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Gay priests sent to Italy monastery ‘to be cured’

The Vatican allegedly sends gay priests to a monastery in northern Italy “to be cured”, Italian media reported.

Gay priests sent to Italy monastery 'to be cured'
Photo: Shutterstock

The Venturini monastery in Trento, which also allegedly houses paeodophile priests, drug addicts and alcoholics, treats those “who show inappropriate sexual tendencies”, Mario Bonfante, a former Catholic priest who revealed he was gay in 2012, told La Repubblica.

“It’s a place where they help you rediscover the right path. They wanted to cure me. I refused to go,” added Bonfante, who was allegedly dismissed by the Church for refusing.

The Vatican declined to comment.

Father Gianluigi Pastò, the 72-year-old priest in charge at Venturini, denied that the monastery catered for the treatment of gay priests, although in an interview with La Repubblica he did allude to the possibility that both gay and paedophile priests had stayed there in the past.

“At this moment in time we don’t have any gay priests or paedophile priests,” he said, while adding that Venturini was a place that helped “priests to become saints”.

He described suggestions that the monastery had housed both gay and paedophile priests as “absurd”.

“Priests instead come here for a period of training and personal reflection…of course, we are here to help all. Most of all, the priests who come here are suffering from depression.” He also said priests are not forced to go to the monastery, which was established in 1983 and houses around seven priests at a time.

The claims come just days after gay Polish priest Krzystof Charamsa accused the Vatican of “institutionalized homophobia”.

Father Charamsa made the accusation during a ‘coming out’ speech in Rome on Saturday, a day before the Catholic Church Synod, a gathering of bishops intended to reshape the church’s teaching, got underway.

Flanked by his boyfriend, Charamsa told a news conference in Rome that he had felt compelled to speak out.

“I'm out of the closet and I'm very happy about that,” the 43-year-old said. “I want to be an advocate for all sexual minorities and their families who have suffered in silence.”

According to Charamsa, most Catholic priests have a homosexual orientation but are so consumed by self-hatred that they support the repression of their basic instincts and desire for love.

The Vatican hit back by saying “the decision to make such a pointed statement on the eve of the opening of the Synod appears very serious and irresponsible, since it aims to subject the Synod assembly to undue media pressure.”

But even before the Polish priest's initiative, Catholic attitudes to sexuality were dominating headlines.

The Vatican confirmed on Friday that Francis had hugged an old gay friend and met his partner during his recent visit to the United States.

The highly symbolic gesture, indicative of Francis's personally tolerant attitude towards gays, came a day before he met prominent gay marriage opponent Kim Davis – another private encounter in the US that the Vatican said did not indicate support for her stance.

WOMEN

Pope appoints French woman to senior synod post

Pope Francis has broken with Catholic tradition to appoint a woman as an undersecretary of the synod of bishops, the first to hold the post with voting rights in a body that studies major questions of doctrine.

Pope appoints French woman to senior synod post
Pope Francis has appointed Nathalie Becquart as undersecretary of the synod of bishops. She is the first woman to hold the post. Photo: AFP

Frenchwoman Nathalie Becquart is one of the two new undersecretaries named on Saturday to the synod, where she has been a consultant since 2019.

The appointment signals the pontiff's desire “for a greater participation of women in the process of discernment and decision-making in the church”, said Cardinal Mario Grech, the secretary-general of the synod.

“During the previous synods, the number of women participating as experts and listeners has increased,” he said.

“With the nomination of Sister Nathalie Becquart and her possibility of participating in voting, a door has opened.”

The synod is led by bishops and cardinals who have voting rights and also comprises experts who cannot vote, with the next gathering scheduled for autumn 2022.

A special synod on the Amazon in 2019 saw 35 female “auditors” invited to the assembly, but none could vote.

The Argentinian-born pope has signalled his wish to reform the synod and have women and laypeople play a greater role in the church.

He named Spaniard Luis Marin de San Martin as the other under undersecretary in the synod of bishops.

Becquart, 52, a member of the France-based Xaviere Sisters, has a master's degree in management from the prestigious HEC business school in Paris and studied in Boston before joining the order.

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