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Berlusconi Sex Scandal Awkward For Vatican

Berlusconi Vatican

First Posted: 02/18/11 09:37 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

By Francis X. Rocca
Religion News Service

VATICAN CITY -- No major Western European leader in recent years has been a more stalwart ally of the Roman Catholic Church than Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Berlusconi's stands against euthanasia, living wills, in-vitro fertilization and domestic partnerships have put his country in line with Catholic teaching, and out of sync with all other major countries in the region, including traditionally Catholic Spain. His government has also granted large financial subsidies to Catholic schools, and expanded tax breaks for church-owned businesses.

Yet in Berlusconi's increasingly public personal life, the billionaire businessman-turned-politician is not exactly a model of Catholic values.

After months of ever more graphic reports of wild parties and sex with young women, including several alleged prostitutes, a judge on Tuesday (Feb. 15) ruled that Berlusconi must face trial on April 6 on charges of paying for sex with a minor and obstruction of justice.

The tension between Berlusconi's political platform and his personal behavior has put church leaders in an exquisitely awkward position, to which they have reacted with conspicuous understatement.

Last month, in what was widely taken as an allusion to the Berlusconi crisis, Pope Benedict XVI told a gathering of Rome police that public officials must "rediscover their spiritual and moral roots."

Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the church's No. 2 official, said the Vatican was watching the Italian situation with "great attention and concern," and he called on leaders to show a "more robust morality."

Slightly stronger words came a few days later from Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, head of the Italian bishops' conference, who said public officials must show "sobriety, personal discipline ... and honor."

Yet even Bagnasco did not refer to the prime minister by name, and he tempered his criticism by questioning the motives of investigating prosecutors.

Significantly, the most eloquent statement by church leaders so far may have been a moment of silence. At a ceremony on Friday (Feb. 18) commemorating treaties between Italy and the Vatican, Bertone and Berlusconi were both present but reportedly did not speak. By contrast, at a similar ceremony four years earlier, the Vatican's No. 2 spent a half-hour in private conversation with then-Prime Minister Romano Prodi, with whom he was publicly at odds over Prodi's support for domestic partnerships.

Catholic bishops have several strong reasons to refrain from openly criticizing Berlusconi now. The most obvious is that the church needs the cooperation of his center-right government to pursue its legislative agenda.

Church leaders here have long refrained from commenting on political leaders' private lives, as opposed to their policies, said Massimo Franco, a writer for Italy's leading newspaper Corriere della Sera.

That public-private distinction also holds in the United States, said Russell Shaw, a former chief spokesman for the U.S. bishops' conference. During the 1998 sex scandal involving President Bill Clinton and the former White House intern Monica Lewinsky, the American bishops never issued a group statement, and most bishops refrained from comment, Shaw said.

Another factor inhibiting Italian church leaders in the Berlusconi matter, Franco said, may be last year's controversies over clergy sex abuse in several European and Latin American countries, which undermined the church's moral authority in the eyes of many critics.

Last month, Berlusconi's outspoken coalition-partner Umberto Bossi, leader of the Northern League party, made a not-so-subtle allusion to abusive priests when he suggested that prosecutors who had been investigating the prime minister should also pay a visit to the Vatican.

Still, the pressure on church leaders to break with the prime minister may grow too strong to resist. An anti-Berlusconi demonstration by hundreds of thousands of Italian women on Sunday (Feb. 13) won the endorsement of the editor of the Italian bishops' official newspaper; one of the most prominent speakers at the rally in Rome was a 70-year-old nun who is also an activist against sex trafficking.

Practicing Catholics are a core element of Berlusconi's political base, but their support is "eroding," said Roberto D'Alimonte, a political scientist at Rome's LUISS Guido Carli University.

"It's easier for church leaders to turn a blind eye, but there's a problem at the parish level," D'Alimonte said. "It's not easy for a pastor to explain why the church supports a man whose behavior is so in contrast with family values."

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By Francis X. Rocca Religion News Service VATICAN CITY -- No major Western European leader in recent years has been a more stalwart ally of the Roman Catholic Church than Italy's Prime Minister Silvi...
By Francis X. Rocca Religion News Service VATICAN CITY -- No major Western European leader in recent years has been a more stalwart ally of the Roman Catholic Church than Italy's Prime Minister Silvi...
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helioszephyr
What do you mean by "micro"?!
02:49 PM on 04/02/2011
Actually, he's a prime model of a catholic... you can screw up as many times as you want, just confess your sins, then start all over again. Perpetual forgiveness justifies perpetual abuse. As the "church lady" would say... "how convenient!
12:01 PM on 02/24/2011
The Vatican may forgive him, but what about the man or women up there?
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ArchbishopBenevolent
Pre-Approved Saint, Beatific but not Canonical
03:25 PM on 02/21/2011
The Vatican must have sent investigators from the Office of Doctrinal Matters and must have checked on Prime Minister Berlusconi to make sure he was not using a condom.

The Vatican is about money and power. He has plenty of both.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lrlrlr
08:59 PM on 02/20/2011
His personal life is not exactly a model of Catholic values, eh?
Yet the church likes his stands against euthanasia, living wills, in-vitro fertilization and domestic partnerships.

When will the church learn that disrespect for women (or gays) is part of a fertile mindset for using women as he now stands accused of doing?

Their world is one where white straight men have all the power and control.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chrystal Ji Davey
Chem. Dance. Theatre.
10:07 AM on 02/21/2011
Exactly. I'm sick of religion holding countries back like this.
I was raised Roman Catholic right up until the point I realized all the ignorance it was promoting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DucksBack
I tend to disagree.
07:37 PM on 02/20/2011
What is the problem? Church leaders are trained in situations requiring the "awkward position".
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ArchbishopBenevolent
Pre-Approved Saint, Beatific but not Canonical
07:24 PM on 02/20/2011
Prime Minister Berlusconi has probably gone to confessional and must be an important donor/tither.

There is always an ulterior reason. And besides, it is money and power the Vatican is after. He has plenty of both.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chrystal Ji Davey
Chem. Dance. Theatre.
10:09 AM on 02/21/2011
You're exactly right.
Italian history has shown political and spiritual leaders that they must kiss each other's hind quarters if they want to remain in favor and maintain their lifestyles.
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loeska
pro et contra
07:09 PM on 02/20/2011
I would like to correct myself : When I speak of "an old boy's club" I'm only referring to the
Vatican and its often disastrous policy. I think we all know what is meant by that.
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loeska
pro et contra
06:50 PM on 02/20/2011
The Catholic Church is mostly an old boys club, defending one another to safeguard the Church's political position. So of course they are pussyfooting around the Berlosconi
problem, in case they should need him in the future.

This is not a religion of much compassion, it's theatricality and saintliness notwithstanding.
05:38 PM on 02/20/2011
So many lies and so little time to tell them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Venmaker1
I am deeply suspicious
03:28 PM on 02/20/2011
""It's easier for church leaders to turn a blind eye, but there's a problem at the parish level," D'Alimonte said. "It's not easy for a pastor to explain why the church supports a man whose behavior is so in contrast with family values.""

Why? Pastors have been "explaining" the Vatican's blind eyes for centuries. Why should this be any different?
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
11:49 AM on 02/20/2011
"...questioning the motivation of the investigators...." Right - the investigators are all wrong, nothing happened, big to-do about nothing.

Any similarity in this response to the one regarding pedophilia?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
11:35 AM on 02/20/2011
Guys who want to control women need to stick together!
08:37 AM on 02/20/2011
Pedopriest awkward? They seem content to defend them - they'll defend this. Berlusconi is "exactly a model of Catholic values."
08:12 AM on 02/20/2011
I concur! Scrape away some of the baroque gilt (guilt) and the enterprise is quite unattractive! Pope Benny the scandal meister is the consummate politician. Twenty three years as head of the CDF (inquisition) and not much to say to the world. Let's get a big stick and scrape him off the bottom of our boots. The whole thing smells really bad.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
02:03 AM on 02/20/2011
But saying one thing and doing something else is what the RC is all about.