The disgraced Bishop of Cloyne, John Magee, will bring at least two dark secrets to his grave with him. The Newry-born Magee was Secretary to three Popes, Paul VI, John Paul I and John Paul II, the only cleric in history to achieve such an incredible honour. John Cooney, an Irish journalist covering religious affairs, wrote how Magee proudly boasted that Pope Paul VI treated him like a son, and that John Paul II treated him like a brother. According to Cooney, he was considered the “most handsome man” in the Vatican and had incredible access to the Popes. He lived in a wonderful villa on the Vatican grounds.
It even had a private chapel, and he loved to entertain friends from Ireland and arrange meetings with the Pope for a chosen few. He was widely expected to return to Ireland in triumph as Archbishop of Armagh, his home diocese, and be the future Primate of All Ireland. But John Paul 11 banished him to a lonely Cork diocese in 1987, when Magee was at the height of his power. The job of Bishop of Cloyne was intended for someone else, but John Paul insisted that Magee go. He was never liked by the priests there, who considered him a Vatican outsider who was dumped on them. The Bishop’s house was a sad, drafty old building in need of repair, totally unlike his Vatican villa.
The reasons why he was exiled to Cloyne have never been explained. Rumors ran rampant, including involvement in a cover-up of the death of John Paul I and unspecified personal behavior charges, but nothing ever came to light. What is known is that in 1978, on the death of John Paul I after only 33 days as Pope, Magee covered up the fact that a nun found him, and a statement was issued that he was the person who discovered the body.
Why this was so has never been explained. Nor was the fact that he was briefly brought back to Rome immediately when Pope John Paul II died for unspecified duties. By all accounts, he went into a deep funk when posted to Cloyne, a minor diocese in Ireland far from his beloved Armagh. His lack of oversight of the child abuse problems in his parish were seen as a sign of his total disinterest in his new duties. Now he is gone, and the mystery of how he ever ended up in Cloyne, or why he tried to mask the truth of who found the body of John Paul I, may never be known.
In “Angels and Demons,” Dan Brown’s prequel to “The Da Vinci Code,” an ambitious Irish priest close to the Pope almost becomes Pope himself by plotting and eliminating enemies during a papal conclave. The book’s Rev. Patrick McKenna may well have been loosely based on Magee. Whatever lofty ambitions Magee had, they have long since ended, and he resigned in disgrace. It was surely not the script he had written for himself.
The Vatican is a cauldron of puss covered in goldleaf.
Such an education at the heart of the Catholic Church must surely have prepared Magee very well for the cover-up of abuse. Suppose it still hasn’t occurred to this lofty man of the cloth that he could have come clean at any time and salvaged his ruined reputation even a little?
This is much ado about nothing. Just read this summary of the Cloyne report:
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2011/0714/1224300713984.html
Millions of pounds for this sort of scraping at flimsy suspicions about events that happened, if they happened at all, in the 1960s?
You must have missed this paragraph, Joe:
“Interviewed by Msgr O’Callaghan, Fr Corin denied “serious interference” but admitted fondling between four and six girls in the 1960s. He said he petted Nia and on occasion this went too far. Msgr O’Callaghan concluded there had been no abuse, only “overfamiliarity”. The commission says: “It was clearly and unequivocally child sexual abuse.”
And you obviously missed this paragraph:
“A second complainant, “Oifa”, recalled an incident when she was 10 in the 1960s and Fr Corin sat her on his lap and put his hands beneath her clothes. In 1996, Fr Corin met Bishop Magee and acknowledged he was guilty of child sexual abuse. He resigned his ministry and died in 2002.”
And this little section completely missed your ‘penetrating’ gaze:
“Fr Calder was born in the 1960s. In 1978, a psychological assessment of his suitability for the priesthood found that he was highly maladjusted, sexually repressed and scored in the 97th percentile for psychosis. He went on to be ordained.
The report says the history of complaints and concerns about Fr Calder is confusing. No formal direct complaint of child sexual abuse has been made against him, but the report says it is clear that concerns were expressed about his behaviour by priests, teachers, doctors, gardaí and parishioners.
In his first parish, there were concerns that he was supplying alcohol, which appeared to be spiked, to young adults.
Fr Calder was transferred to a home for older people. In 2003 there was concern among the nurses because he was using the internet to access pornographic jokes and was seeing young men in his rooms late at night.”
And the section on ‘Fr Tarin’ : Msgr O’Callaghan had evidence of a vicious sexual assault, he opted to try to “bury the matter”.
Wow, Joe, it’s not looking good here – seems to me you posted the wrong link!
Could you comeback with the proper link – you know – the one relating to your comment about “scraping at flimsy suspicions about events that happened, if they happened at all, in the 1960s?”
Good oul FATHER Joe O’Leary has been very busy since the Cloyne report came out, popping up everywhere to try to minimise it’s impact. From liberation theology to apologist for child rapists: say it aint so Joe?