Pope's friends, observers try to make sense of homophobic PR disaster
		
		 
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		 [June 06, 2024]  
		By Alvise Armellini 
		 
		VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Francis is a pope of many firsts: the first to 
		use that name, the first from Latin America, the first from the Jesuit 
		religious order. Since last week, he's also the first pope to apologize 
		for using foul language. 
		 
		Francis was quoted by Italian media as using the Italian term "frociaggine", 
		roughly translating as "faggotness" or "faggotry", in a closed-door May 
		20 meeting with Italian bishops. 
		 
		The Vatican issued an apology, but after that, other Italian reports 
		attributed more gay slurs to the pope, as well as chauvinist language 
		associating women with gossip, in a separate meeting with Roman priests.
		 
		 
		Friends of the pontiff and top Vatican watchers insist that what has 
		possibly been the biggest PR disaster of his 11-year papacy should not 
		obscure his record as a reforming, LGBT-friendly pope.  
		 
		However, some say the 87-year-old's gaffe fits into a pattern of papal 
		missteps that undermine his authority and raise questions about his 
		convictions and the reform path he has in mind for the Church.  
		
		
		  
		
		"Anyone who has been online... has seen the pope reduced to a meme, a 
		social media tool for anyone to make jokes about, some very funny, some 
		in very poor taste," said Massimo Faggioli, a professor of theology and 
		religious studies at Villanova University. 
		 
		"The word of a pope should carry some weight, some credibility. Whether 
		or not you agree with him, you'd normally think that what he says is 
		thought through... Now it is a bit more difficult (to think that)," he 
		said. 
		 
		SALTY TONGUE 
		 
		Francis has a reputation for having a salty tongue, especially in 
		private, so while the reported anti-gay slurs shocked many, they did not 
		seem out of character to people who know him. 
		 
		"I'm obviously not justifying his use of an offensive term ... but it is 
		normal for him in private to speak very, very directly," papal 
		biographer Austen Ivereigh said. "He doesn't talk like a politician." 
		 
		A personal friend of the pope - a gay Argentine man who has known him 
		for more than 30 years and asked not to be named - said that Francis 
		knows he has a problem with foul language. 
		 
		"He calls himself a 'bocon', which kind of translates (from Spanish) 
		into someone who can't keep his mouth shut," the man told Reuters. "He 
		has never been diplomatic. I am actually surprised something like this 
		didn't happen earlier." 
		 
		When Francis went to Ireland in the 1980s to try to learn English, the 
		friend recalled, "his teachers were horrified by the way in the 
		classroom he would use English swear words he had picked up". 
		
		The same source said Francis had come "a long way in terms of openness 
		towards LGBT rights" for a man of his generation, noting he grew up in a 
		very conservative family that considered divorcees - let alone gay 
		people - social pariahs.  
		 
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            Pope Francis attends the weekly general audience in Saint Peter's 
			Square at the Vatican, June 5, 2024. REUTERS/Yara Nardi/File Photo 
            
			  
            Early in his papacy, Francis famously said: "If a person is gay and 
			seeks God and has good will, who am I to judge?". Last year he 
			allowed priests to bless members of same-sex couples, triggering a 
			substantial conservative backlash. 
			 
			He has also sat down for lunch at the Vatican with transgender sex 
			workers and formed a close relationship with Father James Martin, a 
			prominent American Jesuit priest who ministers to the LGBT 
			community. 
			 
			"The idea that he would be homophobic makes no sense to me," Martin 
			said in emailed comments. "His record on LGBTQ people speaks for 
			itself. No pope has been a greater friend to the LGBTQ community." 
			 
			Francis' Argentine friend also praised the pope's support for civil 
			partnerships - though Francis remains opposed to same-sex marriages 
			- and his quiet efforts to help victims of homophobic crimes in 
			Argentina in the 1990s, "when being gay was tough". 
			 
			GAY 'SUBCULTURE' 
			 
			Nevertheless, the pope's profanity has upset many. 
			 
			"Even if intended as a joke, (it) reveals the depth of anti-gay bias 
			and institutional discrimination that still exist in our church," 
			Marianne Duddy-Burke, head of LGBT Catholic rights group DignityUSA, 
			said in a statement.  
			 
			For Andrea Rubera, spokesperson for Italian Catholic LGBT group 
			Paths of Hope, the first reaction was disbelief. "At the beginning 
			we were really thinking it was not true, that it was something like 
			a piece of gossip," he said.  
			 
			According to reports, Francis' gaffe came as he discussed with 
			bishops the question of gay candidates for priesthood. The official 
			Church position is that they should be barred from ministry if they 
			are sexually active.  
			 
			Both Faggioli and Ivereigh said the issue is particularly sensitive 
			for the Italian Catholic Church, given what they said was an active 
			gay "subculture" in some of its seminaries.  
			 
			"My sense was that the pope was responding to a question about 
			certain behavior in Italian seminaries, rather than closing off the 
			priesthood to all gay men," Father Martin said.  
			 
			(Additional reporting by Gavin Jones and Alex Fraser; Editing by 
			Gareth Jones) 
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