Bergoglio makes another mess...
Heresy: blesses same sex family!
Heresy: blesses same sex family!
When Francesca
Pardi sent Pope Francis her children’s book, Why do you have two moms? she
probably wasn’t expecting a response.
In her letter, sent on June 19, Pardi
expresses respect for Catholics and says many have treated her well, but also
says that representatives of the church have been disrespectful to her same-sex
partnership and family, and she asks the Pope to check this behavior (translated
from Italian):
Several
Catholic organizations have lowered themselves to unworthy behaviors,
deliberately deforming reality, the very ones who are meant to demonstrate a
superior moral fiber: I would really like for you to stop them.
Pardi also sent
the Pope a package of children’s books about untraditional families from her
publishing house, Lo Stampatello (link in Italian). Why
do you have two moms?, as well as two of Pardi’s other books, have been banned
from Venice’s Kindergarten libraries.
But the
pontiff did reply, sending a friendly though cautious letter postmarked July
10, via Monsignor Peter Brian Wells.
On her Facebook page, Pardi posted a
picture of the envelope addressed to her by the Holy See. She did not post the
Pope’s letter itself, but she summarized it (translated here from Italian):
He thanks me
for the kind gesture and for the sentiment that motivated it, and hopes for an
always more fruitful activity at the service of young generations and sharing
authentic human and christian values.
The Pope
closes the letter with his “apostle’s blessing” (a special benediction), for
Pardi, she said, “together with Ms Maria Silvia Fiengo”—her same-sex partner
and the other mother of her four children.
Pardi and
others in Italy’s LGBTQ community in Italy took the Pope’s message as a sign of
acceptance: In particular, his saying her work is “at the service of young
generations” and the fact that he imparted a blessing upon her and her same-sex
partner.
(Translated: I
only said that the Pope’s message shows capacity of respectful dialogue with
those with different way of thinking.)
The Vatican
did not deny Pardi’s account of the Pope’s letter—but it made a point to throw
cold water on the idea that the leader of the Catholic church was offering
encouragement or an accepting message about LGBTQ lifestyles.
Father Ciro
Benedettini, the Vatican spokesperson, published a note(link in Italian)
asserting that in no way is the letter “meant to endorse behaviors and
teachings unfit to the Gospel.” Benedettini also says that the Pope’s blessing
was meant for the individual, and was “not in line with the church’s doctrine
on gender theory, which has not changed in the slightest.”
Quartz has
reached out to both Pardi and the Holy See for comments on the exchange and
will update this post with any response.
While the
church’s official position is that homosexual acts are a sin,
the current Pope has at times hinted at a more tolerant view that have led many
to hope for a change in stance—including by
famously saying, in 2013, “If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord
and has good will, who am I to judge?”
Italy remains
a relatively inhospitable place for LGBTQ people. It
is one of the few countries in Europe that doesn’t allow any form of
same-sex unions, and the
Italian government (link in Italian) has gotten an ultimatum from the
European court of human rights to work on a law that allowed gay unions.
Many publicly
still express hostility towards LGBTQ rights, and among them is the mayor of
Venice, Luigi Brugnaro, whose first act in office was banning
several children’s books from the city’s Kindergarten libraries,
including Pardi’s Little Egg, What’s dad’s secret, and Why
do I have two moms?
Several
groups, mostly Catholic, have attacked the authors of the books, which media
have dismissively called “gay fairytales,” claiming they try to “indoctrinate”
kids to prefer gay unions.
But that was never
the intention, Pardi said in her letter to the Pope.
“Maria Silvia
and I opened the publishing house for the love of our kids,” she wrote. “The
book Why do you have two moms? is simply our (their) story.”
“It’s not
ideology,” she explained, “but love for a neighbor.”
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