Viganὸ’s mission according to L’Osservatore Romano

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Two days after the publication of the communiqué that rejected the accusations made by the Nuncio to the USA, the Vatican’s daily broadsheet describes the meeting that took place in the White House

ANDREA TORNIELLI
Vatican City

Anyone flicking through the pages of last Saturday’s issue of L’Osservatore Romano will have seen the published contents of a communiqué signed by two cardinals and two bishops – the new and former administration of the Vatican Governorate – in which the accusations of corruption contained in the letters sent by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò to the Pope and the Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, were rejected as groundless. The letters had been discussed on the Italian television programme Gli Intoccabili (“The Untouchables”) broadcast on LA7. Two days later, at the earliest possible opportunity (L’Osservatore Romano comes out on Saturday afternoon and is dated Sunday, so the following issue comes out on Monday afternoon), the Vatican’s daily broadsheet published an article that could be read as an attempt to stress, in a non explicit way, that the communiqué has not changed anything and that the Nuncio to the United States still has the trust of his superiors.

The text in question is the brief summary customarily written at the beginning of the mission of the new papal representative to the United States. Texts such as this are usually sent to the Vatican newspaper by the Secretary of State who writes them. It can take several days, after the Letters of Credence are presented, for said texts to be published. Viganò, the former Secretary General of the Governorate, had met with bishops and America’s political leadership as the Pope’s representative, on 16 November 2011. The article mentions that the following day, the Episcopate’s plenary assembly took place in Baltimore and that Viganò “had wanted to give the letter of recommendation given o him by the Vatican’s Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, to the Archbishop of New York and President of the American Episcopal Conference, Mgr. Timothy Dolan.”

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