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January 07, 2007

Update to post below

Resigned.

Warsaw's new archbishop resigned Sunday amid a scandal over his involvement with the communist-era secret police that has shaken the deeply Roman Catholic homeland of the late Pope John Paul II.

Stanislaw Wielgus announced his decision at the capital's St. John's Cathedral, which was packed with worshippers gathered for a Mass that was to have marked his formal installation. The congregation included President Lech Kaczynski.

Wielgaus A forlorn-looking Wielgus read from a letter to Pope Benedict XVI in which he offered his resignation "after reflecting deeply and assessing my personal situation."

Though Kaczynski and some others applauded, many in the church and a large crowd packed outside in the rain shouted, "We welcome you," "Stay with us," and "No, No!"

Dressed in a resplendent golden miter and robes, Wielgus, 67, made his brief announcement less than an hour after Poland's church said in a statement that he had resigned.

Vatican announcements - in Italian and Polish.

More from John Allen:

Benedict will want to proceed cautiously to make sure his next pick doesn’t have a similar set of skeletons in his closet, and that may be a complicated process, according to Tomasz Pompowski, an editor with DZIENNIK, an influential Polish newspaper, who has followed the Wielgus case closely.

Pompowski told NCR that he’s aware of 20 cases involving alleged collaboration by current bishops, who were recruited earlier in their clerical careers and groomed as they moved up the system. Pompowski said the degree of collaboration varies from case to case, but some involve allegations at least as serious as those surrounding Wielgus.

The Polish church has long been aware that it’s sitting on a “time bomb” with regard to Communist-era collaborators, Pompowski said, but it avoided confronting these issues during the last years of Pope John Paul II’s papacy for fear of burdening the beloved Polish pope in his twilight.

Wielgus has insisted that he never caused anyone harm, and that he went along with the security forces largely so that he could pursue his academic career, believing that his capacity to travel internationally was important for the church during an age of enforced isolation from the outside world.

Neverthless, Wielgus has acknowledged that “the fact of my involvement has harmed the Church.”

Polish sources say the policy under both the late Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski of Warsaw and Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of Cracow, later Pope John Paul II, was that any contact with the security forces should be avoided if at all possible, and immediately reported in writing to ecclesiastical superiors. Wojtyla, for example, insisted on having witnesses present for such meetings, even for the most delicate discussions.

In that sense, observers say, Wielgus went well beyond what was considered normal practice for clergy of the day.

It was not immediately clear what Wielgus’ future may hold, but Polish sources expect something similar to what happened in the case of Archbishop Julian Paetz, who resigned as the Archbishop of Poznan in March 2002 amid a sexual abuse scandal. Paetz today lives in an archdiocesan-owned apartment in Poznan and keeps a generally low profile.

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Posted by Amy Welborn | Permalink

Comments

"it avoided confronting these issues during the last years of Pope John Paul II’s papacy for fear of burdening the beloved Polish pope in his twilight."

Surely a living saint would be exactly the right kind of person to burden with such things. Why are we as a church so reluctant to face our difficult realities? Maybe it is as simple as a lack of faith. If we really believe that "the gates of hell will not prevail", then there is no problem in dealing with financial or sexual or political misdeeds openly and frankly. There is no scandal in the church greater than loss of faith. In accepting society's definition of scandal, and trying to avoid it at all costs, we have created more scandal to the faithful. This is just another sad example.

Posted by: Paul Pfaffenberger at Jan 7, 2007 11:46:49 AM

According to Polish newspapers, roughly fifteen percent of Polish clergy are suspected of some type of past collaboration with the communist internal security apparatus. In my opinion, Church leaders in Poland waited too long (communism collapsed in 1989) before deciding to deal with this problem. These men should have been sidelined to quiet apartments long time ago, regardless of JPII's burdens. As ugly as this particular situation is, let us not forget that a large majority of Polish clergy performed magnificently in the struggle with the evil of communism, and a great deal of gratitude is owed to them.

Posted by: Torquemada at Jan 7, 2007 4:52:20 PM

Paetz today lives in an archdiocesan-owned apartment in Poznan and keeps a generally low profile.

Why doesn't he live in jail?

Posted by: BillyHW at Jan 7, 2007 5:27:07 PM

East or West, Church and State do not mix, should not mix.

Posted by: Jim at Jan 7, 2007 7:44:39 PM