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F6

05/13/05 8:25 PM

#28351 RE: F6 #28350

(COMTEX) B: John Paul Put on Fast Track for Sainthood ( AP Online )

VATICAN CITY, May 13, 2005 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- The new pope placed John
Paul II on an unprecedented fast track for sainthood Friday and named San
Francisco's archbishop to be the church's guardian of doctrine - the highest
Vatican office ever held by an American.


Pope Benedict XVI's decision to waive the five-year waiting period for
beatification procedures for John Paul came just six weeks after the pope's
death.

"And now I have a very joyous piece of news for you," Benedict told a gathering
of Roman priests at the Basilica of St. John Lateran before reading a letter in
Latin announcing the move.

The announcement came on the 24th anniversary of the 1981 assassination attempt
on John Paul in St. Peter's Square by a Turkish gunman. The Vatican newspaper
L'Osservatore Romano said the timing was an "eloquent" testimony to the late
pope's holiness.

The only other time the waiting period was waived was for Mother Teresa - a step
taken by John Paul himself a year after her death in 1997. She was beatified in
2003.

In his other announcement Friday, Benedict tapped his old friend Archbishop
William Levada to be prefect for the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith
[F6 note -- the good folks who brought us the Inquisition], filling the job
Benedict held for nearly 24 years.

The position, one of the most powerful at the Vatican, is responsible for
ensuring the faithful follow church doctrine and for punishing those who don't.
Levada, 68, was expected to maintain the Vatican's uncompromising opposition to
abortion, euthanasia, ordaining women, homosexuality and lifting the celibacy
requirement for priests.

In choosing Levada, Benedict selected a champion of church doctrine who has
spoken out against same-sex marriages while leading the church in a city with a
vibrant gay and lesbian community.

San Francisco archbishop since 1995, Levada has also dealt with the clergy sex
abuse scandal that has convulsed the American church.

A major victims group, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests,
called the appointment "insensitive" and unwise, noting that the chairman of
a watchdog panel Levada formed to review claims against priests in
San Francisco resigned last year in protest.

"Regarding abuse in the San Francisco Archdiocese, Levada has been slow to act,
harsh to victims and committed to secrecy," the group said Friday.


However, the Rev. Jim Bretzke, co-chair of the University of San Francisco's
theology department, described Levada as intelligent, careful and fair. "He has
all the right credentials," Bretzke said this week. "The conservatives respect
him and even the liberals respect him."

Levada will be the highest-ranking American ever at the Vatican, said Sister
Mary Ann Walsh, spokeswoman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. American
cardinals have headed important Vatican congregations in the past, but the
Doctrine of the Faith is second only to the Vatican Secretary of State in the
Roman Curia. An American has never held either top position before.

Levada has been a member of the congregation for five years. He is also chairman
of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' committee on doctrine and helped
draft the Catechism of the Catholic Church, a guide to Catholic beliefs that was
a major accomplishment of John Paul's papacy.

He is also an expert on the authority of the pope and has been involved in
promoting Episcopalian-Roman Catholic dialogue.

Benedict's decision to put John Paul on a fast track was an answer to popular
calls after his death, when pilgrims interrupted the pontiff's April 8 funeral
Mass with chants of "Santo! Santo!" and held up banners proclaiming "Santo
Subito!" or "Sainthood Immediately!"

Friday's announcement opens the way for a lengthy investigation into John Paul's
life. The Vatican must confirm one miracle attributed to his intercession for
beatification and a second for sainthood - a process that will take years,
Vatican officials said.

Monsignor Gianfranco Bella, the official responsible for starting the
beatification cause, said Friday he hoped to start the investigation "as soon as
possible."

"But things have to be done well. They can't be rushed through," he said in an
interview.

He called Benedict's announcement "wonderful," and suggested approving a miracle
wouldn't be too difficult.

"Certainly he had many gifts, and touched so many people," he said. "Even the
conversion of one person is a miracle."

Following John Paul's death, Italian newspapers were filled with reports of
miracles attributed to him. But they all stemmed from inexplicable cures while
he was alive. According to Vatican procedures, a miracle must have occurred
after his death for it to be considered.

In Wadowice, Poland, where John Paul was born, the news was received with joy.

"If people here in Wadowice pray so much to John Paul II, that is a sign that
for them he is in heaven. And being in heaven means being a saint," said Father
Jakub Gil, parish priest of Wadowice's Basilica of Saint Mary, where the future
pope was baptized.

Beatification is the first step toward canonization, and allows the candidate to
be called "Blessed" and to be honored in a limited way in the liturgy.
Canonization is an infallible declaration by the pope that a person who was
virtuous to a heroic degree in life is now in heaven and worthy of honor and
veneration as a saint.

---

Associated Press reporters Daniela Petroff and Aidan Lewis contributed to this
report.

By NICOLE WINFIELD
Associated Press Writer

Copyright 2005 Associated Press, All rights reserved

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F6

05/23/05 3:44 PM

#28570 RE: F6 #28350

(COMTEX) B: Vatican, religious order say no sex abuse investigation
of order's Mexican founder under way ( AP WorldStream )

VATICAN CITY, May 23, 2005 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- The Vatican said
Monday there was no investigation under way of allegations that the Mexican
founder of a conservative religious order sexually abused seminarians more than
30 years ago, and the Holy See had no plans to bring a church trial against the
priest.

The Legionaries of Christ said Friday that the Vatican notified them a day
earlier about the status of the case involving the Rev. Marcial Maciel
Degallado, accused in the late 1990s by nine former seminarians of abusing them
when they were boys or teenagers. The alleged abuse occurred at seminaries in
Spain and Italy during the 1940s to 1960s.

Maciel, 85, has denied the allegations and said his accusers want to defame him.

"There is no investigation under way and it is not foreseen that there will be
one in the future," a Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Ciro Benedettini, reiterated
Monday.


One of the men who claimed he was abused by Maciel accused the Legionaries of
lying. Another alleged victim was incredulous that the Vatican said there was no
probe under way, claiming that two Vatican officials recently traveled to Mexico
and the United States to take testimony about the allegations.

Earlier this year, news reports surfaced that the Vatican had reopened the
sexual abuse case against Maciel. But Vatican officials at the time said the
reports resulted from a misunderstanding.

The Vatican said an official from its Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, which handles clergy sex abuse cases, had contacted a lawyer for some of
the former seminarians about the case, a move mistakenly interpreted as a new
Vatican probe.

Benedettini said Monday he did not know when a decision on the case had been
made. The Vatican did not explain the reason for its decision.

The Vatican would not say whether this was the first sexual abuse case involving
a priest decided under the new pontiff, Benedict XVI or if it had been decided
when Pope John Paul II was still alive.


On Monday, one of Maciel's accusers, former priest Juan Vaca, accused the
Legionaries of lying about the investigation, saying: "They are desperate." He
told The Associated Press he was confident Benedict will find their allegations
are true.

"I don't accept the idea that this pope is going to go against himself," Vaca
said, speaking from New York. "He started something convinced that we were
saying the truth," he said, referring to Benedict's former role as the head of
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. "I don't think he's going to
turn around 180 degrees (and) say we're making a mistake."

In Mexico, another alleged victim, Jose Barba, said two investigators have taken
testimony from more than 20 people in the United States and Mexico about the
accusations. Barba was a member of the Legionaries of Christ from 1948-1962.

He noted that two Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith officials were in
Mexico on April 2 and then in the United States on April 4. If the case were
closed, "it would be very damaging for the prestige of the Holy See," Barba told
The Associated Press.

The Vatican investigated Maciel in the 1950s for alleged drug use, trafficking
and misuse of funds but not for sexual misconduct. He was suspended from his
duties as head of the order then reinstated after being cleared of all
allegations.

In January, John Paul hailed Maciel for his "paternal affection and his
experience." A few months earlier, the late pope praised Maciel on the 60th
anniversary of his ordination, citing his "intense, generous and fruitful"
priestly ministry.


Earlier this year, Maciel, citing his age, declined to be re-elected, and a
successor was chosen.

Legionaries, with their conservative emphasis on morality, had a high profile
under the papacy of John Paul.
The order claims a membership of 65,000 people,
including hundreds of priests worldwide.

---

Associated Press writers Matt Apuzzo in New Haven, Connecticut, and E. Eduardo
Castillo in Mexico City also contributed to this report.

---

On the Net:

http://www.legionaryfacts.org

By FRANCES D'EMILIO
Associated Press Writer

Copyright 2005 Associated Press, All rights reserved

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