October
11, 2005
Behind
Closed Doors and Sealed Windows--an unexpected look at the
election of the Pope
by Jon
M. Sweeney
An
unnamed cardinal has broken his vow of silence regarding last
April’s
conclave that elected Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger as pope.
The cardinal has published his anonymous account
of those eventful and mysterious days in an Italian journal.
The
published text—which is an unprecedented step of
broken secrecy taken by a cardinal in the modern era—unveils
many details about the behind-closed-doors meetings that elected
Pope Benedict XVI.
Contrary
to Vatican reports at the time, a cardinal from the Third World
was a serious challenger to Cardinal Ratzinger’s
election. Also Bernard F. Law, the former cardinal
of the scandal-plagued Boston diocese, received
one mysterious vote to become
the next pope on the final ballot that elected Ratzinger.
Four separate ballots were cast during the April 18-19 conclave,
which is always held in the ornate Sistine Chapel of Michelangelo.
According to this new published account, the Jesuit cardinal
from Argentina, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, received second-place
votes on each of those four ballots. The contest grew tightest
in the middle rounds, with Ratzinger taking 65 votes to Bergoglio’s
35 in the second, and Ratzinger with 72 votes to Bergoglio’s
40 in the third. The diary also makes it very clear that Bergoglio
did not seek the job, or campaign in any way for it.
The anonymous diarist records that it was U.S. cardinals, in
conjunction with cardinals representing Latin America, who led
the support for Bergoglio. One other Third World cardinal also
received votes on the first ballot of the conclave: Oscar Rodriguez
Maradiaga of Tegucigalpa, Honduras (3).
It is not possible for media to interview cardinals after a conclave,
as they have taken a vow of secrecy that is rarely violated.
In the case of this diary, the vow has been broken, but anonymously.
The cardinal in question must want the world to know more about
what happened behind closed doors. In particular, many Vatican
experts say, he must want the world to know that the College
of Cardinals does indeed take seriously the possibility of a
future Third
World Pope. There are more than 1 billion Roman Catholics in
the world today, and half of them live in Latin America.
During and after the April conclave, it was widely reported that
retired Milan archbishop, Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, was the
main challenger to Ratzinger. But, it wasn’t so. Also,
Ratzinger won by a relatively narrow margin; conclave rules require
a two-thirds majority; in the final ballot, Ratzinger took 84
of 115 votes, when at least 77 were needed to win. By contrast,
John Paul II received 99 votes out of 111 cast on the final
ballot that elected him in 1979.
The Associated Press interviewed David Gibson, an American
journalist and expert on Catholic affairs. Gibson emphasized, “It
does seem that somebody wants to indicate that the conclave
was a more complex process than was being depicted and
that Benedict's
mandate was not a slam dunk.”
The diary was published by Lucio Brunelli, a respected Vatican
journalist, in an Italian foreign affairs journal, Limes. Brunelli
writes in his commentary that he obtained the diary through
a source whom he will not name. If the identity of the secret
cardinal
were to be revealed, excommunication (the stated punishment
for violating the conclave) by the pope would probably soon
follow.
The diary begins with this entry for Sunday, April 17: “In
the afternoon I took over my room at the Casa Santa Marta. I
put down my bags and tried to open the blinds because the room
was dark. I wasn't able to. One of my fellow brothers asked a
nun working there, thinking it was a technical problem. She explained
they were sealed. Closure of the conclave. A new experience for
almost all of us.”
© 2005 Jon M. Sweeney.
—Jon M. Sweeney
is a writer and editor living in Vermont.
His new book is THE
LURE OF SAINTS: A PROTESTANT EXPERIENCE OF CATHOLIC TRADITION.
More
by Jon Sweeney.
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