austraLasia #1748
The Pope's right hand man
Courtesy: TIME (for those who don't have time!)
By Jeff Israely / Rome
Feb 05, 2007 -- Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone doesn't have the guarded
air of those who tend to rise to the heights of Vatican power. He smiles
easily. He laughs out loud. His oval face and dark, bespectacled eyes show no
sign of scars from the bureaucratic battles that accompany most climbs up the
Roman Curia career ladder. A few years ago, I saw Bertone walking alone on a
side street near St. Peter's and went over to say hello and shake his hand. He
stopped on a dime when he heard his name, turning toward me with his arms
spread open, and practically sang out in his baritone, "Oooh! Carissimo!
How's it going!?" And we had never even met before.
Such gregariousness has apparently helped the 72-year-old
find friends in high places. Bertone, a native of the northern Italian region
of Piedmont and a former theology professor, worked for seven years as deputy
for then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, the office that oversees church orthodoxy. Promoted in 2002 to
Archbishop of Genoa, Bertone attained the rank of Cardinal the next year and
was thought to be among the core group in the conclave that pushed for
Ratzinger's election. Still, since he didn't have the usual résumé from the
Vatican diplomatic corps, many were surprised when his old boss, now Pope
Benedict XVI, tapped him to take over in September as Vatican Secretary of
State, the No. 2 slot in the entire Catholic Church hierarchy, behind only the
Pope himself.
Bertone sat down last week with TIME for a rare interview in the sunny 15th
century Vatican tower that serves as his temporary office while the Secretary
of State's quarters are being remodeled. "The Holy Father has shown to
have great trust in me," Bertone says, recalling their years at the
doctrinal office. "We were the consummate duo. We've always gotten along
personally, and there is a mutual understanding that continues to be the basis
for our work together." It's the kind of affinity--similar to what U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is said to have with President George W.
Bush--that inevitably adds extra weight to an already influential assignment.
Although he shares the same title as the chief U.S.
diplomat, the Vatican Secretary of State is more like a Prime Minister,
responsible not only for foreign policy but also for overseeing church
headquarters at the Roman Curia, being the Vatican link to Catholic organizations
and officials around the world, and even stepping in for the Pope if he falls
ill or is unavailable. While Pope John Paul II's constant travels kept him
somewhat separated from the workings of the Vatican bureaucracy, Benedict and
Bertone are instead expected to work hand in hand on all matters, foreign and
domestic. The Pope will need his No. 2 as both a political strategist and a
sort of chief of operations, which will give Benedict the space to pursue the
intellectual and theological aspects of the job that he prefers.
Moreover, if Benedict hopes to continue streamlining the
governance of the church--which would include interrupting the ambitions of top
prelates--he will have to lean on Bertone, who handled such delicate tasks in
the past as spearheading Vatican negotiations with the ultratraditionalist
Lefebrve group. "The Pope can count on Bertone's absolute loyalty,"
says a veteran Vatican diplomat. "Ideally, the Secretary of State must
maintain some autonomy while always reflecting the thoughts of the Pope."
Both men have learned quickly that their respective new
roles go well beyond the internal discussions over church doctrine that marked
their old positions. Bertone came on the job just three days after the Pope's
controversial speech in Germany about faith and violence that angered many
Muslims. The new Secretary of State hit the ground running, orchestrating what,
by Vatican standards, was a swift response that included conciliatory public
statements, a quickly organized meeting with ambassadors from Muslim countries
and, ultimately, the success of November's trip to Turkey, where the Pope
surprised his critics with a moving prayer together with an imam in Istanbul's
Blue Mosque. "Words have great value," says Bertone. "But
sometimes gestures can have such an enormous emotional impact that words might
not be able to achieve."
Yet, not all of late has gone smoothly in Rome. The low point was the Pope's
botched appointment last month of the new Archbishop of Warsaw, who had to
immediately resign after revelations that he had been an informant for the
Polish communist regime. There are also broader complaints inside the Curia
that other appointments, and key documents, have being delayed. "We're
still waiting on important changes," says a senior Vatican official.
"Benedict is turning out to be more cautious than we had thought, and so
far Bertone hasn't managed to really get things moving."
For a poor farmer's son to have risen to the top of the
Vatican hierarchy, Bertone must have had to develop steel under his outward
affability. Vatican insiders note that in the new job--for which part of his
task is to fend off those who want to derail the Pope's agenda--that thick skin
may count more than Bertone's good humor. A Vatican official who has worked
with the Cardinal in the past says, "I've never seen him betray his
principles--but he's had to do everything just short of it." Adds the
official: "He knows how to operate within the structure of the Holy See.
He has the skills of a politician."
Still, Vatican watchers say it remains an open question if
the Benedict-Bertone team--which may have been effective in imposing orthodoxy
on wayward theologians when the pair ran the doctrinal office--has the worldly
vision and institutional muscle to impose their will on the 1.1 billion-strong
universal church.
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