and who had
accepted their airfares to Fatima to be paid by The Fatima Crusader),
were discouraged by these declarations, and failed to attend.
A Physical Attack
While Fr. Gruner was at Fatima, an extraordinary incident occurred. He
was physically attacked by two men, one of whom later admitted that he had been
acting under orders from Monsignor Luciano Guerra, the Rector of the Fatima
shrine. Msgr. Guerra, who remains Rector at Fatima, claimed the attack was
staged by Fr. Gruner as a "publicity stunt".
An Incardination Blocked
Less than a year later, in the summer of 1993, Fr. Gruner obtained an
offer of incardination from Bishop Gilbert Rego of the diocese of Simla and
Chandigarh, India, whom he had met at the Fatima conference. Accordingly, Fr.
Gruner wrote to Bishop Antonio Forte, who had succeeded Bishop Pierro in
Avellino, requesting excardination from his diocese, normally a simple
formality. It took more than three months for Bishop Forte to respond to this
request, and when he did, his letter advised that he declined to give the
excardination. As his reason for this extraordinary decision, he cited a direct
order from Archbishop Crescenzio Sepe, who was then the de facto head of
the Congregation for the Clergy. The Archbishops instructions to Bishop
Forte to withhold excardination were entirely outside his jurisdiction, and had
no legal validity. Nevertheless, Bishop Forte obeyed him, and refused to
act.
A Cordial Visit and a Rude Shock
Early in 1994, Fr. Gruner went to Avellino, and met with Bishop Forte in
an attempt to resolve the matter. The Bishop confirmed that Fr. Gruner remained
a priest in good standing, and directed him to return to Canada, where he would
be told what to do by means of a letter. When the promised letter arrived three
weeks later, it delivered a profound shock. It claimed Fr. Gruner was in Canada
without permission and it contained a direct order from Bishop Forte to abandon
the Fatima apostolate and return immediately to Avellino, or face suspension of
priestly faculties.
Canon Law Flouted, Abuses Ordered
The threat of suspension astonished Fr. Gruner, as it was flagrantly
contrary to Canon Law. For such a penalty to come into play, a crime must have
been committed. This had not happened, yet here was a threat to impose
the penalty arbitrarily, without any justification in Canon Law. Even more
astonishing, the orders to do this were orchestrated by the Congregation for
the Clergy, which is supposed to safeguard the rights of priests. Instead, they
were doing the opposite, literally ordering an abuse of power. Fr. Gruner
responded with a detailed defense of his position, and when 30 days elapsed
without a reply from Bishop Forte, he filed a formal appeal against the order,
as required by Canon Law. The appeal suspended the effect of the bishops
order, allowing Fr. Gruner to continue the work of his apostolate.
Interference Continues
Vatican interference with that work also continued. When a new Fatima
conference of bishops was organized for the autumn of 1994 in Mexico, it
quickly came under attack from the Vatican Secretary of State, via the network
of Nuncios and other Vatican emissaries in capitals around the world. They sent
letters to all Catholic bishops, and also obstructed Mexican visas for many,
substantially discouraging attendance, but their interference angered some of
the bishops who were not intimidated.
Need for Impartial Judgment "Not Foreseen"
Also in 1994, Fr. Gruner got his first taste of "justice" as
administered by his Vatican opponents. Cardinal Jose Sanchez and Archbishop
Crescenzio Sepe, then Prefect and Secretary, respectively, of the Congregation
for the Clergy, rendered a decision against Fr. Gruners appeal of Bishop
Fortes order. Both these prelates had been directly involved in writing
illicit letters to bishops and issuing behind-the-scenes instructions to foil
Fr. Gruners attempts to obtain incardination with a new bishop. When Fr.
Gruner objected to the obvious impropriety of these men sitting in judgment on
their own actions, he was astounded to be officially advised that the right to
impartial judgment "was not foreseen in the legislation" on administrative
proceedings in the Church!
Justice Denied
The case then moved up to the Vaticans supreme tribunal, the
Apostolic Signatura. For his defense, Fr. Gruner was obliged to retain one of
only 16 canon lawyers accredited to appear before the Signatura. The services
of the lawyer he engaged in 1994, Carlo Tricerri, proved sorely deficient. Mr.
Tricerri failed to examine all the documents in the case, and filed a seriously
erroneous and incomplete reply to the Signatura without Fr. Gruners
approval. Then, when the Signatura issued a judgment allowing only 10 days for
appeal, Mr. Tricerri simply filed it away, without even notifying Fr. Gruner of
its existence. Another 17 months passed before Fr. Gruner finally saw a copy of
this document, at which point his right of appeal was denied.
From Bad to Worse
Inadequate legal services were only part of the problem in obtaining
justice at the level of the Signatura. Here again, the leading member of the
judges panel, Cardinal Gilberto Agustoni had been actively involved in
the campaign against Fr. Gruner and his Fatima apostolate. He did not recuse
himself from the case, and thus Cardinal Agustoni presided as the
Signaturas Prefect when it handed down its ruling against Fr. Gruner on
May 15, 1995, which ruling Fr. Gruner only received many months later.
A Letter to the Pope
In mid-1995, Fr. Gruner published an Open Letter to the Pope in Il
Messaggero, one of Romes leading newspapers. Signed by two bishops
and thousands of priests and lay people, it protested the abuse of power by
anti-Fatima bureaucrats in the Vatican, and asked the Holy Father to intervene.
The Pope took no direct action, but Cardinal Agustoni later took the
unprecedented step of recusing himself from further participation in Fr.
Gruners case.
Incardination at Last
Towards the end of 1995, an official decree of incardination was
received by Fr. Gruner from Archbishop Saminini Arulappa of Hyderabad, India.
He required no additional document of excardination from the current Bishop of
Avellino, since a letter from the previous bishop in 1989 had already given
assent to Fr. Gruners incardination elsewhere. Under Canon Law, Fr.
Gruner was now incardinated in Hyderabad, not Avellino, and he had his new
bishops express permission to continue his Fatima apostolate as before,
based in Fort Erie, Ontario.
Another Conference Challenged
A third Fatima Crusader Peace Conference was organized in Rome in late
1996, and once again, various Vatican officials did all in their power to
discourage attendance. A letter to all bishops from the Congregation for the
Clergy described Fr. Gruners activities as "harmful" (without saying
how), and called his defense of his Fatima apostolate "a regrettable situation"
(without saying why). Shortly before the conference, another letter to all
Catholic bishops was issued by the Congregation for Bishops, urging them not to
attend an "absolutely unauthorized" event, which did not require
"authorization" in the first place. It was signed by Cardinal Bernard Gantin
who was on the panel of Signatura judges considering Fr. Gruners case.
Nevertheless, more than 200 bishops, priests and lay people attended. During
the conference, Fr. Gruners canonical complaint against two Vatican
officials was placed directly in the Popes hands at a public event.
Right to Choose Counsel Impaired
In 1997, Fr. Gruner discovered yet another way his Vatican opponents
were acting illicitly against him. As he struggled to find a new lawyer to
represent him before the Signatura, he discovered the reason for the reluctance
of those he approached: They were being privately advised not to take the case
by Archbishop Zenon Grochelewski, who had been appointed to replace the
now-recused Cardinal Agustoni on the tribunal! One of the reluctant lawyers,
Francesco Ligi, reported a telling admission made by Archbishop Grochelewski.
Mr. Ligi, a respected advocate in the Supreme Court of Italy as well as in the
Signatura, said the Archbishop advised him to withdraw because "this case
isnt about Fr. Gruners incardination, its about what Fr.
Gruner says." This remark amounted to admitting that the incardination issue
was simply being used to give the appearance of legitimacy to an action
designed to achieve another and quite illegitimate purpose:
silencing Fr. Gruner.
Another Negligent Lawyer
When Fr. Gruner was finally able to engage another Signatura-approved
lawyer, Sandro Gherro, his services proved to be just as ineffective as the
previous one. When Mr. Gherro received a document from the Signatura setting
out an alleged (and substantially erroneous) summary of facts and giving 10
days to respond, he simply filed it away, and allowed the allotted time to
elapse. The Signatura then officially adopted their own version of events as
"facts," and issued a second ruling against Fr. Gruner on January 20, 1998.
Another Open Letter
In the spring of 1998, Fr. Gruner published a second Open Letter to the
Pope in the Rome daily Il Messaggero. Again pleading for relief from
bureaucratic harassment of his apostolate, it was signed by 27 archbishops and
bishops, 1,900 priests and religious and more than 15,000 lay people. Once
again, the secretive and illicit maneuvers of Fr. Gruners opponents were
exposed to the light of day.
Another Blow
In the autumn of 1998, the Signatura delivered a new blow in the form of
a document produced by a Vatican official known as the "Promoter of Justice".
It was supposed to be a summary of the facts of the case and the canonical
positions of the parties, to assist the tribunal in its deliberations. In fact,
it was a blatantly prejudicial catalogue of unfounded denunciations of Fr.
Gruner, many of them quoted from letters he had never seen. Before allowing him
to see this latest document, the Vatican tried to get Fr. Gruner to take an
oath to keep it secret, which he refused to do. The result was that Fr. Gruner
was not even allowed to have a copy of the document. His lawyer was forced to
travel 6,000 miles to Canada to display the document, under orders not to let
Fr. Gruner keep a copy!
Fundamental Rights Denied
Fr. Gruner replied to the Promoters document with a detailed
refutation of its factual errors and unsupported claims. He also formally
requested copies of 20 letters cited by the Promoter, in accordance with his
fundamental right as the defendant in the case. Copies of the letters were
never provided, and the Signatura never mentioned the Promoters document
again.
Another Ruling, More Illicit Pressure
In mid-1999, Fr, Gruner sent the Bishop of Avellino a new document
affirming that he is now incardinated in the diocese of Hyderabad. The
Apostolic Signatura had the same information, but simply ignored it when ruling
against Fr. Gruner in September 1999. In filing his rebuttal to this decision,
Fr. Gruner found that the third canon lawyer he had hired to defend him was now
being pressured to drop his case.
More Bishops Discouraged
Another Fatima Peace Conference, this time in Hamilton, Ontario in
October 1999, was subjected to the same harassment from Vatican officials as
previous conferences. Over 300 people attended, but most of them were lay
people.
Another Canonical Complaint
In November of 1999, Fr. Gruner sent a new canonical complaint to the
Pope, naming Cardinals Agustoni, Innocenti and Sanchez, as well as Archbishops
Sepe and Grochelewski, and Bishop Forte. Like the previous complaint, this one
was deemed to be officially accepted the following May, when the Pope made no
response to it within the time allotted by Canon Law.
The Ultimate Threat
With matters seemingly stalled in the Apostolic Signatura, Fr. Gruner
was suddenly attacked from a new direction. A letter was hand-delivered in
early June 2000, from Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos, Prefect of the Congregation
for the Clergy. With stunning disregard for Canon Law, the letter repeated
false accusations already refuted in documents filed with the Signatura, and
threatened Fr. Gruner with excommunication! Fr. Gruner replied, once again
denying the accusations, and challenging the morality of the threat of
excommunication.
The Cardinal Carries On
A month later, Cardinal Hoyos instructed various Nuncios around the
world to circulate lies, including a charge of forgery, against Fr. Gruner.
When challenged about this, the Cardinal amended his false accusations to
lesser charges, equally false, but made no retraction or apology. Nor did he
withdraw his illicit threat of excommunication. In December of 2000, Fr. Gruner
filed a new canonical complaint to the Pope about Cardinal Hoyos, requesting
his removal from office.
"A Higher Authority" Speaks
Things lay dormant at the Signatura through most of 2001, while the Pope
took no action in response to Fr. Gruners formal complaints, despite the
requirements of Canon Law by which John Paul II had bound himself to hear such
matters. Finally, on the day after the terrorist attacks of September 11, a new
statement was issued by the Vatican press office. Citing "a mandate from a
higher authority," it said Fr. Gruner was suspended, and no one should attend
his upcoming conference in Rome in early October. No reason was given for the
alleged suspension. Fr. Gruner thus became the only priest in living memory to
have his suspension announced to the world by a nameless higher authority for
an unspecified offense. Fr. Gruner promptly denied the validity of the
suspension, since it has no basis in Canon Law.
Venue Suddenly Unavailable
A few weeks later, the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Rome
backed out of its contract to provide facilities for Fr. Gruners October
conference, claiming a sudden need to conduct a "structural inspection" of the
building. The Universitys agent later admitted she had received "an
ecclesiastical telephone call" from the Vatican.
Not What He Does, But What He Says
Significantly, the Vaticans efforts to silence Fr. Gruner have
never taken the form of challenging what he says, the truth of which they
cannot seriously contest. Instead, they have sought to discredit him
personally, first by circulating unfounded accusations about his status as a
priest, and later by an escalating campaign aimed unmistakably at forcing him
to abandon his Fatima apostolate. In the course of this campaign, officials of
the Vatican Secretariat of State, the Congregation for the Clergy and the
Apostolic Signatura have repeatedly participated in breaches of the
Churchs own rules protecting the right of priests to due process under
Canon Law.
Related Articles:
- For more information about Father Gruner, visit the
Fatima Priest web
site
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