Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Pope Adolf I

It was inevitable really that Cardinal Ratzinger would be elected as the new pope. As the only candidate with a personal relationship with all of the cardinals (as Dean of the College of Cardinals), he was able to mould that support into an iron-clad assurance of his ascendance.

So, want to know a little bit of history about the man who has now been elected as the spiritual leader of over a billion catholics worldwide? Well, how about:

  • He was a member of the Hitler Youth

  • He fought on the side of the Nazis during WW II... he was assigned to an anti-aircraft unit that protected BMW factories. BMW, of course, made a fortune through their use of slave Jewish labour

  • For twenty years, he was the head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith. If you don't recognise it, maybe you will under its previous name - the Holy Inquisition.

You might argue that he had no choice but to bind himself to the Nazis - he himself argues that any attempt to rebel would have been 'futile'. Of course, the many brave, admirable men and women who did rebel (and often died for their refusal to submit to the brutal reign of the Reich) stand as testimony to the fallacy of that view.

The new pope is an ultra-conservative who has ruthlessly quashed any attempt to realign the vatican with modern society. He is homophobic, and misogynist. In the 80s he cracked down on the Liberation Theology movement... he has had Vatican teachers removed from their post for teaching concepts that he personally found repellent.

Undeniably a very intelligent man - it's just a shame that intelligence has found its keenest application in the ruthless suppression of any modernising trend in the Catholic church. He has all of the right-wing orthodoxy of Pope John Paul II, but seemingly with very little of the strength of spirit that compelled the last pope to speak out against those injustices against humanity (such as the Iraq war).

Time will tell if he is as bad a choice as he seems on paper. Undoubtedly he appeals to those Catholics who feel that the church should be a rock, unyielding to external pressure. Those of us who believe the Vatican to be a misguided and dangerous anachronism have little to hope for in the coming years, except perhaps for a short and unremarkable reign - after all, Pope Benedict XVI is already 78 years old.

Funny, isn't it - cardinals seem to have an abnormally high average life-span. It seems the Lord is not over-eager for them to join him.

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