Claims have been made of a 'gay network' among some Vatican
priests and Swiss Guards. Photograph: Filippo Monteforte/EPA
A former commander of the Swiss Guard, the small force of men
whose job it is to protect the pope, has said there is "a network of
homosexuals" within the Vatican, the latest in a series of claims about gay priests working at the heart of the Roman Catholic church.
Elmar
Mäder, who was commandant of the Guard from 2002 until 2008, said his
time at the heart of the Vatican had given him an insight into certain
aspects of life there. "I cannot refute the claim that there is a
network of homosexuals. My experiences would indicate the existence of
such a thing," he told the Swiss newspaper Schweiz am Sonntag.
Famed
for their striking uniforms of blue, red and orange, recruits to the
Guard swear to protect the pope and his successors with their lives.
Mäder,
50, from the canton of St Gallen, refused to comment on speculation
that he had warned guardsmen about the behaviour of certain priests.
Earlier
this month, the same newspaper reported the claims of a former, unnamed
member of the Guard that he had been the target of more than 20
"unambiguous sexual requests" from clergy while serving in the force.
Recounting
a dinner in a Rome restaurant, the man was quoted as saying: "As the
spinach and steak were served, the priest said to me: 'And you are the
dessert'."
At the time, spokesman Urs Breitenmoser said the
rumoured gay network did not pose a problem to the Swiss Guard, whose
members he said were motivated by entirely different interests.
Asked
about the claims, Mäder reportedly said stories of this kind "obviously
lacking in factual basis" were sometimes told. But the facts remained
clear, he added. "
A working environment in which the great
majority of men are unmarried is per se a draw for homosexuals, whether
they consciously seek it out or unconsciously follow an urge," he said.
"The Roman Curia [the Vatican's bureaucracy] is exactly this kind of environment."
Though
it does not condemn gay people, whom it says should be "accepted with
respect, compassion and sensitivity," the catechism of the Catholic
church teaches that homosexual acts are "objectively disordered" and calls gay people to abstinence.Mäder,
while he said he did not have a problem with homosexuality, said he
feared that a network or secret society of gay people within the Vatican
could pose security problems. He added that he would not have promoted a
gay man in the Guard – not because of his sexuality but because "the
risk of disloyalty would have been too high".
Mäder said: "I also
learned that many homosexuals are inclined to be more loyal to each
other than to other people or institutions," he said.
"If this
loyalty were to go as far as to become a network or even a kind of
secret society, I would not tolerate it in my sphere of decision making.
Key people in the Vatican now seem to think similarly."
The comments appeared to be referring to a remark made by Pope Francis
on the flight home from Brazil last summer. "They say there are some
gay people here. I think that when we encounter a gay person, we must
make the distinction between the fact of a person being gay and the fact
of a lobby, because lobbies are not good," the pontiff told
journalists, while at the same time joking that, while there was a lot
of talk about a gay lobby, he had never seen it stamped on a Vatican
identity card.
While Francis signalled a clear conciliatory tone
on the issue, he added: "If they accept the Lord and have goodwill, who
am I to judge them?" Mäder's comments about the supposed threat posed by
gay guards and priests drew criticism among rights advocates in Italy.
"Along
with all gay people in the armed forces, I would advise Mäder to become
better informed," said Aurelio Mancuso, chairman of Equality.
Franco
Grillini, chairman of Gaynet, added: "Statistically, gays are the least
violent group in human society so if the pope were really surrounded by
homosexuals, he could sleep easy."
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