May 29, 2019 at 6:33 p.m.
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Nearly a year later, Pope Francis denied claims made by a former apostolic nuncio to the United States who accused him and other church officials of failing to act on accusations of abuse of conscience and power by former Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick.
"I knew nothing, obviously, of McCarrick. Nothing, nothing. I said several times that I didn't know, that I had no idea," the pope said in an interview with Mexican journalist Valentina Alazraki published by Vatican News May 28.
In an open letter published in August, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, who served as nuncio to the United States from 2011 to 2016, claimed he told the pope of the allegations in 2013.
However, the pope told Alazraki, "I don't remember if (Vigano) spoke to me about this."
"If it is true or not, (I have) no idea! But you know that I didn't know anything about McCarrick; otherwise, I would not have stayed quiet," Pope Francis said.
The pope, who was in Dublin for the World Meeting of Families at the time, refused to comment directly on the allegations at the time and told reporters to "read that statement attentively and make your own judgment."
The pope told Alazraki that response was "an act of faith" in people reading the document. "Maybe when a bit of time has passed, I'll talk about it," he had said on his return flight to Rome.
At the time, he said, he had not read Archbishop Vigano's entire letter and decided to "trust in the honesty of journalists" and asked them to make their own conclusions.
Pope Francis said the reporting on inconsistencies in Archbishop Vigano's testimony "was very good, it was better than me explaining to defend myself. (Journalists) judged with the proof they had in their hands."
Another reason for remaining silent, he said, was to try to imitate the approach Jesus took on Good Friday, where in the face of "a climate of viciousness he closed his mouth."
"The Lord taught us that path and I follow it," the pope said.
"In front of a climate of viciousness, you cannot answer," Pope Francis said. "And that letter was vicious as you later realized by the results, that it was -- as some of you reported -- paid for. I do not know (if that is true) but I look at the consequences."
- - -
Follow Arocho on Twitter: @arochoju
- Pope Leo XIV names Archbishop Caccia papal ambassador to United States
- Trump administration seeks pause on another lawsuit challenging abortion pill
- Pew: Americans ‘more likely’ to disapprove of their own nation’s morals
- Indiana court blocks state abortion restrictions in lawsuit claiming religious objections
- Diocese of El Paso declares bankruptcy to settle abuse claims filed under New Mexico lookback law
- Washington Roundup: Iran war powers resolution fails; Noem fired; human trafficking bill advances
- Chaldean Catholic bishop in California jailed for alleged financial crimes
- Can AI be a tool for virtue? Catholics grapple with Anthropic’s claim of virtuous AI
- With wars and disasters overseas, bishops’ annual CRS Collection ‘more vital than ever’
- ‘Underbelly of the AI industry’: Panel explores data centers’ ecological, economic impacts

Comments:
You must login to comment.