Tuesday, April 21, 2026

One year ago today: The pope from the peripheries died on Easter Monday

One year ago today, Pope Francis died at 7:35 a.m., April 21, 2025.

It came the day after Easter, when - barely able to raise his hands - he gave his blessing urbi et orbi (to the city and the world). Looking drawn and worn, the 88-year-old pope from Argentina took his final ride in the popemobile, spending about 15 minutes among the crowd.

But then, the next morning, which was a major holiday in Italy, church bells tolled the death knell after U.S. Cardinal Kevin Farrell, chamberlain of the Holy Roman Church, announced that Francis had died just a few hours ago.

"His whole life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and his church," Farrell said in a video announcement broadcast from the chapel of the Domus Sanctae Marthae, where Francis lived.

The Wikimedia Foundation said that its "Deaths in 2025" entry, which included Francis, was their second most-read entry during the year. 

And plenty of people took the occasion to learn more about his life too, adding that "His English Wikipedia article was the 11th most-read (page) of the year."

Elected March 13, 2013, Francis was the first pope in history to come from the Southern Hemisphere, the first non-European to be elected in almost 1,300 years and the first Jesuit to serve as successor to St. Peter.

Following in the footsteps of his predecessors, Francis was an untiring voice for peace, urging an end to armed conflict, supporting dialogue and encouraging reconciliation.

He gave new energy to millions of Catholics - and caused concern for some - as he transformed the image of the papacy into a pastoral ministry based on personal encounters and strong convictions about poverty, mission and dialogue.

His simple lifestyle, which included his decision not to live in the Apostolic Palace and his choice of riding around Rome in a small Fiat or Ford instead of a Mercedes sedan, sent a message of austerity to Vatican officials and clergy throughout the church.

Although he repeatedly said he did not like to travel, he made 47 foreign trips, taking his message of Gospel joy to North and South America, Europe, Africa and Asia.

He was elected after Pope Benedict XVI retired in 2013. 

Then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was already a known and respected figure within the College of Cardinals, so much so that no-one disputed a respected Italian journal's report that he had received the second-highest number of votes on all four ballots cast in the 2005 conclave that had elected Benedict.

Elected on March 13, 2013, Bergoglio chose the name Francis to honor St. Francis of Assisi.

"Go out" was Francis' constant plea to every Catholic, from curial cardinals to the people in the pews. 

More than once, he told people that while the Bible presents Jesus as knocking at the door of people's hearts to get in, today Jesus is knocking at the doors of parish churches trying to get out and among the people.

Pope Francis revealed: His final days, intimate friends and a legacy to keep

Right after his death on April 21, 2025, everything that had belonged to Pope Francis was packed, in a matter of a couple of hours, into several specially sealed boxes, under the careful supervision of his closest collaborators.

The situation was dictated by the practical need to clear out Casa Santa Marta, the Vatican building that has always existed as a kind of guesthouse to accommodate the cardinals participating in a conclave.

In those days, there was a constant flurry with people doing repainting, cleaning and renovation work.

And yet, amid the hurried clearing of rooms one detail lingered.

As Vatican News journalist Salvatore Cernuzio tells it in his new book: "I was told that, during the general reordering, a photograph of me - with my wife and my children - was found in the pope's study." 

The image, taken during a Christmas trip to Assisi, Italy, had been donated to Francis and placed by him beneath a statue of St. Joseph, among the "cases" he entrusted to prayer every night. "So that he may pray for us."

"I always pray for you. You must do the same for me," Francis had told him repeatedly.

That small, intimate scene - part memory, part revelation - captures the essence of Padre: An Untold Portrait of Pope Francis, Cernuzio's book, published April 7, that in two weeks, climbed Italian bestseller lists. 

Neither a traditional biography nor a strictly journalistic account, Padre unfolds as something closer to a personal testimony, a narrative built from proximity, trust and the unusual, intimate relationship between its author and the late pope.

"Even now I still ask myself why I did it," Cernuzio said of his decision to write the book, after years spent covering the Vatican for official media and now continuing his work under Pope Leo XIV. 

Cernuzio said that he felt it "could be something good - not to add anything to what people already know, namely how extraordinary this pope was. The only added value is the fact that I truly experienced unique situations."

Those "unique situations" form the backbone of his book. Cernuzio's relationship with the pope began almost by accident - on a papal flight to Iraq in 2021, when the young journalist handed Francis a letter. 

Months later, he received an unexpected phone call: "Good morning, this is Pope Francis."

From there, a connection developed of regular conversations, emails, invitations and even gifts for Cernuzio's four children.

"I had nothing written down, but everything was engraved in my heart," he told the National Catholic Reporter. The impulse to write came later, prompted by a colleague's suggestion: "In time you'll grow old and forget, but you'll have to tell it to your children."

At its core, his book is a portrait of Francis who appears deeply engaged with the crises of his time. 

It also reveals how, in the final months of his life, the pope considered a series of symbolic and physically demanding journeys: to the Gaza Strip, where he had been calling the only local Catholic parish every evening during the bombings; to Cutro, in southern Italy, to honor dozens of migrants who died at sea; to Cape Verde and the Canary Islands, to confront firsthand the realities of migration.

At one point, Cernuzio revealed, Francis even entertained the idea of a solo diplomatic mission between Moscow and Kyiv, Ukraine, hoping - despite his age and declining health - to act as a mediator capable of ending the war.

These ambitions, as Cernuzio presented them, were not political calculations so much as extensions of a pastoral instinct. 

The same instinct that led Francis to maintain a nightly phone call with a small parish under bombardment, or to express a desire to spend Christmas "under any conditions" among its congregation. 

It was, in the author's words, part of a broader vision: "the importance of opening up and engaging in dialogue with the world and with uncomfortable realities."

But Padre is also equally concerned with the pope's everyday humanity. 

The anecdotes scattered throughout its pages - many of them drawn from moments the author witnessed firsthand - reveal a man at ease with humor and contradiction, such as Francis teasing heads of government, the pope watching viral clips and laughing, or rolling down a car window in Rome's busy traffic at a traffic light just to greet surprised strangers.

"He met so many people, spoke with everyone and opened his doors many times - perhaps even too many," Cernuzio said. "I myself thought I was just one of many. But I realized that I had actually lived something unique: experiencing him almost daily, the kindness of his gestures, his phone calls, his gifts. And above all, having a truly personal relationship that went beyond work."

That relationship also extended into the author's family life. Cernuzio's children, for instance, grew up with a pope who was a recurring presence. 

"For them, a pope calling the house during dinner to ask how we were doing was something normal," he said.

"My eldest son once used as an excuse at school that he hadn't done his homework because he was going to see the pope," he said.

The normalization of the extraordinary is one of the book's quiet themes. It surfaces again in a small but telling detail: the absence, after Francis' death, of the chocolate Easter eggs he used to send Cernuzio for his children.

The emotional center of Padre lies in its final chapters, where the narrative narrows to the last encounters between the journalist and the pope. 

Cernuzio was among the very few secretly admitted to Francis' private apartment after his final hospitalization.

In recounting those moments, Cernuzio's tone shifts - from observer to participant, from narrator to witness. "We often said, 'Ti voglio bene,' " which is an exquisitely Italian expression close to "I love you" but used in friendship contexts, "and that was the last thing I said to him," Cernuzio recalled.

The next day, Cernuzio accompanied the pope on what would be his final visit to a prison, on Holy Thursday. 

Four days later came the end.

The book does not attempt to redefine Francis' legacy in doctrinal or institutional terms. Instead, it reframes it through lived experience, suggesting that the essence of his pontificate might be found as much in private gestures as in public acts.

"I believe that what has not been understood at all about Francis' pontificate is its prophetic nature," Cernuzio said. "He has been described in every possible way. ... I think the only truly valid label is that he was prophetic." 

For the author, that prophecy was expressed in choices - whom to meet, where to go, what risks to consider - and in a consistent emphasis on human connection over ideological alignment.

The success of Padre has not unfolded in isolation. In these same weeks, another Italian volume has entered the public conversation, offering a different but complementary way of reflecting on Francis' legacy. 

Reactivating Pope Francis, edited by Italian theologians Piotr Zygulski, Andrea Bosio and Lucandrea Massaro, gathers the voices of 40 theologians, intellectuals, scholars and church leaders from around the world - prominent authors and theologians such as Massimo Faggioli, Cardinal Timothy Radcliffe, Gilles Routhier, Jesuit Fr. James Martin and Jesuit Fr. Antonio Spadaro, but also young religion teachers.

If Cernuzio's book is rooted in lived experience, this second work seeks to interpret, question and "reactivate" a papacy that still resists easy definition.

The project, Zygulski told NCR, was not meant to celebrate or criticize Francis in a simple way, but to take him seriously as a figure who opened processes rather than closing debates. That idea - of a pope who preferred movement over certainties - runs through the entire volume.

"Part of the Catholic world expected clear answers and firm positions from Pope Francis on many issues," Zygulski said. "Whereas Francis was the pope of open worksites, of the open door, of processes, of ongoing developments."

At the center of this reflection is the idea of "process." Francis, as Zygulski said, "initiated paths of synodality and dialogue. He made it possible to talk about certain topics that had been taboo, that were obstructed, and that were difficult to discuss openly. He opened doors, even if he did not always walk through them."

This emphasis helps explain why the debate around his legacy remains so alive. For some, the lack of definitive answers was frustrating. For others, it was precisely the point. 

The reflections of top theologians in the book suggest that Francis' real impact may not lie in single decisions he made, but in the habits he encouraged worldwide Catholics to practice: listening, questioning, engaging the world.

That outward movement - what Francis himself often called a "church that goes forth" - is another thread that connects the two books. 

In Padre, it appears in Francis' desire to travel to places of suffering forgotten by mainstream media. 

In Reactivating Pope Francis, it is framed as a historic theological and pastoral shift.

Popemobile child clinic yet to reach Gaza one year after Francis's death

On the first anniversary of the death of Pope Francis, one of his last wishes - to convert his popemobile into a mobile clinic for children and send it to war-torn Gaza - is still waiting to be granted.

"It was really the wish of the Holy Father to be able to do something for the children of Gaza," a close confidant of the late pontiff, Cardinal Anders Arborelius of Sweden, tells me. "It's a symbol of hope."

The iconic popemobile - from which the pope waved at crowds of thousands of Palestinian Christians during his trip to the Holy Land in 2014 - was afterwards kept on display outside a Church-owned ice-cream parlour in Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank.

Last November, I was shown the newly refitted vehicle equipped for trauma care and vaccinations and told it could treat up to 200 children a day. However, today it remains in a glass case in the same place.

Caritas Jerusalem - the local branch of the international Catholic charity, Caritas - carried out the work on the popemobile for the Vehicle of Hope project and planned to send the vehicle to Gaza.

Then, in December, it was included on a list of 37 foreign non-governmental organisations (NGOs) ordered to stop work by the Israeli authorities after they failed to comply with controversial new "security and transparency" requirements, including staff disclosures.

Since then, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem has successfully made the case that the new regulations do not apply to Caritas Jerusalem because it has a long-standing, special legal status "operating under the aegis and governance of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land".

Regarding the Vehicle of Hope, a local Caritas spokesperson told the BBC that the organisation was "in dialogue with the authorities" and that a permit for the converted popemobile was being processed through the Church.

In a statement, Cogat, the Israeli defence body which controls the crossings to Gaza, said it had arranged for two mobile clinics to be sent by the Latin Patriarchate in February and was "not aware of any request to bring additional vehicles into the Strip."

It added: "Should an orderly request be submitted through the accepted channels, it will be examined accordingly."

Cardinal Arborelius hopes that permission will soon be given for the converted popemobile to enter Gaza. "It's a purely humanitarian action, it has nothing to do with politics," he says.

"We think it could be very important for everyone. It would show the goodwill of the authorities of Israel, it will give hope to the people, and it will show that somehow the spiritual heritage of Pope Francis is respected."

"That was his wish, to create good relationships between all peoples, all religions, and especially in favour of children who have a very, very difficult situation."

A short video released by the Vatican upon the death of Pope Francis showed his intimate relationship with Gaza's tiny Christian community, many of whom he came to know by name. He can be seen chatting with priests at the Holy Family Church in Gaza City.

After war broke out following Hamas's deadly attacks on Israel in October 2023, many displaced Christians moved into the church. The late pope took to calling almost nightly to check on their wellbeing and would talk to different members of the congregation.

In his Easter message last year – his last public appearance – Pope Francis repeated his call for peace and a ceasefire in Gaza. With his words read by an aide, he said: "The terrible conflict continues to cause death and destruction and to create a dramatic and deplorable humanitarian situation.''

Two years of conflict in Gaza have severely weakened Gaza's health system. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), only half of all hospitals are partly functional and specialised medical care is largely unavailable.

Since a ceasefire came into force in October, work has been slow to repair damaged healthcare facilities and increase medical supplies and services. 

The WHO says some 18,500 people, including 4,000 children, are on waiting lists for medical evacuations, in many cases for lifesaving treatment.

Church in Wales: New bishop needed to rebuild trust after cathedral controversy

The Church in Wales is advertising for a new Bishop of Bangor following the retirement of Archbishop Andrew John amid a safeguarding crisis at the cathedral.

Most Rev Andrew John stepped down in August 2025 after an independent review found "a culture in which sexual boundaries seemed blurred" and "promiscuity was acceptable" at Bangor Cathedral. 

The report also cited inappropriate language, rude jokes in the choir, and weak financial controls.

The diocese has said it is seeking a bishop who can "rebuild trust and relationships" and act as "a healer and pastor, with discernment and integrity".

A "mood board" published by the Church in Wales describes the ideal candidate as "a shepherd, pastor, with a geniune deep faith-loving people" who can offer "strategic thinking" while remaining sensitive to those affected by recent events.

Applicants are advised that the diocese has faced "considerable media attention and general external scrutiny" but is "recovering well".

Archbishop Andrew, who has served as Bishop of Bangor since 2008 and became Archbishop of Wales in 2021, acknowledged the findings were "hard to hear" but said they "must be faced if we are to move forward with integrity". 

There is no suggestion that he personally behaved inappropriately.

The Diocese of Bangor covers north-west Wales, including Gwynedd and Anglesey. 

Its mother church, St Deiniol's Cathedral, celebrated its 1,500th anniversary last year.

Message from His Holiness Pope Leo XIV to His Eminence Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, Dean of the College of Cardinals, on the 1st Anniversary of the death of Pope Francis


 _________________________________

Al Signor Cardinale

Giovanni Battista Re

Decano del Collegio Cardinalizio

__________________________________

Nel primo anniversario della morte del caro Papa Francesco, è viva nella Chiesa e nel mondo la sua memoria. Assente da Roma per il Viaggio apostolico in Africa, mi associo spiritualmente a quanti si raccoglieranno nella Basilica Liberiana per offrire il Sacrificio eucaristico in suffragio del mio Predecessore. Saluto con affetto, insieme con i Cardinali, i Vescovi, i sacerdoti e i religiosi, i pellegrini giunti per testimoniargli affetto e riconoscenza.

La morte non è un muro, ma una porta che si spalanca sulla Misericordia che Papa Francesco ha instancabilmente annunciato. Il Signore lo ha chiamato a sé il 21 aprile dell’anno scorso, nel cuore della luce pasquale. Ha concluso il suo pellegrinaggio terreno nell'abbraccio di Cristo Risorto, in quella “gioia del Vangelo” che ha ispirato una tra le più incisive sue Esortazioni Apostoliche.

È stato successore di Pietro e pastore della Chiesa universale in un tempo che ha segnato e ancora sta segnando un cambiamento d’epoca, quel cambiamento di cui Egli è stato pienamente consapevole, offrendo a tutti noi una testimonianza coraggiosa, che rappresenta un significativo patrimonio per la Chiesa.

Il suo magistero è stato vissuto da discepolo-missionario, come amava dire. È rimasto discepolo del Signore, fedele al suo Battesimo e alla consacrazione nel ministero episcopale, fino alla fine. È stato anche missionario, annunciando il Vangelo della misericordia “a tutti, a tutti, a tutti”, come ebbe a dire più volte. I benefici suscitati dalla sua testimonianza di Pastore sollecito ha contagiato il cuore di tanta gente, sino agli estremi confini della terra, grazie anche ai pellegrinaggi apostolici e specialmente a quell'ultimo “viaggio” che è stata la sua malattia e la sua morte.

In sintonia con i suoi predecessori, ha raccolto l’eredità del Concilio Vaticano II e ha spronato la Chiesa ad essere aperta alla missione, custode della speranza del mondo, appassionata per l’annuncio di quel Vangelo che è capace di dare a ogni vita pienezza e felicità.

Ancora sentiamo risuonare le sue esortazioni, espresse con parole eloquenti, per rendere più comprensibile la lieta notizia: misericordia, pace, fratellanza, odore delle pecore, ospedale da campo e tante altre. Ognuna di queste espressioni ci riporta al Vangelo da Lui vissuto con un linguaggio nuovo che annuncia lo stesso Vangelo di sempre.

Papa Francesco ha nutrito una profonda devozione a Maria in tutta la sua vita; ricordiamo, infatti, che si è recato tante volte a Santa Maria Maggiore, luogo della sua sepoltura, e in molti santuari mariani sparsi nel mondo. La Vergine Maria, Madre della Chiesa, ci aiuti a essere in ogni circostanza apostoli infaticabili del suo divin Figlio e profeti del suo amore misericordioso.

Dal Vaticano, 12 aprile 2026

LEONE PP. XIV

Apostolic Journey to Equatorial Guinea: Visit to the Staff and Patients of the “Jean Pierre Olie” Psychiatric Hospital

Signor Direttore Generale,

distinte Autorità,

carissimi fratelli e sorelle!

Vi ringrazio di cuore per questa accoglienza, per la vostra ospitalità, per i canti, le danze. Grazie!

Ogni volta che visito un ospedale, una casa di accoglienza per persone che hanno magari alcune malattie o difficoltà, provo sentimenti contrastanti: da un lato, provo dolore o tristezza per le persone che stanno soffrendo, che spesso portano in sé un dolore molto grande, a volte con ferite visibili e a volte con ferite che nessuno vede, ma che la persona stessa sa di portare nel proprio cuore, nella propria vita. Provo dolore per le famiglie che spesso non sanno come accompagnare il paziente e aiutarlo.  

Ma al tempo stesso provo ammirazione e conforto per tutto ciò che lì ogni giorno si fa per servire la vita umana. Anche qui mi succede questo, ma oggi in me, e spero anche in tutti voi, prevale la gioia e la speranza: la gioia di incontrarci nel nome del Signore, la gioia e la speranza di sapere che ci stiamo prendendo cura di chi vive una condizione di fragilità.

Alcune parole che ho ascoltato adesso mi hanno commosso.

Il Direttore ha detto: “Una società veramente gande non è quella che nasconde le sue debolezze, ma quella che le circonda di amore”. Sì, è così. Questo è un principio di civiltà che ha radici cristiane, perché è Cristo che nella storia dell’umanità ha riscattato la disabilità dalla maledizione e l’ha restituita a piena dignità. Ma il Salvatore non vuole e non può salvarci senza la nostra collaborazione, sia sul piano personale che su quello sociale: perciò ci chiede di amare i nostri fratelli e le nostre sorelle non a parole ma nei fatti. Una casa di cura come questa, con l’aiuto di Dio e con l’impegno di tutti, può diventare un segno della civiltà dell’amore.

Il Signor Pedro Celestino ha voluto concludere con un’espressione toccante: “Grazie di amarci così come siamo”. Perciò dico: Grazie a Lei, per la Sua testimonianza! Grazie a tutti voi per essere qui a dare testimonianza, segno che qui in questo luogo c’è amore autentico.

Dio ci ama come siamo. Solo Dio, in realtà, ci ama totalmente così come siamo. Ma non perché rimaniamo come siamo! No, Dio non ci vuole sempre malati, sempre sofferenti, ci vuole guarire! Questo si vede mille volte nel Vangelo: Gesù è venuto ad amarci come siamo ma non per lasciarci così, per prendersi cura di noi! E un ospedale, specialmente se ha un’ispirazione cristiana, è proprio questo: un luogo dove la persona è accolta così com’è, rispettata nella sua fragilità, ma per aiutarla a stare meglio, in una visione integrale. A tale scopo la dimensione spirituale è essenziale – mi ha fatto molto piacere che il Direttore l’abbia sottolineato.

Infine, grazie al Signor Tarcisio per la sua poesia! Vorrei dire che in un ambiente come questo si compongono ogni giorno tante “poesie” nascoste, forse non con parole, ma con piccoli gesti, con sentimenti, con attenzioni nei rapporti tra di voi. È un poema che solo Dio sa leggere pienamente e che consola il Cuore misericordioso di 

Carissimi, vi prego di esprimere la mia vicinanza a tutti i malati dell’ospedale, specialmente a quelli più gravi e più soli. A ciascuno, pazienti, operatori sanitari e personale, imparto di cuore la mia benedizione, affidandovi alla protezione di Maria, Salute dei malati. Tante grazie!

Four commissioners appointed to historical sexual abuse in schools commission

Four commissioners have been appointed to the Commission of Investigation into the Handling of Historical Child Sexual Abuse in Schools.

Ms Justice Mary Ellen Ring, senior legal consultant Roddy Bourke, and child safeguarding experts Kieran McGrath and Michele Clarke will join Mr Justice Michael MacGrath, who was appointed as chair last year, in leading the work of the Commission.

Minister for Education Hildegarde Naughton, under whose department the commission was established, said the combined expertise of the appointees would be critical in underpinning the "independence and effectiveness" of the commission.

The commission was established following the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools run by religious orders.

The scoping inquiry followed serious and troubling allegations of abuse which highlighted the need for a comprehensive, independent investigation.

Mr Justice McGrath was appointed to the role as head of the Commission of Investigation in July last year.

There is concern among survivors that the pace of the commission's work has been slow.

However, the commission's remit - investigating how concerns or allegations of child sexual abuse were handled in all day and boarding schools in Ireland, including special schools, between 1927 and 2013 - is widely acknowledged as extensive.

In addition to the appointment of the four commissioners, the Minister for Education has also approved the appointment of Mary O' Toole, who chaired the scoping inquiry, as senior legal advisor to the commission.

Under its terms of reference, the commission is required to investigate how concerns of child sexual abuse were handled by schools and other relevant bodies.

It is not tasked with investigating individual cases of child sexual abuse or making findings in this regard.

In a statement, Minister Naughton said survivors must be at the heart of the process.

"A survivor-centred, trauma-informed approach will guide all aspects of the Commission’s work. I am conscious that individuals may come forward with deeply personal and sensitive experiences.

"It is essential that their information is treated with the highest standards of care, confidentiality and respect. I welcome the Commission’s careful and considered approach to ensuring these protections are fully in place before engagement begins," she said.

Campaign to help mother-and-baby home survivors in UK

Survivors of mother-and-baby homes are stepping up their campaign to help those who now live in the UK.

There are concerns that former residents of these institutions are not claiming the redress they are entitled to because they risk losing out on means-tested benefits.

The British government has pledged to change this through what is known as Philomena's Law - but the legislation has not been enacted, leaving thousands of survivors in limbo.

Among them is Rosemary Adaser, who lived in a mother and baby home as a child, and later gave birth in a home. She now lives in west London and she is reluctant to claim the redress she is entitled to.

She said that it was a "major oversight" in the scheme not to consider the impact that payments would have on social welfare claims in the UK, where up to 17,000 eligible survivors live.

Speaking on RTÉ's News At One, she said: "We are scared because should we accept compensation, the state supports that we rely on will cease and then we're left in a state of poverty. And that's very scary at our age."

Ms Adaser said the group most impacted by this are people who were on lower incomes, who could not pay into private pensions.

"So the fear is actually that we can't afford to accept the pension because the social care that is free to us right now, the additional financial supports that we enjoy, can be removed and that taxation would also be a factor."

'Difficult to engage with the redress scheme itself'

Ms Adaser said while it was difficult for some survivors to be reminded of their past traumas, most believed that they were entitled to the compensation. She said there were more practical problems.

"It's actually quite difficult to engage with the redress scheme itself. You have to be computer literate for starters. The portal system they have there, is not very informative, doesn't give you a lot of information at all.

"So those of us are lucky to have access to Irish centres, like the Irish in Britain in Camden, Liverpool and Birmingham. We're very fortunate, but there'll be thousands who are living in rural areas without that kind of support. What are they going to do?"

Ms Adaser said her situation contrasted with that of her twin brother who lives in Ireland.

"He claimed his compensation - got it within weeks. And I think that's why he's feeling so aggrieved on my behalf, because we endured the same degree of abuse as very young children in Ireland's mother-and-baby institutions.

"But while he is sitting pretty with his little bit of compensation, I'm over in the UK too terrified to apply for mine."

Last month, the British government said it would support legislation known as Philomena's Law, named after Philomena Lee, to ensure that people do not lose their benefits.

"That was a very big win on the 13th of March 2026," said lawyer Caoilfhionn Gallagher.

"There was an acknowledgement at the UK-Ireland summit when the prime minister and the Taoiseach spoke together that there should be a disregard.

"So there's been a principled acceptance in March 2026 that this should happen."

'We don't yet have Philomena's Law on the statute book'

Ms Gallagher said there is a two-fold problem with the proposed disregard.

"Although there was that agreement in principle, we don't yet have Philomena's Law on the statute book.

"And that's why Rosemary (Adaser) followed up her earlier threat of legal action against the UK government, by asking them, now that they've made the in-principle agreement, to actually bring in guidance from the Department of Work and Pensions to make clear that people shouldn't have their benefits deducted while we're waiting for Philomena's Law to become law.

"I'm pleased to say she got that guidance last week, so that's positive, but it's only guidance and we don't yet have it on the statute books.

"That's why Rosemary's now asking for this to be in the King's Speech next month and she would like support from Irish politicians and from the Irish public, in putting pressure on the UK government to do right by these 13,000 survivors of institutional abuse in Ireland who've made their homes in Britain," she added.

Ms Gallagher also wants the disregard to apply retrospectively to those who already applied for compensation.

"The second thing is that we know that there were about 770 people who claimed compensation between February 2024 when the scheme opened and the 13th of March 2026 when the concession was made by Prime Minister Starmer in Cork.

"And we are very worried, that of those 770 people, a sizeable number of them are likely to have had a financial penalty. And that is not right."

Ms Gallagher said she thinks this is an issue for the Irish Government to address.

"That's why we're now saying the Irish Government, Irish politicians and the Irish people need to put pressure on the British government to do all they can to now convert this in practice into the resolution that survivors need.

"Just speaking very frankly, many of the survivors are elderly. They're not well. I'm aware of survivors who've died while waiting for this, who didn't claim their compensation.

"Survivors who are very, very elderly and unwell. And time is not on their side. We need to get a move on here," she added.

One Year Without Francis: A Review of a Pontificate That Fractured the Church

On April 21, 2025, Easter Monday, Jorge Mario Bergoglio died in Santa Marta. 

A year has passed and the mourning is no longer news: what remains is the balance.

I. The Man

Bergoglio arrived at the balcony on March 13, 2013, with a «buona sera» that was, at once, a greeting and a program. 

He came from Buenos Aires with the reputation of an austere archbishop - subway, small apartment, peripheries - carefully built by his friendly biographers. 

The reality of the porteño government was more complex: an iron hand with collaborators, a long memory for offenses, a marked preference for suspicion over priests of traditional sensitivity, and a network of personal loyalties that he would later replicate in Rome.

He was a Jesuit from the generation that followed the expulsion of the traditionalists from the Company, formed in the atmosphere of the theology of the people - younger sister but unmistakable of the theology of liberation - that read the Gospel in a key of sociological protagonism of the poor rather than in a key of the Kingdom. 

Pious in Latin American popular devotion; intellectually impatient with anything that smelled of doctrinal rigor. 

That combination explains almost everything: the kisses to prisoners on Holy Thursday and the devastating letters to communities that only asked to be able to pray with the 1962 Missal are not a paradox, they are a method.

He died weakened after the long stay at the Gemelli in February-March 2025. He wanted to be buried in Santa Maria Maggiore, outside the Vatican. 

Even in the sepulcher, the calculated gesture of distance from a Tradition that he had decided to use as a backdrop and not as a home.

II. The Communicator

Francis was an intuitive and effective communicator, and here credit must be given where it is due. 

He understood before almost anyone in the Curia that the image weighs more than the text, that the gesture travels faster than the encyclical, and that a Pope who walks barefoot in Lampedusa has more reach than one who signs documents in Latin. 

The problem is that he confused reach with evangelizing effectiveness. 

That millions see a photo does not mean that millions convert; it means, simply, that millions see a photo.

The preferred style - brief homily from Santa Marta, interview on the plane, loose phrase - produced during twelve years a constant drip of calculated ambiguity. 

The famous «Who am I to judge?» was not a slip: it was a formula that Francis allowed to circulate knowing perfectly well how it would be read outside the Church and within it. 

The interviews with Scalfari - an agnostic who reconstructed the conversations without a recorder and published theological barbarities signed by the Pope - were repeated up to six times. 

After the first, it was no longer carelessness: it was connivance with a format that allowed saying what could not be written and half-denying it when convenient.

And then there is the central contradiction of the public figure: a Pope who preached synodality, decentralization, and a «polyhedral» Church governed with an authoritarianism that John Paul II or Benedict XVI would not have signed. 

Lightning appointments by phone, improvised commissariats over entire congregations, rescripta ex audientia without passing through the competent dicasteries, use of the motu proprio as a hammer. 

The Church «outgoing» toward the outside coexisted with an inward Church where publicly dissenting from the Pope had immediate professional cost. 

One cannot preach parrhesia to the faithful and practice forced silence with the cardinals.

III. The Five Documents That Define the Pontificate

From Francis’s magisterial production—four encyclicals, seven apostolic exhortations, dozens of motu proprio - five texts summarize the legacy. 

The longest or most cited ones have not been chosen, but those that will weigh the most in the next fifty years, for better or worse.

1. Evangelii Gaudium (2013)

Programmatic apostolic exhortation. The manifesto of the pontificate.

Published eight months after the election, it is the matrix text. 

Here Francis sets the vocabulary, the enemy, and the method. The vocabulary: «Church in exit», «mercy», «shepherds with the smell of sheep». 

The enemy: the «doctor of the law», the «museum Christian», the «neopelagian» - categories that in his twelve years of pontificate he would systematically apply against anyone who defends the norm, never against anyone who dissolves it. 

The method: the four principles of chapter IV, especially the famous «time is superior to space» (EG 222-225), which is much more than a pastoral aphorism. 

It is a magisterial license to open doctrinal processes without closing them, to launch questions without resolving them, to sow changes that will mature with bolder successors. 

It is the theoretical core of the Bergoglio method: not to define, to condition.

To this is added the treatment of the Jewish people in EG 247 - «we can never consider that the Old Testament has lost its vigor» - which in the context of the document slips dangerously toward the thesis of two parallel covenants that Ratzinger had contained with extreme care. 

And a constant that would repeat until the end: the caricature of the traditional Catholic as rigid, unhappy, and fearful, presented as pastoral analysis when it is, simply, a judgment of intentions about millions of faithful whom the Pope never bothered to know.

It is literarily brilliant. It is pastorally useful in stretches. 

And it is, at the same time, the foundational act of everything that would come after.

2. Laudato si’ (2015)

Encyclical on the care of the common home.

The first encyclical entirely his own - Lumen Fidei was a finished text by Benedict XVI with a changed signature - and the only major document of the pontificate that holds up if the accompanying ecological propaganda is abstracted. 

It recovers the doctrine of man as custodian of creation, denounces the practical relativism of consumption, and, above all, explicitly links environmental ecology and human ecology: there is no coherent defense of the forest without defense of the unborn, and one cannot protect the animal while discarding the elderly (LS 117, 120). 

That thesis is deeply Catholic and should have been formulated before.

That said, the encyclical has two serious burdens. 

The first: it adopts the IPCC climate consensus as if it were revealed data, confusing what is majority scientific opinion with what would be binding doctrine. 

It is not for the Pope to canonize a climatological model, just as it did not correspond to Leo XIII to canonize an economic model. 

The second: the language about «Mother Earth», the uncritical quotes from Bartholomew, and certain cosmological passages open a door to environmental pantheism that theologians less prudent than Francis - starting with the Amazonian wing of the pontificate - would cross joyfully five years later with the Pachamama strolling through the Vatican gardens.

The best document of the pontificate. Which says as much about its value as about the general level of the other four.

3. Amoris Laetitia (2016)

Post-synodal apostolic exhortation on love in the family.

The document that broke the sacramental unity of the Catholic Church. What is at stake in chapter VIII and in the sadly famous note 351 is not a minor pastoral question: it is whether a faithful who lives objectively in adultery - second civil union with legitimate spouse alive - can be absolved and admitted to communion without purpose of amendment. 

Against twenty centuries of discipline, against Trent, against Familiaris Consortio, against Veritatis Splendor, Francis answered yes «in some cases». 

And then he systematically refused to clarify what cases, under what conditions, and with what criteria.

The five dubia presented by Brandmüller, Caffarra, Meisner, and Burke in September 2016 were technical questions, drafted in the most sober canonical language possible, that admitted a «yes» or «no» response. 

There never was one. Silence was the response. 

And the silence of the magisterium before legitimate questions about the magisterium is not neutrality: it is a deliberate taking of position for ambiguity. 

The private letter to the bishops of Buenos Aires endorsing their permissive interpretation - leaked later as if it were an official act - completed the mechanism: real guidance for those who wanted to read it; formal denial for those who protested.

The result is there to see. In Poland one discipline is applied; in Germany, another; in Argentina, another. 

The same sacrament, the same objective situation, incompatible responses according to the zip code. 

That is not legitimate pastoral diversity: it is the dissolution of sacramental catholicity. 

And the most serious thing is that the problem is irreversible without an explicit act by a successor, because the text is drafted precisely so that there is nothing to withdraw - only ambiguity to clarify.

The document where Bergoglio stopped being a pastor with a debatable method to become a Pontiff who consciously chose to break disciplinary unity in exchange for a concrete pastoral advance. And not even the advance was pastoral: it was ideological.

4. Traditionis Custodes (2021)

Apostolic letter in the form of motu proprio on the use of the Roman liturgy prior to 1970.

The most revealing document of the pontificate, because it is the only one in which Francis acted without any ambiguity. 

With Traditionis Custodes he revoked Benedict XVI’s Summorum Pontificum - still alive, still resident a few meters away - and subjected the celebration of the traditional Roman Missal to a regime of authorization, surveillance, and programmed extinction. 

The Responsa ad dubia of the following year, signed by Roche, closed the remaining cracks: prohibition of personal parishes, prohibition of promoting the traditional Mass in bulletins, obligation to use the new lectionary in Latin - an absurd combination that no one had asked for, restriction of ad tramitem ordinations.

The justification was a survey of the world’s bishops whose results the Vatican refused to publish. 

When fragments were leaked years later, they showed exactly the opposite of what was stated in the preamble of the motu proprio: the vast majority of bishops did not report serious problems with traditional communities. 

The Pope lied, or at least allowed Arthur Roche to lie in his name, about the documentary basis of the most severe act of government against a group of Catholic faithful in more than half a century.

What was punished with Traditionis Custodes was not schism - traditionalists in full communion are, by definition, not schismatics - but the very existence of a liturgical sensitivity that Bergoglio considered unbearable. 

The official argument—that these faithful rejected the Second Vatican Council—is false for the vast majority and, in any case, irrelevant: the Church has canonical mechanisms to deal with individual dissents, it does not need to extinguish an entire liturgy. 

Benedict XVI had written that «what was sacred for previous generations remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be suddenly totally forbidden». 

Francis decided that it could. 

And the distance between those two phrases measures exactly the rupture that this pontificate has introduced in the hermeneutic of continuity.

It is the most unjust act of the twelve years. Period.

5. Fiducia Supplicans (2023)

Declaration of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith on the pastoral sense of blessings.

The consummation of the method. Víctor Manuel Fernández, installed at the head of the former Holy Office with no more credentials than personal friendship with the Pope and a theological bibliography best not remembered, signed the declaration that allows blessing couples in irregular situations «including same-sex ones». 

The letter of the document says that the union is not blessed, only the persons; that there is no rite; that there is no equivalence with marriage. The letter says many things. 

The reality is that the next day the world’s headlines announced that the Church was blessing homosexual unions, and neither Fernández nor Francis did anything serious to deny it until four weeks later, when the fire in Africa had forced the rectification.

That rectification - the complementary note of January 2024 admitting that blessings must last seconds, without liturgical gestures, without vestments, without rings - is a confession of failure written with the greatest possible dignity. 

But the damage was done. And what will remain in memory is not the complementary note but the headline.

Even more serious was the ecclesial response. 

Practically the entire African episcopate, led by Ambongo, rejected the application of the document in their territories with a signed declaration that Francis himself had to endorse to avoid the ridicule of excommunicating half a continent. 

Episcopates of Asia, Eastern Europe, some bishops in the United States did the same. 

A declaration approved by the Pope and signed by the Prefect of the Doctrine of the Faith was rejected by entire episcopal conferences without any canonical consequence. 

That had not happened in the modern history of the Church. 

And it did not happen because the African bishops are rebels: it happened because the document was indefensible.

St. Thomas taught that a pastoral act whose objective meaning for the recipient contradicts what the text affirms is scandal. 

Fiducia Supplicans is the operational definition of scandal in moral theology: it was known how it would be read, it was drafted knowing it, and it was published anyway. It is not an error: it is a policy.

IV. What Remains

Twelve years later, the Church that Francis leaves is more known and less believed, more present in the media and less present in hearts, with the applause of politicians and media of the most stale left but with sacramental statistics that sink in almost the entire Western world. 

Vocations continue to fall. 

The German dioceses approach formal schism without Rome doing more than concerned letters. 

The traditional is persecuted. 

The modernists, rewarded. 

And the cardinalate, after twelve years of appointments, looks more like a network of personal loyalties than a representative college of the universal Church.

His successor faces an ungrateful task: to restore without vengeance, to clarify without humiliating, to pick up the pieces without turning the restoration into another rupture. 

We pray for him, and we also pray for Francis, who needs the mercy he preached so much now more than ever.

Requiescat in pace. Et lux perpetua luceat ei.

Cardinal Marx promotes blessings for irregular and same-sex couples in Munich

Cardinal Reinhard Marx has recommended that priests in the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising use a pastoral guide to bless couples who cannot or do not wish to enter into canonical marriage, including same-sex couples.

An internal letter to pastoral agents

According to the German outlet Katholisch.de, the Archbishop of Munich has sent a letter to priests and pastoral agents in which he proposes applying this guide as the basis for pastoral work in the diocese.

The content of the letter has not been published in full, but the archdiocese has confirmed its existence and its general orientation.

The document it refers to was approved last year by the German Episcopal Conference and the Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK), within the framework of the “Synodal Way”.

A guide to bless all kinds of couples

The text raises the possibility of blessing couples who do not access the sacrament of marriage, including remarried divorcees, same-sex couples, and unions that do not wish to be formalized canonically.

The proposal is supported by the Vatican document Fiducia supplicans, published in December 2023, which opened the door to non-liturgical blessings for couples in irregular situations.

Without binding character in the German Church

The guide was developed within a dialogue body between bishops and laity, which has no normative capacity. 

Therefore, its application depends on each diocesan bishop.

In practice, the majority of German dioceses allow or recommend its use, although some - such as Cologne, Regensburg, or Passau - have rejected its implementation.

Towards a new official ritual of blessings

In parallel, the Benediktionale - the book of blessings - is being revised for German-speaking countries. In this new liturgical book, specific formulas for the blessing of couples are expected to be included.

The person in charge of the working group responsible for the revision has stated that they consider it necessary to incorporate this type of blessings, as it was one of the aspects that drew the most attention in the review process in Rome.

New Chaldean patriarch returns to Iraq after his expulsion by ISIS in 2014

Paulos III Nona, newly elected Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans, will return to Iraq to assume his position after having been expelled from Mosul in 2014 by the Islamic State, at a time when the Chaldean Church is seeking to rebuild after the recent internal crisis.

From Mosul to exile: a Church forced to flee

According to the Iraqi Christian Foundation, Nona was the Chaldean archbishop of Mosul when, in the summer of 2014, ISIS terrorists took the city and forced the exodus of Christians.

The jihadist offensive led to the near-total emptying of one of the world’s oldest Christian communities. Nona, along with other ecclesiastical leaders, had to abandon the city along with his faithful.

Years of ministry outside Iraq

After those events, he was appointed in 2015 as Chaldean archbishop of Australia and New Zealand, moving his ministry outside Iraq at a time when the Christian presence in the country was going through one of its most critical stages.

During these years, the diaspora became one of the main destinations for Iraqi Christians fleeing violence and persecution.

Return as head of the Chaldean Church

More than a decade after the fall of Mosul, Nona has been elected Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans, the largest Christian community in Iraq.

His taking possession is scheduled for the end of May 2026 in Baghdad, in a ceremony that will mark his return to the country where he exercised his ministry before the emergence of terrorism.

A symbol for Iraqi Christians

The return of Nona as patriarch carries strong symbolic weight for the Iraqi Christian community, which in recent years has suffered displacements, persecution, and a notable reduction in its presence in the country.

His election and return are interpreted as a sign of continuity and reconstruction for a Church that seeks to remain in its land of origin despite the difficulties.

Bishops of the Holy Land denounce the desecration of the crucifix in Lebanon and demand sanctions

Following the dissemination of images of an Israeli soldier destroying an image of Christ in southern Lebanon and the subsequent reaction of the Israeli Government, the Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land has condemned the act and demanded accountability.

Condemnation following the profanation of the crucifix

The statement, signed on April 20 in Jerusalem, responds to the episode that occurred in the Lebanese town of Debel, where an Israeli soldier was recorded striking an image of the crucified Christ, an incident confirmed by the Israeli army itself and which has prompted an internal investigation.

The bishops of the Holy Land describe what happened as a “grave affront to the Christian faith” and express their “deep indignation” at an act that, they emphasize, is not isolated.

A series of incidents against Christian symbols

The Assembly warns that this episode adds to other cases reported in southern Lebanon, in the context of the Israeli military offensive in the area.

The images of the attack on the crucifix generated an immediate international reaction and even led Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to publicly condemn the gesture and promise disciplinary measures against the perpetrator.

Demanding accountability and guarantees

In their statement, the Catholic Ordinaries call for “immediate and firm” measures, as well as a credible process of accountability.

They also demand clear guarantees that this type of behavior will not be repeated, stating that respect for religious symbols is part of the minimum requirements even in conflict contexts.

Despite the gravity of what occurred, the bishops recall that the meaning of the Cross is not affected by its profanation. 

Quoting Saint Paul - “Far be it from me to glory, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ” - they emphasize that for Christians it remains a source of hope and redemption.

Urgent call for peace

The statement is framed within the ongoing conflict in southern Lebanon, where military operations have caused thousands of victims and widespread destruction in recent weeks.

In this situation, the bishops reiterate their call to end the war and advance along the path of dialogue.

Recalling recent words from Pope Leo XIV, they insist on the need for a “disarmed” peace, based on responsibility, respect for the sacred, and the dignity of all human life.

We provide below the full statement: 

Profanation of an image of the crucified Jesus

The Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land expresses its deep indignation and condemns without reservation the profanation of a representation of the crucified Jesus by an Israeli soldier in a Lebanese village.

This act constitutes a grave affront to the Christian faith and adds to other reported incidents of profanation of Christian symbols by Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon. 

Furthermore, it reveals a worrying deficiency in moral and human formation, where even the most basic respect for the sacred and for the dignity of others has been gravely compromised.

The Assembly calls for the adoption of immediate and firm disciplinary measures, the opening of a credible accountability process, and clear guarantees that such conduct will not be tolerated or repeated.

However, even in the face of such an offense, the Cross remains impregnable in its meaning. As the Apostle Saint Paul declares: “Far be it from me to glory, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Gal 6:14). For believers, the Cross endures as a source of dignity, hope, and redemption, and as a call to overcome violence through sacrificial love.

Precisely in the light of this truth, the Church continues to proclaim that true peace cannot be born from violence, but must be, in the words of Pope Leo XIV, “disarmed… a peace that calls for sheathing the sword”.

For this reason, the Assembly renews with urgency its call to end the war that has ravaged this region for too long and to embrace a path in which peace is manifested in moderation, dialogue, responsibility, and respect for the sacred and for all human life.

Jerusalem, April 20, 2026

His Beatitude Pierbattista Card. Pizzaballa

Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem

President of the AOCTS

Gänswein clarifies Benedict XVI's resignation and the relationship with Francis: "There was only one Pope"

Archbishop Georg Gänswein, for years the personal secretary of Benedict XVI and today the nuncio in Lithuania, has offered a firsthand testimony about one of the most delicate and singular periods in the recent history of the Church, dismantling interpretations about Ratzinger’s resignation and shedding light on the relationship between the Pope Emeritus and Francis.

“There was only one Pope”: the key to an unprecedented coexistence

The image of two figures dressed in white inside the Vatican marked an unprecedented stage in the modern history of the Church. 

However, Gänswein insists that this visual perception should not lead to error. “Here we must distinguish well. There was only one Pope. The other was called Pope, but in reality he was the Pope Emeritus,” he explains.

Benedict XVI, aware of the novelty of the situation, introduced concrete gestures to emphasize that difference: he abandoned certain elements of the pontifical attire and modified visible details. 

Even so, the coexistence of both within the same space - the Vatican - represented an unprecedented reality that he himself had wanted to define as the presence of a Pope Emeritus alongside a reigning Pope.

A resignation born of conscience, not scandals

On one of the most controversial points—the reasons for Benedict XVI’s resignation—Gänswein leaves no room for ambiguity. 

In the face of hypotheses linking his decision to the Vatileaks scandal or internal pressures, he responds categorically: “None of that had anything to do with it.”

Far from conspiracy theories, the former secretary of Ratzinger describes an interior process marked by faith: “The resignation was the fruit of deep reflection, of strong prayer: the Pope posed the question to his conscience and then decided.” 

A decision, in short, that took shape in the personal and spiritual realm, not in the terrain of Vatican crises.

Francis’s first gesture: seeking out Benedict

The moment of Jorge Mario Bergoglio’s election was etched in Gänswein’s memory as a scene charged with expectation. 

After the white smoke, the name of the new Pope “spread through the room like a wildfire.” 

But even more significant was what happened immediately afterward.

When Gänswein went to greet the newly elected, Francis took the initiative: “I would like to meet with Benedict. Can you help me?” 

That desire for a meeting set the tone for the relationship between them from the beginning.

It was not easy to establish telephone contact with Castel Gandolfo - where everyone was following the announcement on television - but it was finally achieved. 

A few days later, they met in a gesture that symbolically sealed the transition.

Castel Gandolfo: mutual respect and a “burden” handed over

On March 23, 2013, the first meeting between Benedict XVI and the new Pontiff took place. 

Gänswein recalls revealing details: upon entering the chapel, Ratzinger wanted to yield the way to Francis, but he refused. 

The same happened with the kneeler. 

From the first moment, he notes, it was perceived that Francis wanted to treat his predecessor “in a very fraternal way.”

That day, moreover, Benedict handed over to his successor the documentation on the Vatileaks case. 

“If there was a burden in that story, it can be said that he left it behind,” Gänswein states. 

The gesture closed a stage marked by internal tensions.

Two distinct styles, one same faith

The differences between Benedict XVI and Francis have been the subject of multiple interpretations. Gänswein does not deny them, but places them in their natural context: “The biography is the biography… the formation, the life experience, everything is different.” 

That diversity, far from being problematic, “is a complementarity… something that enriches.”

He also rejects the idea that the Pope Emeritus became a reference for an opposing bloc within the Church. In his view, the existence of organized tensions around his figure has been exaggerated.

Significant silences and delicate moments

On sensitive issues, such as restrictions on the traditional Mass or certain statements by Pope Francis, Gänswein introduces nuances without breaking the line of discretion that characterized Benedict XVI.

He assures that the Pope Emeritus “never commented” on the motu proprio Traditionis custodes. 

However, he acknowledges an interior reaction: “When we read the Osservatore Romano, Benedict’s heart grew heavy.” An expression that, without being an explicit criticism, hints at the impact of the decision.

Regarding phrases like “Who am I to judge?”, Gänswein admits that they are “at the very least surprising coming from a Pope,” although he insists that he never heard direct comments from Benedict on these matters.

A relationship marked by respect until the end

The death of Benedict XVI offered the last image of that relationship. Gänswein was the one who personally informed Francis, following previous instructions. 

The Pope went immediately to the monastery.

There, beside the body of his predecessor, Francis “blessed him, sat by his side, remained silent for a few minutes, and then we all prayed together.” 

A sober but eloquent gesture that summarizes years of coexistence marked by evident differences, but also by a relationship of respect.

Russian Orthodox clerics expelled Catholic faithful from their temple in Ukraine to occupy it for Easter

Clergy from the Moscow Patriarchate occupied the Church of Saints Peter and Paul in the Ukrainian city of Tokmak on April 12, after expelling Greek Catholic faithful and preventing them from accessing the temple during the Easter celebration.

Takeover of the Temple During the Easter Celebration

The occupation took place in Tokmak, in the Zaporizhzhia region, under Russian control since the 2022 invasion. 

The temple belongs to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, in communion with Rome, whose faithful were evicted before the Orthodox liturgical celebration, coinciding with the Easter of Eastern Christians.

The head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, reacted days later in statements reported by The Pillar: “This is a blasphemy against the Risen Lord, the Prince of Peace. And moreover on the Easter feast”.

Faithful Expelled and Ban on Praying in Their Own Church

The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church denounced that the takeover of the temple was not an isolated incident. 

According to the statement from the Donetsk exarchate, the occupation occurred illegally and the local faithful have been expelled and deprived of access to the site.

“With cynicism, our church was taken on Easter; our faithful were expelled,” stated Shevchuk in his weekly message on April 19. 

The archbishop added that the temple has been used by Russian Orthodox clergy in the presence of paramilitary units.

The exarchate emphasized that believers have been prohibited from praying in their own church while outsiders occupy the temple. 

“It is especially outrageous that parishioners are banned from going to their church while others present themselves as ‘parishioners,’” the text states.

Testimonies and Pressure on the Faithful

Among the cases cited, the Church highlights that of Svitlana Loy, a laywoman who continued to go to the temple to pray and care for it despite threats and intimidation.

According to the denunciation, those who attempt to exercise their religious freedom in these territories may face reprisals from the occupation authorities, including sentences of up to 15 years in prison.

Denunciations of Systematic Persecution

The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church maintains that what happened in Tokmak is part of a broader pattern. 

Since the start of the invasion, it has denounced detentions, tortures, and deportations of its members, including priests.

Human rights organizations have also pointed out that Russian authorities use structures of the Orthodox Church to replace Christian communities not aligned with Moscow.

An international report presented in March tallies 737 places of worship damaged or destroyed in Ukraine since the start of the war, and 67 members of the clergy killed.

Conflicting Versions of What Happened

From media outlets close to the Moscow Patriarchate, it has been claimed that the church was “abandoned” and that its use responded to pastoral needs. 

They have also accused the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church of applying a “double standard” in its denunciations.

Call for Unity Amid Pressure

In its message, the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church asks the faithful to maintain unity and hope amid the situation. 

“In these circumstances, it is especially important to hold on to prayer and not lose hope,” the statement notes.

And it adds an affirmation that connects the current situation with Christian faith: “Christ’s Resurrection, like our history, shows that truth and freedom, though temporarily suppressed, ultimately prevail”.

Rome remembers Francisco on the first anniversary of his death with a Rosary and a Mass

The Vatican will commemorate this April 21 the first anniversary of the death of Pope Francis with a series of liturgical acts in the Basilica of Saint Mary Major, where his remains rest since his passing in 2025.

The pontiff died at 7:35 in the morning in the Casa Santa Marta, one day after having imparted the blessing urbi et orbi. His funeral was held five days later, and since then he rests, according to his will, in this Marian basilica of Rome.

Rosary and Mass in Saint Mary Major

According to Vatican News, the commemorative acts will begin at 17:00 with the recitation of the Rosary in the Pauline Chapel, a place especially linked to Francis, who went on numerous occasions to pray before the image of the Salus Populi Romani.

Next, a commemorative plaque will be unveiled that recalls this bond. 

The inscription, in Latin and made of bronze, refers to the 126 visits of the Pope to this Marian icon and states that he rests in this basilica by his own decision.

Subsequently, at 18:00, the Holy Mass will be celebrated, during which a message from Pope Leo XIV will be read, who is currently on an apostolic journey in Africa.

A documentary about the pontificate

Coinciding with this anniversary, the Vatican media will also publish a 26-minute documentary dedicated to the figure of Francis. 

A piece that collects archival images and significant moments of his pontificate, centered on his gestures and the lines that marked his ministry, especially his attention to the peripheries and his insistence on mercy.

Fundraising for the Pope's visit has already exceeded the goal, but the parishes continue to ask for donations

The fundraising to finance the Pope’s visit to Spain has already exceeded the planned target. 

According to sources familiar with the process, last Friday approximately 16 million euros were reached, one million above the initial 15 million set as necessary to cover the trip’s expenses.

However, this data does not seem to have been effectively communicated to all levels. 

This same weekend, in various parishes in Madrid, economic contributions have continued to be requested from the faithful during collections, without mention that the economic goal has already been met.

The situation points to a possible disconnect in internal communication within the organizational structure, where information about the fundraising status would not have arrived in time - or would not have been updated - in the parish realm.

For the moment, there is no official public confirmation about the total amount raised or about the closure of the campaign, while requests for donations continue in the churches.

Omella turns 80 and leaves the dioceses of Spain with only one cardinal elector

Cardinal Juan José Omella, Archbishop of Barcelona, turns 80 on April 21 and thus reaches the age limit at which he loses the right to participate in a potential conclave, leaving Spain with Cobo as the only cardinal elector and confirming the loss of influence of the Spanish episcopate in the universal Church.

From Aragon to the episcopate: the early years

Born in 1946 in Cretas, in Aragon, Juan José Omella studied Philosophy and Theology in Zaragoza, Louvain, and Jerusalem. He was ordained a priest in 1970 and developed his ministry for years in his diocese of origin.

His appointment as auxiliary bishop in 1996 marked the beginning of his episcopal career, which continued in various dioceses in northeastern Spain before his arrival in Barcelona.

The rise with Francis: Barcelona and the cardinalate

The decisive turn in his career came with the pontificate of Pope Francis. It was he who appointed him Archbishop of Barcelona in 2015 and created him a cardinal in 2017, also incorporating him into the Council of Cardinals, one of the Pope’s main advisory bodies.

Since then, Omella has been identified as one of the Spanish prelates closest to the line promoted by Francis, characterized by a commitment to dialogue and institutional presence.

Presidency of the Episcopal Conference: dialogue without results

Between 2020 and 2024, he presided over the Spanish Episcopal Conference in a particularly complex context, marked by significant social and legislative changes.

During those years, the Church in Spain maintained a relationship of interlocution with the government of Pedro Sánchez. 

However, that strategy of dialogue coexisted with the approval of relevant laws on sensitive matters, such as euthanasia in 2021.

Far from strengthening the public presence of the Church, that period left a sense of institutional weakness and a lack of response to the main cultural challenges.

A conciliatory profile in a context of tension

Omella has habitually been described as a bishop with a moderate and conciliatory profile. 

In Catalonia, during the years of the independence challenge, he tried to maintain a position of balance, avoiding further polarization.

That style has marked his public action, focused on mediation and understanding, in an increasingly demanding ecclesial and social context.

The visit of Leo XIV and the horizon of succession

Omella’s departure from the conclave coincides with the upcoming visit of Pope Leo XIV to Spain, scheduled from June 6 to 12. 

The Pontiff will be in Barcelona on the occasion of the centenary of the death of Antonio Gaudí and the inauguration of the tower of Jesus of the Sagrada Familia.

The trip could also serve to prepare the replacement in the Archdiocese of Barcelona. 

Among the names mentioned is that of the Archbishop of Pamplona, Florencio Roselló, although there is no official confirmation.

The end of an era

Omella ceases to be an elector, but he remains a relevant figure for understanding the Spanish Church of recent years: close to Francis, inclined toward institutional pact, and marked by a strategy of moderation that did not always bear fruit. 

His departure from the conclave certifies the end of an era and opens another more important unknown: who will occupy Barcelona and what course they will set for a decisive diocese in the Spanish ecclesial landscape.

Charlotte Diocese says priest did not violate conduct policies during confession with teens

The Diocese of Charlotte has found that a priest did not violate any of its conduct policies during confessions with teens at Charlotte Catholic High School in North Carolina last December.

Multiple families whose teens attend the school had complained that a priest stepped over the line into “inappropriate” talk during confession, but in a statement to EWTN News, the diocese said it “looked into complaints raised about conversations that occurred during confession at Charlotte Catholic High School last December” and did not identify any “violations of our conduct policies” in the priest’s behavior.

The families, who wished to remain anonymous to protect their daughters, said that during the sacrament of reconciliation, a priest asked the young women “unexpected and personal questions,” according to a report by WCNC Charlotte.

One father said the priest, who has not been identified, asked his daughter about sexual sins.

According to the young woman’s mother, the question was unrelated to the sins she was confessing at the time. “‘Mom, I was telling him about missing Mass and lying to you and fighting with my brother … and we were not talking about anything sexual at all and he just asked me that,’” the mother said.

Another mother reported that the priest asked her daughter “if she’s ever had a sexual relationship with a boy.”

Those two families and others said they informed the school as well as the Diocese of Charlotte of their concerns.

In its statement, the diocese said it has communicated about the matter “with all involved at the time and has addressed the issue with all priests of the diocese, reiterating the need for pastoral sensitivity in celebrating the sacrament.”

According to the Diocese of Charlotte, Bishop Michael Martin also responded by letter to the families, who told WCNC they received similar responses.

“I am sorry that your daughter had a conversation in confession that made her feel uncomfortable,” Martin reportedly said in his letter.

He said priests sometimes ask clarifying questions during confession or lead a penitent who has not properly examined his or her conscience.

The Catholic Church teaches that the faithful should examine their consciences regularly, but especially prior to the sacrament of reconciliation in order to make a good confession.

“Penitents frequently come to the sacrament having engaged in a limited examination of conscience,” Martin continued, saying a priest might “raise common age-appropriate struggles with sin … to jog his or her memory or give them the benefit of having only to say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ so they do not have to describe the sin in too much detail."

He reminded the families that priests are prohibited from breaking what is known as the “sacramental seal,” or discussing what they hear in confession.

Charlotte Catholic High School did not respond to EWTN News in time for publication.

Several of the parents who raised the issue expressed dissatisfaction with the bishop’s response, however, with one parent saying she felt her concerns were “dismissed.”

“The whole letter felt like we were being gaslighted,” another mother told the local news outlet. “We understand what is appropriate and inappropriate.”

Nevertheless, one of the mothers said “I’m still a faithful Catholic. I just want this to be about doing the right thing.”

The dioceseʼs statement continued: “Confession is a sacrament meant to address sins so a priest can offer a penitent absolution and guidance. A variety of topics come up during confession, and according to Church norms, a priest may ask clarifying questions and, if necessary, assists the penitent to make a complete confession.”

“Confession is a sacrament Catholics learn about at home and at their church, through required sacramental preparation classes. Confession is offered on a voluntary basis at our schools, and as Catholics, students are encouraged but not required to participate at school,” the statement concluded.

Priests' perspective

A priest who serves as a chaplain to middle and high school students told EWTN News that he knows of only one case personally where a penitent was “scandalized that the priest was asking for clarifying information,” which he acknowledged priests sometimes do to help the penitent make a “good confession.”

“People are sensitive about topics like that right now,” said the priest, who wished to remain anonymous. “Even with completely innocent intentions, things can play out really badly. We’re in the ‘Me Too’ season, we’re in the ‘priests are pedophiles’ time of history.”

The priest told EWTN News that he does not “regularly lead [penitents] in examination of conscience” during confession. He added: “I donʼt know of a single priest that does.”

In addition, the priest noted that there “is a beauty of the seal of confession,” he said, but because of it, a priest accused of wrongdoing “is helpless, not that he’s necessarily innocent, but his ability to defend himself is really limited.”

Another priest and former high school chaplain who also wished to remain anonymous told EWTN News that it is possible there was a misunderstanding, because young people, “especially teen girls, are often embarrassed to speak of sins of a sexual nature and are sometimes not clear during confession, requiring the priest to ask clarifying questions.”

“But the priest should not bring up questions unrelated to the sins the penitent is confessing, and then, they should be clarifying questions only to help him or her make a better confession,” he said.

APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF POPE LEO XIV TO ALGERIA, CAMEROON, ANGOLA AND EQUATORIAL GUINEA (13–23 April 2026) - MEETING WITH THE WORLD OF CULTURE

ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV

“León XIV” Campus of the National University (Malabo)

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

_____________________________


Distinguished Rector,

Esteemed Authorities,

Dear ladies and gentlemen,

I thank you for your invitation to this event, in which a new campus of the National University of Equatorial Guinea is inaugurated. In expressing my gratitude for the kind gesture of naming the campus after me, I am aware that such a decision goes beyond the person being honored as it reflects the values that we all want to pass on to others.

The inauguration of a university campus is more than a mere administrative act. It transcends the simple expansion of infrastructure and places for study. 

This inauguration is an act of trust in human beings, an affirmation of the fact that it is worth the effort to continue wagering on the formation of new generations and on the task, so demanding and yet so noble, of seeking the truth and putting knowledge at the service of the common good.

Therefore, this moment assumes an importance that goes well beyond the material confines of places and buildings. Today a space for hope, encounter and progress is opened. Indeed, every authentic academic effort is one that grows not only structurally, but also as a living organism.

Perhaps for this reason, the image of a tree is particularly eloquent for speaking of the university’s mission. For the people of Equatorial Guinea, the ceiba, the national tree, has a great symbolic meaning. 

A tree puts forth deep roots, and ascends slowly with patience and strength to the heights, embodying in itself a fruitfulness that does not exist for itself.

In its greatness, in the sturdiness of its trunk and in the abundance of its branches, this tree seems to offer a parable of that which a university is called to be: an institution well rooted in the seriousness of study, in the living memory of a people and in the persevering search for truth. 

Only in this way will it be able to grow strong; only in this way will it be capable of bettering itself without losing contact with the historical circumstances in which it is situated. 

And, in addition to providing the means for professional success, it will be able to offer to future new generations a purpose in life, criteria for discernment and motives for serving.

The history of humanity can also be read through the symbolism of some biblical trees. In the garden of the Book of Genesis, near the tree of life, stood the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (cf. Gen 2:9), whose fruit God commanded the man and woman not to eat. 

It should be emphasized that this story is not about a condemnation of knowledge as such, as if faith was afraid of intelligence or looked with suspicion upon the desire for knowledge. Human beings have received the capability to know, to name, to discern, to marvel at the world and to wonder at its meaning (cf. Gen 2:19).

The problem, therefore, does not rest with knowledge but in its deviation towards an intelligence that no longer seeks to correspond to reality, but rather to twist it for its own purposes, evaluating it according to the benefit of the one who demands to know. 

Here knowledge ceases to be an opening and becomes instead a possession; it ceases to be the path towards wisdom and is transformed into a prideful affirmation of self-sufficiency, opening the road to confusion, which can eventually become inhumane.

Nevertheless, the biblical story does not finish with that tree. Christian tradition contemplates another tree, that of the Cross, not as a denial of human intelligence, but as a sign of its redemption (cf. Col 2:2-3). 

If in Genesis we find the temptation to seek knowledge separated from truth and goodness, on the cross we find a truth revealed, Jesus Christ, who far from imposing his own will, offers himself through love and elevates us to the dignity with which we were conceived from the beginning. 

At the cross, human beings are invited to allow their desire for knowledge to be healed: to rediscover that truth is not fabricated, not manipulated nor possessed like a trophy, but welcomed, sought with humility and served with responsibility.

For this reason, from a Christian perspective, Christ does not appear as a religious escape in the face of intellectual endeavors, as if faith began where reason ended. On the contrary, in him the profound harmony between truth, reason and freedom are manifested. 

Truth presents itself as a reality that precedes human beings, challenges them and calls them to come out of themselves. This is why truth can be sought with trust. Faith, far from shutting itself off from this search, purifies it of self-sufficiency and opens it to a fullness towards which reason strives, even if it cannot completely embrace it.

In this way, the tree of the Cross restores the original purpose for love of knowledge. It teaches us that knowing means being open to truth, understanding both what it means and the mystery contained therein. 

Thus, the search for truth remains truly human: humble, serious and open to a truth that precedes us, calls us and transcends us.

Indeed, it is not enough for a tree to bear fruit: the quality of the fruit also matters, because by its fruits the tree will be known (cf. Mt 7:20). In the same way, a university measures itself by the quality of the students it offers for the life of the community more than by the number of graduates or the expansion of its infrastructure. 

This is the sincere desire that the Church expresses in her centuries-old commitment to the field of education: that new generations are formed in an integral way, rather than giving the mere appearance of success. The results will not be long in coming.

Dear brothers and sisters, here on this campus, the ceiba of Equatorial Guinea is called to bear fruits of progress rooted in solidarity and of a knowledge that ennobles and develops the human being in an integral way. It is called to offer the fruits of intelligence and uprightness, of competence and wisdom, of excellence and service. 

If generations of men and women are profoundly shaped in this place by truth and are capable of transforming their own existence into a gift for others, then the ceiba will remain an eloquent symbol rooted in the best things of this land, elevated by wisdom and abounding in fruits that pay tribute to Equatorial Guinea and enrich the entire human family.

With these sentiments, I invoke upon each one of you –– upon the authorities, teachers, students and staff of this University and upon your families –– an abundance of the blessings of Almighty God who, in Jesus Christ, the incarnate Word, has shown men and women the truth about themselves and their true dignity (cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes,, 22). 

I entrust all of you to the maternal protection of Mary most holy, Seat of Wisdom, so that these fruits, in addition to being abundant, may also be very good. Thank you very much!