From September the Argentine Edition of the Osservatore Romano will appear -- in the photo is the Internet site of the Vatican Paper |
(Rome) At the direction of Pope Francis an autonomous Argentine edition of the Osservatore Romano will be published. The launch is scheduled for next September.
In Rome currently no one knows exactly how it with the semi-official newspaper of the Vatican, the Osservatore Romano will continue. Established by Pope Francis in the June 2015, the Communication Secretariat of the Roman Curia is planning drastic cuts.
The prefect of the new dicastery, the Italian priest and communication scientist Don Dario Edoardo Viganò, is working on a summary and restructuring of all Vatican media. The former director and chief editor of the Vatican Television Centre (CTV) sees primarily a cost factor in Osservatore Romano. The Italian edition will be transferred from a daily newspaper to a weekly newspaper to reduce costs. Several different languages, weekly expenses, including shifting the German edition completely to the Internet.
Pope Francis has a different view, at least as regards Argentina. The Pope gave orders to start its own edition of the Osservatore Romano for Argentina. This was due to the recent polemics in his home about his relationship since December 2015 with incumbent President Mauricio Macri and the Papal Foundation Scholas Occurrentes.
An Argentinean edition of the Osservatore Romano is to offer "complete and unabridged, the Pope's words" as reported by the Argentine news agency, Telam . The papal intention had already turned into the concrete implementation as "Vatican sources confirmed," say the news agency.
The Argentine edition is to appear from next September. It will be operated out of Silvana Perez's Spanish weekly edition, which is respectively extended by a 4-8-page special Argentine supplement.
The Pope's "heretical" Ghostwriter accepts supervisory role
The authors of this special supplement are personally "selected and authorized by the Pope" so Telam. The oversight of the supplement is to be undertaken officially by the Argentine Episcopal Conference, but in fact a "publisher Commission" is to be headed by the papal confidant Msgr. Victor Manuel Fernández.
Victor Manuel Fernandez Accepts Supervisory Role |
Fernández is considered the intellectual factotum of Pope Francis. Jorge Mario Bergoglio assigned him as rector of the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina in 2009 against strong resistance in the Vatican. Exactly two months after his election as Pope Francis, he appointed him Titular Archbishop.
Officially, the Rector in Buenos Aires, Msgr. Fernández, adheres more in Rome than in Argentina. He is known as one of the Pope's closest confidants, but also as ghostwriter . Both Evangelii gaudium and Laudato si and Amoris laetitia are attributed to a significant extent to the feather of the Argentine prelate. This also applies to the controversial wording of the post-synodal letter Amoris laetitia.
No less than the prefect of the CDF, Cardinal Gerhard Müller, described the papal text's author as "heretical".
Editorial director is a Protestant theologian, technical director, a Peronist
While the oversight of the Argentine Osservatore Romano will be the "heretical" Titular Archbishop Fernández, the editorial line will be taken over by the Protestant theologian Marcelo Figueroa.
Santiago Pont Lezica and Marcelo Figueroa Santiago Pont Lezica and Marcelo Figueroa
The appointment of Figueroa underlines "the ecumenical character", which Pope Francis has given his pontificate, says Telam .
Santiago Pont Lezica and Marcelo Figueroa |
The technical management is accepted by Santiago Pont Lezica, the director of FM Milenium, a private radio city in Buenos Aires. Before that, FM Milenium 1998 was founded by the late Bernardo Neustadt, the former press secretary of Juan Perón. The Peronist Neustadt was born in 1925 in Jassenmarkt (Romanian Iaşi), the old Romanian capital. When he was six months old, his family emigrated to Argentina, where he was one of the most influential political journalists since the late 50s.
Figueroa and Pont Lezica met last June with Pope Francis in Santa Marta to discuss the Argentine Osservatore. On this occasion, they led an interview with the now departing Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi SJ.. Lombardi said that with controversial papal statements, it was necessary "to go to the sources, to the direct words of the Pope, and there will be no polemics."
Argentina will thus be the first country, outside of Italy, to have its own edition appearing since Osservatore Romano was founded in 1861, which since 2007 has been led by the Italian journalist Giovanni Maria Vian.
Text: Giuseppe Nardi
Photo: Osservatore Romano / Wikicommons / Baet / Youtube (screenshots)
Trans: Tancred vekron99@hotmail.com
Edit: check out Catholic Germ Culture, HO HUM, just another day in Francesco Church.
Link to Katholisches...
AMDG
Vatican II sucks.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if PF considers Mr. Figueroa to be a "brother bishop"? After all, Protestants helped to design the Novus Ordo Mass at Vat II, and they administer Catholic schools and colleges, and run Catholic retreat centers, so, why not?
ReplyDeleteHmmm, I wonder whether the Argentinian edition is going to have singles dating serve ads, nightclub ads, an advice column for the lovelorn, and protestant megachurch ads? And will thy take circus ads, then?
ReplyDeleteOsservatore Romano has been putting out unCatholic crap for years. They spend more print space fawning over rock "stars" than they do on anything remotely Catholic. Putting a heretic in as editor is just the cherry on top of the cupcake. Who cares?
ReplyDeleteMost people aren't as sage as you obviously are.
DeleteI care when they are doing it with my money !
ReplyDeleteSo stop giving--I have. Just donate to very particular projects--like an orphan or specific program.
ReplyDeleteA special Argentinian edition, just so that Bergoglio can continue his feuding with other Argentinians! What a narcissistic and petty minded "pastor".
ReplyDeleteThat's about it, too.
DeleteThey're going to run L'Osservatore Romano into the ground and out of existence. Tragic, because this Vatican newspaper was once very faithful to the Pope and Church, up until the 1960's. Under JPII, it became a rag, like People Magazine etc., or the gossip newspapers stacked in the check out lines in grocery stores like Giant and Acme, Krogers, etc.
ReplyDeleteThe circulation of this trashy newspaper has likewise plunged , so don't be surprised if the Argentine branch, as well as the Vatican brand itself, flops before too long.
Damian Malliapalli