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MT 24 August 2014

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12 "YOU'RE not as old as I, so perhaps you don't remember. But back in the days of Archbishop Mikiel Gonzi, you couldn't… I just can't imagine anyone talking about a leadership crisis the way they talk about it to- day. Even under Bishop Joseph Mer- cieca, whom I know personally, the time had not yet come when people asked these types of question in pub- lic. Well, perhaps it used to happen too, but certainly not with the same insistence…" We are in Professor Victor Asciak's office in the University's Biology De- partment, and I have just asked the former Church Environment Com- missioner – he stepped down last year after occupying the post for a decade – to give his own view of what led to an apparently unprecedented level of criticism directed at the leadership of the Catholic Church… criticism which has come mostly from clergy- men. "Maltese society has changed since the 1960s," he continues. "It no longer feels such a close connection with the Church. We have reached a situation where people, even if they believe in God, no longer feel duty-bound to also believe their parish priest, or to bow their head to everything he says. People now feel they can ask about everything: about how the Church behaves in certain situations, and also about the leadership. If the leadership is now in question, it is partly because people feel comfortable questioning everything. Which is how it should be…" Nonetheless Asciak himself wrote an article in defence of Archbishop Paul Cremona last Wednesday… sug- gesting that the local Church leader was being 'crucified' for refusing to align the Church with partisan poli- tics. Isn't there more to this issue than just changing societal trends? He nods. "That is what I said in that article. The way I see it – and I don't see everything – the first time some- one made a connection between the Church leadership, or lack thereof, and politics, it was the leader of the Nationalist Party. Last April [Simon Busuttil] spoke along the lines of how Joseph Muscat had succeeded in 'si- lencing' the Church over the civil unions issue. So like it or not, there is a connection. When a political party starts talking about the leadership of the Church, how can anyone say there isn't a link with politics?" Asciak however contests the validity of Busuttil's interpretation. "As I see it, his point was that Joseph Muscat had won such a large vic- tory at the election, that anyone who wanted to criticise him would think twice… as if he had become a demi- god. I don't agree with this interpre- tation myself, but anyway. That's where the political connection began. My question is: these people who are talking about the 'excessive silence' of the Church... do they have some other agenda? Or is it because they sincerely believe what they are saying?" When it comes to the question of who is more authentic – Cremona, or his critics – Asciak leaves little to the imagination. "I have no doubt that Archbishop Paul Cremona, from the little I know of him, is authentic. I have faith in him. He is straightforward, a person who believes in what he says. If he doesn't say something, the chances are that it's because he doesn't fully believe it. I have had many pleasant experiences with him, and will cher- ish them as part of my life experience. But when someone asks: but why does this man not speak out? Is it because he's afraid of Joseph Muscat? And then, when other people come out… people like Fr Joe Borg, Dun Charles Vella… you ask yourself: but why are these people saying this? Now let me put it this way: I'm not saying Cre- mona's leadership style is necessarily good… as a leadership style. All I'm saying is that the Church leadership does not come only from the Arch- bishop. It comes from us, too… espe- cially in the way we act, and the way our actions impact the perceptions of the Church." Asciak here argues that the very people who criticise the Church lead- ership are themselves part of the ob- ject of their own criticism. "Each time Fr Joe Borg, or some- one like Fr Rene Camilleri, writes an article, unwittingly we associate that with the Church, and unwittingly we build our perception of the Church in part upon those articles. So this per- ception that the leadership issue is political… it wasn't my doing. Others dragged politics into it. So my conclu- sion, to a certain extent, is that these people… I won't say there's a plan, or anything, but…" In fact I was going to ask this very question: does Prof. Asciak (like many others) also see this as a 'conspiracy' to replace the Archbishop with a more combative figure for political purposes? "No, I think the word 'conspiracy' is too clumsy. But naturally when peo- ple like Fr Borg – or myself for that matter – speak out, he will have his own biases, like we all do. But that is also why one must be careful when speaking, so that the perception that emerges would not be exploited by others. I believe that if there is any- one who doesn't want this to hap- pen – who doesn't want the Church to be aligned with a political party, I mean – that person is precisely Paul Cremona." This is perhaps the crux of the entire issue. Surely it is not in the Church's own interest to align with a political party: not if it intends to also be a Church for everyone. Otherwise it will be an exclusive and divisive Church, which would defeat its entire purpose… Asciak nods. "We have to also un- derstand… and to an extent toler- ate… that the Church should not be political in that sense. I have no doubt that the Church, back in the 1960s, was politically inclined. Archbishop Gonzi, for instance: I have no doubt that he fully believed in what he was doing; but I also have no doubt that it was wrong. I'm not saying he wasn't genuine in his intentions; or that he just wanted to lend a helping hand to the Nationalists. If he wanted to do this, it was because he saw Dom Min- toff as a devil." Here he breaks into a laugh. "And it was his job to fight the devil! But this doesn't mean he was right. And this, I think, is where Maltese society has changed. Back then, no one (except for someone like Mintoff) would have even dreamed of challenging Gonzi's authority... and a lot of people suf- fered psychologically as a result. Peo- ple who supported a political party, and were told they would go to hell if they supported it... I am convinced those who suffered because of those perceptions, suffered unjustly…" The consequences of those distant battles are still with us today, he con- tinues. "Many people lost their faith in the Church. I won't say I'm shocked, but it saddens me to hear that some of them never entered a Church again in their life. I know some of these people. They're not devils who are destined for hell; quite the contrary. They are beacons of Christian charity. But… that was it. That time, the time of the 'interdett', scarred a lot of peo- ple. And I think that: first of all, we can never go back to that time. Never. Society has changed. But today, there could be elements, especially within the media, that…" He breaks into a mischievous smile. "Well, instead of an 'interdett', they might come up with a blog, for example…" There may however be other rea- sons for the Church's reluctance to enter the political fray. The last time it did so overtly was arguably during the divorce referendum campaign of 2011… and we all know how that turned out in the end. Could it be, therefore, that the Church simply took a strategic decision not to com- ment directly on political issues? Prof. Asciak makes it clear that he has no direct knowledge of strategic decisions taken by the Curia. "But I do have an opinion. I think the Church should speak up about everything. It has a right to speak. And it does speak. Why do we only talk about Archbishop Cremona? We are forgetting that there is another bishop, Gozo Bishop Mario Grech. He speaks so much about so many things: about sex, for example… eve- ryday things that affect ordinary peo- ple. Isn't he also part of the Church? Again, I know that man personally, and have the greatest respect for him. I sincerely consider him an authen- tic person. He doesn't hold back on expressing his views about anything. And I don't believe that he does this out of some hidden agenda. You can see he is genuine. You can also see that… I'm not sure if I should say this, but I'll say it anyway… he is living in a minefield. If he managed to survive the minefield that is Gozo, with all its ecclesiastic and social issues… this man has fibre. He knows how to ne- gotiate certain situations. And yet, he does not remain silent. The Church is not just Paul Cremona…." But the criticism has been levelled specifically at the leadership of the Church, not the Church as a whole… "Isn't Mario Grech also part of the Church leadership? He has his own style, and perhaps Cremona has a different style. I don't want to be apologetic for Cremona, but… I know that it's not true that the Church leadership is not interested in certain things, and doesn't talk about social issues. Mario Grech does talk. You might ask: then why doesn't Cremona do the same? I don't know. It could be that Cremona feels that silence some- times speaks louder than words. I am however certain of one thing. I don't believe that Joseph Muscat, with his electoral victory, has 'silenced' others. Silence does not come from Joseph Muscat, but from one's own fear. If I am afraid of Joseph Muscat, it comes from me, not from him… He seems to be suggesting that Cre- mona may be afraid of Joseph Mus- cat… "I was referring to what Simon Bu- suttil said: my point is that the argu- ment doesn't hold water…" Meanwhile, there is more to this talk of leadership crisis than mere politics. There are parochial and pas- toral issues, too. To cite one recent example: the former parish priest of Mgarr was recently removed under dubious circumstances. To be fair we have only heard his side of the story, but the picture that emerges resem- bles a revolt by certain parishioners who objected to his attempts to ad- dress controversial 'traditional' prac- tices… such as the annual auction for the right to carry the statue of Our Lady, for instance. This exposes a certain contradic- tion at Church leadership level. On one hand we have Gozo Bishop Mario Grech warning (in a recent sermon) against the threat of excessive tra- ditionalism, and on the other the Church removed a parish priest who was ultimately motivated by the same concerns. Doesn't this also point to- wards internal pressures within the Interview By Raphael Vassallo maltatoday, SUNDAY, 24 AUGUST 2014 The Church is not just SILENCE Gozo bishop Mario Grech does talk. You might ask: then why doesn't Archbishop Cremona do the same? I don't know. It could be that Cremona feels that silence sometimes speaks louder than words… INTERNAL PRESSURES You have to learn to live with those pressures. And I think Paul Cremona may have yet to grow accustomed to them. I imagine someone like Bishop Charles Scicluna will know how to live with them. Paul Cremona perhaps less so

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