Thursday, October 16, 2008

போப் ஜான் பாலைக் கத்தியால் குத்திய பாதிரியார்- இதை ஏன் மறைத்தார்கள்?

Pope John Paul 'wounded' in 1982
Cardinal Dziwisz with the Pope
Stanislaw Dziwisz worked with the pontiff for nearly 40 years

A priest who attacked Pope John Paul II in 1982 reached the pontiff with a bayonet and drew blood, it has emerged.

The extent of the injury from the attack in Portugal was kept quiet, a film based on an aide's memoirs says.

The ultra-conservative Spanish priest, Juan Maria Fernandez y Krohn, was sentenced to six and a half years.

His attack came a year after the Pope was wounded by Turkish gunman Mehmet Ali Agca in St Peter's Square in Rome. The Pope died in 2005, aged 85.


I can now reveal that the Holy Father was wounded. When we got back to the room [in the Fatima sanctuary complex] there was blood
Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz

Film breaks Vatican secrecy

The latest revelation was made in a new documentary film based on the memoirs of the Pope's personal secretary, Stanislaw Dziwisz.

He said that during the Pope's visit to a shrine in Fatima in Portugal, the priest came at the pontiff with a bayonet.

According to Cardinal Dziwisz, the priest managed to draw blood with the weapon but was overcome by the Pope's security guards.

"I can now reveal that the Holy Father was wounded. When we got back to the room [in the Fatima sanctuary complex] there was blood," he says in the documentary.

Priest arrested in Fatima, Portugal 1982
Krohn was sentenced to six and a half years for the attack

The Pope did not reveal the injury at the time and continued with the trip.

There has been no comment from the Vatican on the cardinal's revelations.

The documentary film, Testimony, pulls together material from the Pope's private life as related by Cardinal Dziwisz.

He is now the cardinal of Krakow in Poland and served as John Paul's private secretary for nearly 40 years, including all his 27 years as Pope.

The 90-minute film marks the first time the Vatican has opened its doors to foreign cameras.

Pope Benedict XVI will watch a preview later on Thursday.

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