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BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

Ultimo Aggiornamento: 23/08/2021 11:16
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23/07/2013 20:33
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Thanks to Aqua for passing on this article by Italian Vaticanista Andrea Gagliarducci who writes for both Italian and English media. It takes him a while to get to the point, but he too sees the obvious risk that was always evident when Pope Francis first named the Commission of Eight cardinals to assist him in governing the Church. Namely, the inevitable creation, as I remarked back then, of new bureaucracies parallel to and inevitably competing with the resident Vatican bureaucracy.

Because both in their home countries, which is home base for seven of the eight members representing distinct geographical regions of the world (the eighth member is the President of Vatican City State governatorate), and in the Vatican itself, this Commission will necessarily have to hire staff to coordinate their dealings and manage their communications with the thousands of bishops, priests and religious in their respective regions, not to mention the mini-Vaticans that the national episcopal conferences have become - in order to truly represent their interests, and not just the cardinal-commissioner's perception of what his region's problems are, however wise and experienced he may be.

Gagliarducci starts with the very trendy notion of 'outsourcing', but in-sourced or out-sourced, Pope Francis's creation of ad hoc study commissions will presumably lead to permanent structures within a new Vatican/Holy See administrative framework that would seem to be the ultimate goal of the 'mission of reforming the Curia' that the world expects of Pope Francis... As the refrain goes, the more things change, the more things remain the same. Fighting a bureaucracy, any bureaucracy, is much like Don Quixote trying to fight the windmills. And obviously, you don't fight windmills by putting up new windmills!



Outsourcing in the Vatican
By Andrea Gagliarducci

July 21, 2013 .

Pope Francis’s most recent administrative move is the appointment of a pontifical commission to look at the organization of the economic-administrative structure of the Holy See. In essence, it is an external team of auditors who will advise how to streamline the expenses and activities of the 37 semi-autonomous offices which make up Vatican City State. The commission is comprised of eight members. Interestingly, only one comes from the ranks of the Holy See. [Actually, he is the only cleric, even if two of the key members are already advisers to the Vatican's Prefecture of Economic Affairs.]

With a similar commission (although an internal one), Pope Francis sent the message that he wanted clarity in the activities of the so-called Vatican bank, the Institute for Religious Works (IOR).

For an eventual reform of the Curia, Pope Francis more pragmatically named a group of eight cardinals, including Cardinal Oscar Andrés Maradiaga as their coordinator. The terms of reference for this group have not yet been defined in an official document. It is expected that Pope Francis will soon do so, making the group an official entity of the Church.

It is typical of the Jesuits to form external commissions to confront and resolve problems. Pope Francis has embraced this approach, common in the management of Jesuit provinces, and he is applying it to his pontificate.

Bergoglio’s goals are enormous. He wants to change the way the entire Roman Curia thinks and behaves. A Curia rightly or wrongly perceived by many as out of touch with the people. Pope Francis’s way of proceeding reveals distrust for the Curia.

Pope Francis meets, reportedly quite often, with Benedict XVI. He also phones the dicasteries very frequently, speaking with employees at all levels and asking them about their work. Some of the employees have also been invited to pay him a visit in the Domus Sanctae Marthae.

Pope Francis has taken the reins of the situation, or he’s trying to. It is an exhausting approach, that which he is taking.

The most recent obstacle he has faced was the appointment of the prelate of the IOR, i.e. the Holy See representative who works as a link between the cardinals’ oversight commission and the IOR's lay executive board.

Pope Francis decided that Mons. Battista Ricca should take that job. Bergoglio knows Ricca very well, they often had lunch together.

Ricca was a career diplomat who – after having served in several nunciatures – was called back to Rome. There, he gained the reputation of “incorruptible” in his managing of the accounts of the nunciatures. He was also appointed director of three residences for prelates. One, the residence in Via della Scrofa in Rome, was where then-cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio usually stayed during his trips to Roma. Another residence managed by Ricca, the Domus Sanctae Marthae, is now the Papal residence.

So Ricca was very close to the Pope, and this is how he earned the Pope’s confidence. But when the Pope chose Ricca as prelate, no one brought up to him the dossier that explained why, earlier in Ricca’s career, it had been so important to bring him back to Rome. A dossier that the Italian vaticanista Sandro Magister made reference to, and which contained accusations of homosexual behavior.

«Who wants to boycott Pope Francis?» This was the question raised after the publication of Magister's story on Ricca. The Vatican’s problem is not whether specific reports and information are true or not. [WHICH IS VERY STRANGE INDEED - isn't the character of Ricca in question here? Not so much that he may be homosexual and (was) engaged in conduct highly unbecoming od a priest, much less, a diplomatic representative of the Vatican, but that unless he or the Vatican directly refute the allegations documented against Ricca by Magister, he will always be under a cloud of notoriety and a potential target for blackmail. Which is not at all desirable for the Pope's own 'personal' representative to presumably oversee the morality of the IOR's activities!]

It is more important to understand who “leaked” the dossier outside the Sacred Walls. [It need not have been leaked at all! Initial reports - never denied by the Vatican - claimed that the damaging information about Ricca was passed on directly to the Pope by some of the Nuncios who had come to Rome for their Year of Faith event. From what they said, it was easy for any journalist to follow the leads and ask persons in Uruguay who would have first-hand knowledge of this information. The problem is only Magister bothered to do so, - and everyone else simply ignored it, including the usually diligent John Allen who would not have missed any occasion for a real 'scoop'. Why no one other than Magister bothered is clearly an effort by the media to avoid acknowledging that Pope Francis may have made an egregious error in naming Ricca to IOR.

How, with everything they have invested into painting the Pope as the dream Pope no one had even imagined could exist, could they then say maybe he has feet of clay, after all, like us ordinary mortals? Now, if this had happened with Benedict XVI, they'd have already consigned him to the deepest reaches of hell for being 1) so uninformed and/or stupid as to have made such an appointment error (after Wielgus and Williamson, though it was not an appointment but lifting excommunication in the latter case); and 2) just so unworthy to be Pope, in general, at least in their opinion! I will never understand how petty minds can so dismiss with scorn such an obviously superior creature of God as Joseph Ratzinger! Perhaps because it makes them feel superior to be able to trash and dismiss someone so eminent. 'He may be Pope and all that, but to me, he's just scum to scrape off the sole of my shoes! So there!"]


With an outgoing, «lame duck» Secretary of State and the appointment of his successor on stand by, it seems as if attacks on anyone’s reputation are fair game. It is a chaotic situation inside the Vatican. {Really? Everyone is telling us that all is sweetness and light and pure fresh air in the Vatican these days, cleared of every sulphurous infernal fume exhaled by a Benedict who was actually Satan decked out in white robe and red shoes, who had led the Church down to hell in a handbasket!]

This proves that the Curia’s poisonous environments did not dissipate with Pope Francis’s arrival. [Careful, mR. Gagliarducci,withf those generalities. You are trotting out the herd stereotypes here. Whatever inefficiencies, petty corruptions and yes, malice and evil, that are present among the human beings who make up the Roman Curia, all of those defects together do not equal the poison created daily by the mindless stereotypes of media about the Curia without any substantiation. OK, so one surfaced recently - the case of the notorious Mons. Scarano, but should we take him as 'typical' of everyone who works in the Curia, or as one extremely misguided individual whose circumstances gave him the opportunity to play fast and loose with his finances and those of his friends?]

The appointment of the advisory commission for the IOR might have made some believe that Pope Francis realized that it is impossible to reform the Curia without the Curia. Not so. The appointment of this most recent commission shows that the Pope has taken the path of outsourcing.

Benedict XVI started a plan to bring order to the expenses and the activities of the pontifical administration. It was necessary to streamline the structures, as often there were unnecessary overlaps and redundancy of responsibilities.

First of all, Benedict XVI reformed the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, the Vatican «ministry of economy». Benedict’s reform made the Prefecture look like a modern ministry of finance, with the power to control and project expenses. This way, Benedict XVI worked towards making the Vatican a modern State, and at the same time to strengthen its structures.
[But did the media ever ever report these developments to underline their significance, if they even got to report it at all? Obviously not. So having not reported that these things were happening under Benedict, they are now free to mak believe and make it appear that every initiative at cleaning house and streamlining the Vatican administration only began once a new Pope had replaced Benedict.]

In fact, external consultants are not new. Every Vatican dicastery appoints consultants, i.e. experts called to serve the Holy See in some specific field. However, not until now had consultants been so clearly a part of an outsourcing strategy.

Pope Francis does not favor appointing “ad hoc” consultants for specific issues.
[But the three commissions he has named so far are all ad hoc! The Advisory Council still has to be defined formally, and the IOR and administrative-structure commissions are clearly ad hoc' to turn them evnetually into something permanent will result in new bureaucratic redundancies.]

Instead, he prefers to address some problems by presenting them to experts outside the Vatican. An approach that has been accepted in Vatican City State, to the detriment of the Holy See.

The Vatican administration must pay salaries and keep its finances in the black. In order to meet its obligations, Vatican City State has accepted donations. Including very large donations. Donations, however, invite outsiders’ intromission, since the donors may attempt to exert control over everything. They are ultimately buying the Vatican, one piece at a time.

The Knights of Columbus, for example, have been making generous donations to the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (APSA). These donations have served to pay the salary of one of the top consultants at the Vatican, for the past two years. Obviously, before hiring the job holder, the Knights of Columbus were consulted.

Even in the financial area, a lot has been traditionally outsourced. Since the Calvi and Marcinkus era, many things have changed. The IOR is now controlled by a “board of laymen,” the council of superintendency. Ettore Gotti Tedeschi was once named president of this council. But Tedeschi was not a Vatican man.
He treated the Vatican more like a multinational company than a sovereign state with funds at the Pope’s disposal. Tedeschi eventually received a no confidence vote from the board he presided. [Obviously, the full story behind the defenestration of Gotti Tedeschi still has to be told - he wasn't just thrown under a bus, he was thrown out the window! - so, in the interests of the truth and fairness, we must wait and see.]

How was his successor chosen? The IOR’s Superintendency Council decided to contract the services of a specialized agency, a “head hunter”. It was an external agency, which was well paid for its services. The agency identified Ernst von Freyberg for the position. Von Freyberg then hired his own, external, spokesperson, enabling him to manage relations with the press.

In a similar vein, Von Freyberg tasked an American company (the Promontory Financial Group) with auditing the IOR. Nothing wrong or unusual: auditors must be external. What is interesting is that later Antonio Montaresi was appointed the IOR’s chief risk officer. He comes from the ranks of the Promontory Financial group. No one questions Montaresi’s professional credentials. The issue is, is there a possible conflict of interest?

In the meantime, Grupo Santander – Gotti Tedeschi had been for years the president of its Italian branch – proudly and loudly announced its re-arrival to the Vatican in the role of consultant to the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See.

Pope Francis wants a poor Church, and always maintains that «structures are important, but up to a certain point.» The problem is that, up until now, Francis is increasing Vatican bodies, and thus expenses. Furthermore, the advisory commission for financial activities can also call on outside experts itself, and will have its needs well covered.

This is how outsourcing in the Vatican is growing. And while the Vatican hires outside experts, inside the Sacred Walls there continues to be potentially disloyal butlers, and priests under the influence of the gay lobby. Will Francis truly succeed in cleaning up the Church? Or will the way he is proceeding favor the formation of new interest groups?
[DIM=8pt[][G[On the way to creating a many-headed mother of all bureaucratic monsters?]

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 23/07/2013 23:43]
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