The Vatican’s Secret Life

©ourtesy of Michael Joseph Gross

In Rome these days the topic of gay clerics in the upper reaches of the Holy See is hard to avoid.

Photograph © David Lees/Corbis; digital colorization by Lorna Clark.
Despite headlines about a powerful “gay lobby” within the Vatican, and a new Pope promising reform, the Catholic Church’s gay cardinals, monks, and other clergy inhabit a hidden netherworld. In Rome, the author learns how they navigate the dangerous paradox of their lives. 

Naked but for the towel around his waist, a man of a certain age sat by himself, bent slightly forward as if praying, in a corner of the sauna at a gym in central Rome. I had not met this man before, but as I entered the sauna, I thought I recognized him from photographs. He looked like a priest with whom I’d corresponded after mutual friends put us in touch, a man I had wanted to consult about gay clerics in the Vatican Curia. My friends told me that this priest was gay, politically savvy, and well connected to the gay Church hierarchy in Rome. But this couldn’t be that priest. He had told me that he’d be away and couldn’t meet. Yet as I looked at the man more closely, I saw that it was definitely him. When we were alone, I spoke his name, telling him mine. “I thought you were out of the country,” I said. “How lucky for me: you’re here!” Startled, the priest talked fast. Yes, his plans had changed, he said, but he was leaving again the next day and would return only after I was gone.

!…ummm yummy, WHAT – no tongue.

What’s the Big Deal Here, someone explain PLEASE ? What a bunch a’ hypocrites. So much for loving your fellow Man Catholic Religion. Why ALL the Fear?

To supplement Benetton’s very controversial Unhate campaign that I posted earlier this week, they’ve also released a 1-minute film featuring acts of violence, moments of passion and other sorts of visually stimulating clips.  And looks like the Vatican is taking legal action to have the photo of him playing tonsil hockey with Sheikh Ahmed el-Tayeb of Egypt taken down.

To supplement Benetton’s very controversial Unhate campaign that I posted earlier this week, they’ve also released a 1-minute film featuring acts of violence, moments of passion and other sorts of visually stimulating clips. And looks like the Vatican is taking legal action to have the photo of him playing tonsil hockey with Sheikh Ahmed el-Tayeb of Egypt taken down. – – more