Germany Germany was speechless when one of their own
was elected pope in 2005, as they were again when Pope
Benedict XVI announced his resignation.
Only Msgr Georg Ratzinger
was not surprised, saying he knew his younger brother had been
considering stepping down for several months.
“I was in on the secret,” said the 89-year-old from his home in Regensburg. “My brother wishes more peace in his old age, age is weighing on him.”
In
the pope’s Bavarian birthplace of Marktl am Inn and the nearby town of
Traunstein, where he grew up, the mood was one of shock and surprise.
“I
just heard the news two or three minutes ago and I don’t know what to
say now,” said Gundi Aigner, tourism chief in Marktl, where the pope’s
birth house, now a Joseph Ratzinger museum, attracts 50,000 visitors
annually.
Mayor Hubert Gschwendtner said the town would “keep his memory”.
In
Traunstein, where the pope began his religious studies in 1939, Fr
Markus Moderegger, headmaster of the pope’s former school, said the news
came as a “bolt out of the blue”.
“I saw him last in 2010 with a group of seminarians, but he seemed very tired at Christmas Mass,” he said. “It’s an exhausting position but I think this decision is filled with humility and courage and earns our respect.”
Responsible decision
Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, head of the German Bishops’ Conference, described it as a “responsible decision”.
In Berlin, Chancellor Angela Merkel said the pope would “remain one of the most important religious thinkers of our time”.
In
2009 she criticised the pope publicly for not providing “sufficient
clarification” of his disapproval of the Holocaust-denying Bishop
Richard Williamson.
The Vatican rejected her claim, relations never
recovered and Dr Merkel’s criticism still rankles with many German
Catholics.
In the land of Martin Luther, Protestant
Church leaders said they were disappointed by a lack of progress
building bridges between the Christian faiths.
Nikolaus Schneider,
president of the Lutheran Church council in Germany, said he hoped a
new pontiff would “set new impulses for ecumenism”.
Theologian
Hans Kung, an ex-colleague turned critic of the pope, said it would be
difficult for the church to find a successor who could lead it out of
its “many-layered crisis”.