Chemist, not Christ caused Padre Pio stigmata

A new book claims St Padre Pio used carbolic acid to cause his stigmata.

The book “Padre Pio: Miracle and Politics in a Secular Age,” by Italian historian, Professor Sergio Luzzatto, has discovered documents including a letter from a pharmacist who arranged carbolic acid for Pio.

A report in the Telegraph says Luzzatto suggests that the it was the corrosive acid caused the bleeding on Pio’s hands, that the Saint claimed were replicas of Christ.

He also said many Popes had expressed doubts and suggested the Vatican only canonised Pio – real name Francesco Forgione – because of public pressure.

“Human beings – and particularly the most fragile among them – will still need to look at figures such as Padre Pio to get, if not miracles, then at least consolation and hope,” Professor Luzzatto said, according the the Sun.

Professor Luzzatto previously referred to the documents, found in the Vatican’s archive, in The Other Christ: Padre Pio and 19th Century Italy.

His claims were dismissed by the Catholic Anti-Defamation League in 2007.

Pietro Siffi, the president of the League, said at the time: “We would like to remind Mr Luzzatto that according to Catholic doctrine, canonisation carries with it papal infallibility.”

“We would like to suggest to Mr Luzzatto that he dedicates his energies to studying religion properly.”

Pio, a former monk who died in 1968 aged 81, wore gloves because his hands bled constantly for 50 years in what were revered as stigmata wounds.

He became Italy’s most loved saint after he was canonised by Pope John Paul II in 2002.

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