Nate Tinner-Williams on a film uncovering the scourge of abuse against women religious—centering on the high-profile Jesuit artist Marko Rupnik.
“Nuns vs. The Vatican,” a searing new documentary from director Lorena Luciano, is an exercise in accompaniment and—despite its flaws—has the power to shift the broader understanding of the Catholic Church’s mercurial response to clergy sex abuse.
At the center of the film is the largely unrecognized phenomenon of abuse perpetrated against women religious, with a particular focus on the notorious former Jesuit priest-artist Marko Rupnik and his now-shuttered Loyola Community in Slovenia.
Though he is just one of several villains in the narrative, he is at once the ultimate symbol of religious corruption at the expense of vulnerable women, having engaged in spiritual and sexual abuse over the course of 30 years. The film follows several of his victims and…
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