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Boston Globe, July 9, 2005
Sell Art and
Keep Parishes Open
By David D'Alessandro
Rome -- IN ORDER TO help pay for generations
of priests who abused young boys, Archbishop
Sean O'Malley is abusing a new generation of
children and parishioners. Closing schools
and parishes and selling off the real estate
to the highest bidder so that we can have more
high-priced condominiums is doubly offensive.
Despite great criticism for allowing children
to be abused, the arrogant, clueless, CEO Cardinal
Bernard Law doesn't go to jail -- he presides
over the magnificent Santa Maria Maggiore basilica
here in return for toeing the party line. In
his stead the Vatican sends a man who on the
surface has just the right PR touch: a humble
monk, with rough-hewn brown robes, sandals,
and a pious manner. Supposedly, he's a contrast
to the elitist Law. But is O'Malley any different?
I think not. He is another instrument of the
Vatican -- assigned to keep the scandal as
far from St. Peter's as possible.
Perhaps being a disaffected Catholic makes me
more cynical, but maybe it also makes me see
a bit clearer, particularly here in Italy,
center of the Roman Catholic Church. Not only
is the church's powerful influence so prevalent
in every city and town here, the breathtaking
wealth the Catholic Church possesses in many
cathedrals, shrines and holy places is overwhelming.
From Venice museums, San Gimignano's St. Augustine
Church to Siena's Gothic cathedral, to thousands
of small churches and shrines in places like
Torcella, Pistoria, and Spoleto. They contain
millions of antique artifacts ranging from
bejeweled chalices to frescoes to statues to
tapestries and ancient art in all forms. All
owned by the Catholic Church before we even
discuss the world's richest art collection
-- the Vatican's.Within Rome's self-contained
country, the mind-boggling Vatican art collection
is housed in 1,400 rooms in 12 separate complexes.
The total value is beyond any art expert's
ability to estimate. Much of it unseen, some,
all but forgotten, except for the busy Curia
scribes who inventory its hundreds of thousands
of pieces.
While, back in the Boston Archdiocese, the families
who contributed and worked to help build, rebuild,
and maintain their parishes are being evicted
as the church cries poor. It is curious. The
Vatican sets all the rules: Priests cannot
marry. Gays cannot marry. Women cannot become
priests. The divorced can not accept Communion
without an annulment. Abortion is forbidden.
Birth control is anathema. Rome creates the
rules, but is not willing to accept responsibility
for the actions of its employees -- criminal
priests and their protectors.
During an age of increasing corporate responsibility
-- more transparency -- recognition of stakeholder
rights, the archdiocese is moving in the opposite
direction. It complains of a lack of priests,
decreasing parishioners, and money woes. Yet,
its parent owns billions of dollars of art
and artifacts hardly ever seen and of virtually
no practical use except to art collectors.
Why not sell to the world's private collectors
and museums a few hundred sculptures, paintings,
and artifacts? I am not suggesting the Vatican
sell ''the Pieta" or the Sistine Chapel's
frescoes, but some of the archived material
so obscure no one will care about it. There
is enough forgotten art in Law's basilica to
keep all of our parishes and schools open and
create a long-standing recruitment campaign
for new priests.
If Pope Benedict XVI is serious about the church
being judged by its deeds, why not take responsibility
for the sins of its employees -- the abusive
priests and their superior protectors.
Why make the victims and the faithful pay the
price when you have the means to do it yourselfWhat
message does that send? We fail. You pay. And
the church expects loyalty and trust in return?
These parish sit-ins and protests are a wonderful
beginning to sending a message to the Vatican
Do not be fooled. O'Malley is but Rome's latest
messenger, just like Law. Instead of a Basilica
though, if he convinces people they must leave
their parishes and schools, his reward will
be a cardinal's red hat.
Protest publicly -- long and hard. Campaign vocally
to deny him the red hat and Rome will get the
message.
David D'Alessandro is a former CEO of John
Hancock Financial Services.
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