Pastor-journalist
expelled
Vatican protests “grave” action
Father Stefano Caprio, the Moscow correspondent for the Fides news service, has
learned that he cannot return to Russia, because he is considered a “Vatican
spy.”
Father Caprio—who also serves
Catholic parishes in the towns of Vladimir and Ivanovo—had his visa removed as
he boarded a flight from Russia to Rome. He explained that an official took his
passport before he boarded the flight, and returned after a few minutes. “Only
when I arrived in Milan did I realize that the annual visa, valid until July
this year, had been removed,” the priest reported.
A Russian consular office in
Milan confirmed that Father Caprio was not authorized to return to Moscow. He
declined to provide any explanation. The consul spokesman said he could apply
for a new visa in one year. The English-language Moscow Times later reported
that Father Caprio’s name is listed as persona non grata in Russia—a category
usually reserved for individuals who are regarded as threats to national
security.
Father Caprio pointed out that
he served two parishes with more than 500 parishioners. Both parishes were duly
registered, as required by Russian law governing religious activities. The
Italian priest had been in Russia since 1989. Originally assigned there as
chaplain to the Italian embassy, he had taken on parish assignments in 1993.
Since 1999 he has also provided news reports for Fides. His last report for
Fides was an analysis of the Russian Orthodox Church, and a reply to Orthodox
accusations of “proselytism” by the Catholic Church there.
The Holy See protested that the
Russian government’s revocation of a Catholic priest’s visa is a “grave action,”
and a blow to friendly relations. “This is the second time in less than a year
that such an action was taken against the Catholic Church in Russia,” observed
one Vatican official. (Father Jozef Opiela, a Polish native, had been denied a
visa, at a time when he was serving as secretary to the Russian bishops’
conference.) Another Vatican official, scoffing at the notion that Father Caprio
was a spy, said that the Russian government’s action “recalls the regrettable
practices of the Soviet era.”
Prelate says
Orthodox act “ideologically”
Stance will eventually change
Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical Council for Christian Unity,
has offered a tough reaction to the decision by the Orthodox Patriarchate of
Moscow to suspend ecumenical discussions with Rome, in an article that appeared
in the Italian Jesuit magazine Civiltà Cattolica. While reproaching the Russian
Orthodox leadership for reacting “ideologically,” the cardinal asked Catholics
to be patient because, he said, the current Orthodox position cannot last.
After the elevation of the four
Russian apostolic administrations to dioceses last month, the Moscow
Patriarchate announced the suspension of official relations with the Holy See,
as well as the cancellation of a scheduled visit by Cardinal Kasper to Moscow.
According to the Orthodox leaders, the Vatican’s decision was a provocation, and
evidence of proselytism by Catholics.
“It became clear that behind the
debate on the principles of canonical territory and proselytism lie arguments of
a substantially ideological nature,” Cardinal Kasper wrote. Indeed, he went on,
the Russian Orthodox Church “defends not only a reality which no longer exists,
but also a relationship between the Church and the people which is problematic
on the theological level.” Moreover, he criticized an “ecclesiological heresy”
consisting in “not recognizing in the Catholic Church her missionary dimension.”
The cardinal suggested that the
Russian Orthodox hierarchy “feels its own pastoral and evangelical weaknesses,
and thus fears a Catholic presence that is more effective at the pastoral level,
although fewer in numbers.” While recognizing a certain “coherence” in the
Orthodox position, he said that it does not allow them “to face the future.”