Dr Lucetta Scaraffia - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 28 Mar 2019 07:06:49 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Dr Lucetta Scaraffia - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Editor and all Vatican women's magazine editorial board resign https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/03/28/vatican-women-magazine-scaraffia/ Thu, 28 Mar 2019 07:09:57 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=116316

The founder and all-female editorial board of the Vatican's women's magazine Women Church World have resigned after what they say was a Vatican campaign to discredit them and put them "under the direct control of men." In the final editorial and open letter to Pope Francis, released to news media ahead of the magazine's 1 Read more

Editor and all Vatican women's magazine editorial board resign... Read more]]>
The founder and all-female editorial board of the Vatican's women's magazine Women Church World have resigned after what they say was a Vatican campaign to discredit them and put them "under the direct control of men."

In the final editorial and open letter to Pope Francis, released to news media ahead of the magazine's 1 April publication, chief editor Lucetta Scaraffia complains of feeling "surrounded by a climate of distrust and progressive de-legitimization."

So far, there has been no comment about the letter from the Vatican.

The glossy monthly is listed on Vatican daily newspaper L'Osservatore Romano's website as one of its eight published sections.

Since Women Church World's inception - first as a supplement in 2012 and then as a magazine in 2016 - L'Osservatore has offered Scaraffia editorial freedom.

According to a 2016 edition of L'Osservatore, the magazine would "delve into the role of women in the Church" with editorial independence.

In February this year Scaraffia denounced the sexual abuse of nuns by clergy and the resulting scandal of religious sisters having abortions or giving birth to children who are not recognized by their fathers.

The article prompted Francis to acknowledge, for the first time, that abuse of nuns is a problem and that he is committed to doing something about it.

Also in February, L'Osservatore's new editor Andrea Monda said he would also take over as editor of the women's magazine. (Monda became editor of L'Osservatore last December.)

However Scaraffia says Monda reconsidered after the editorial board threatened to resign and the Catholic weeklies that distribute translations of Women Church World in France, Spain and Latin America, told her they would stop distributing it.

"After the attempts to put us under control, came the indirect attempts to delegitimize us," she says.

Monda says he did not interfere "in any way" in the printing of the monthly magazine but only suggested topics and persons for the publication.

He also says he guaranteed the magazine "complete autonomy" and "total freedom," and its budget had been confirmed.

Scaraffia disagrees.

Women were brought in to write for L'Osservatore "with an editorial line opposed to ours," she says.

Scaraffia says that resulted in obscuring the magazine's words, "de-legitimizing us as a part of the Holy See's communications.

The Vatican is "returning to the practice of selecting women [writers] who ensure obedience," to a "clerical self-reference" that surrenders "parrhesia (freedom to speak freely) that Pope Francis so often seeks.

"We are throwing in the towel because we feel surrounded by a climate of distrust and progressive de-legitimization," Scaraffia says.

Thanking Scaraffia for her "valuable work," Monda says "in no way" did he choose anyone "with the criterion of obedience" but rather with "the sign of the openness and parrhesia requested by Pope Francis, with whose words and with whose Magisterium we all identify."

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Editor and all Vatican women's magazine editorial board resign]]>
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Vatican paper launches feisty women's magazine https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/05/06/vatican-paper-launches-feisty-womens-magazine/ Thu, 05 May 2016 17:14:19 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=82507

The Vatican's semi-official newspaper has started a women's magazine, which is not averse to taking a critical stance over women's role in the Church. The new monthly magazine "Women-Church-World" was launched this week by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Holy See's secretary of state. His department oversees L'Osservatore Romano, in which the new magazine has previously Read more

Vatican paper launches feisty women's magazine... Read more]]>
The Vatican's semi-official newspaper has started a women's magazine, which is not averse to taking a critical stance over women's role in the Church.

The new monthly magazine "Women-Church-World" was launched this week by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Holy See's secretary of state.

His department oversees L'Osservatore Romano, in which the new magazine has previously featured as a separate section.

During the launch, Cardinal Parolin said: "A woman could become secretary of state [at the Vatican], in the sense that the role of the secretary of state is evidently not bound to the sacraments or the priesthood."

Speaking to journalists after the event, the cardinal said he did not believe women wanted a quota system in the Church.

Rather, "they want to move forward through their merit and their capabilities, without having institutionally reserved spaces".

The co-ordinator of "Women-Church-World", Dr Lucetta Scaraffia, wrote in the new magazine's first editorial that a "hidden revolution" had taken place in the last century.

This has seen women make an increasingly important contribution to the intellectual life of Catholicism.

This intensified in the years following the Second Vatican Council, when more and more women started to study theology.

But this contribution by women has been "almost ignored" by the Church, Dr Scaraffia wrote.

The theme of the first edition was the Visitation.

Dr Scaraffia stated this event shows the prophetic role of women and should not just be reduced to a moment of solidarity.

"Both [Mary and Elizabeth] are able to see the true and profound meaning of the events that they are living through and are able to perceive the divine even when it is hidden," Dr Scaraffia wrote, "and they do it earlier than men and before the priests and sages".

Dr Scaraffia, a feminist journalist and professor, has been a regular writer in the Vatican's newspaper despite being an outspoken critic on the male-dominated leadership of the Church.

In March, the Women-Church-World section in L'Osservatore Romano called for women to be able to preach at Mass, currently exclusively reserved for priests and deacons.

On the same day the magazine was launched, Pope Francis released his prayer intentions for the month of May, which he dedicated to women.

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