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Pope front-runner; Why Italian, 71, may get top job (favorite of John Paul 11, thinks like him)
DAILY NEWS ^ | April 9, 2005 | HELEN KENNEDY, STAFF WRITER

Posted on 04/10/2005 3:00:15 PM PDT by Liz


Oddsmakers have Dionigi Cardinal Tettamanzi of Milan, a favorite of John Paul II, as favorite to succeed the late pontiff. Some say the charming moral theologian is campaigning too hard. Serinelli GETTY


Dionigi Cardinal Tettamanzi kisses the hand of Pope John Paul II. Lepri AP

Dionigi Cardinal Tettamanzi of Milan is the odds-on favorite of every bookmaker taking wagers on the next Pope. He would just hate that.

A moral theologian who looks like Pope John XXIII and thinks like Pope John Paul II, Tettamanzi has fulminated against gambling, which he says is immoral because it enslaves people.

"Man is not made for games; games are made for man," he said.

On the other hand, the popular cardinal might be pleased that he's in the lead at 3-to-1, given that one of the biggest knocks against him is that he's campaigning too hard for the job.

Tettamanzi is little known abroad but ubiquitous in Milan, where he appears on TV, writes newspaper articles and publishes opinions about everything from gay marriage to bioethics to the wiles of Satan.

Avuncular and charming, Tettamanzi has been able to bridge political chasms within the Vatican without making important enemies. He is popular with both conservatives and progressives.

At 71, he's old enough to make another 26-year papacy unlikely. He's the leading Italian in a year when many foresee the job returning to Italian hands.

And most importantly, he was a favorite of John Paul, is believed to have ghostwritten some of his encyclicals and would represent a smooth continuation of the late Pope's policies.

Tettamanzi is short and round and jokes about it. He didn't take offense when a Scottish cardinal famously suggested in 1999 that he wasn't dignified enough to be

Pope by saying, "Who's the wee fat guy?"

He bears a resemblance to the widely beloved Pope John XXIII and has a similar populist style: He loves to wade into crowds to shake hands.

In 2003 he visited the Formula One race track at Monza, chatted with the drivers, mechanics and fans and even took a few zippy turns around the track in driver Ivan Capelli's red Mercedes. He joked afterward that he has been known to go even faster on a regular road.

He recently published a chatty letter to children with references to Bill Gates, Italian pop stars and the rainbow peace flags hanging from so many apartment balconies.

He signed it "Dionigi."

The Italian magazine L'espresso dubbed his activities "Tettamanzi's frantic campaign for the papacy."

Born near Milan, Tettamanzi wanted to be a priest since he was 5 and entered the seminary at 11. He spent much of his career as a seminary rector before becoming an archbishop in 1989 and then secretary of the bishops conference in Rome two years later.

He became a favorite of John Paul and in 2002, when he received an unusual promotion from archbishop of Genoa to Milan - Italy's largest diocese - some saw it as the subtle anointing of a successor.

Politically, Tettamanzi is hard to characterize.

Like John Paul, he is very conservative about church doctrine - taking strong positions against homosexuality, stem cell research and abortion - but liberal when it comes to issues of social justice.

Some Vatican watchers contend he's a lock because of his courting of the politically powerful Opus Dei.

Like all but one of the voting cardinals, Tettamanzi is not a member of the secretive archtraditionalist group, but he has allied himself with them.

He once compared Opus Dei founder José Maria Escriva to St. Francis of Assisi and has published fundamentalist papers such as one warning that the devil is real - "very intelligent, astute and charming" - and walking the Earth. Tettamanzi listed 10 practical ways to resist Satan and, in an echo of the famous "usual suspects" movie line, wrote: "He is a liar, and his greatest lie is that he does not exist."

Tettamanzi has also been at the forefront of the church's opposition to what he called "gay culture" - especially same-sex unions.

"In this cultural situation the church must exercise the greatest vigilance," he wrote.

But Tettamanzi is also popular with the liberal lay Community of St. Egidio, and other Vatican observers say Opus Dei has cooled on Tettamanzi because of it.

As archbishop of Genoa in 2001, Tettamanzi backed the anti-globalization protesters who laid siege to the G8 summit of world leaders there.

"One African child sick with AIDS counts more than the entire universe," he said, urging rich countries to take more care of the Third World.

In Milan, the cardinal has been outspoken about social problems including unemployment, poverty and the treatment of illegal immigrants.

He called for "placing in common the welfare and the goods of all, material and immaterial, physical and spiritual" - prompting a blistering editorial last year from the newspaper Il Foglio blasting "the Communism of Tettamanzi."

Tettamanzi both embraces modernity and worries about it.

Though Microsoft published digital editions of his 2000 book on bioethics, he is strongly critical of 21st century Western culture as being too materialistic.

"We seek to satisfy ourselves with consumer goods. We pursue economic well-being as the lone guarantee of true quality of life," he said. "We try to build a paradise on Earth, because we no longer believe in paradise in Heaven."

When it comes to the reforms so many American and European Catholics are pushing for, Tettamanzi is unlikely to deliver if elected.

Like John Paul, he sees the church's problems as external, not internal.

In his view, pressure to ordain women or let priests marry is due to a crisis of faith among Catholic worshipers, not a structural problem in the church or a failure to adapt to modernity.

"The first and fundamental problem concerns us Christians and our faith: To what point are we Christians?" he has said. "In Europe today, the priority does not lie in 'baptizing the converted' but in 'converting the baptized.'"

If he becomes Pope, he'll be the rare one with a nudgy mom.

In 2002, Giuditta Tettamanzi, now 94, was asked if she was pleased her son was moving to Milan and therefore could visit her more.

"I have no demands. When he calls me and asks me how I am, I simply answer: Alleluia!" she said. "My son must do the will of God, not mine."

She said she had one mantra when her son was made a priest and then a cardinal: "I repeated to him: Only with humility will you be able to take souls to God."


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: cary; nextpope; tettamanzi; vatican
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Like John Paul, (Cardinal Tettamanzi) is very conservative about church doctrine - taking strong positions against homosexuality, stem cell research and abortion - but liberal when it comes to issues of social justice. .....most importantly, he was a favorite of John Paul, is believed to have ghostwritten some of his encyclicals and would represent a smooth continuation of the late Pope's policies....

Good start.

1 posted on 04/10/2005 3:00:15 PM PDT by Liz
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To: Liz

I'm a bit suspicious that the New York Times was pushing this guy yesterday, and now the Daily News is pushing him today. They say he is conservative. I wonder.


2 posted on 04/10/2005 3:10:11 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Liz
(favorite of John Paul 11, thinks like him)

Wait, wait!
What about John Pauls 3 - 10?!

;^)

3 posted on 04/10/2005 3:10:38 PM PDT by Constitution Day
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To: Liz
Like all but one of the voting cardinals, Tettamanzi is not a member of the secretive archtraditionalist group, but he has allied himself with them.

Any idea who the one Opus Dei Cardinal is?
4 posted on 04/10/2005 3:10:44 PM PDT by Castro (Moses supposes his toeses are roses...)
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To: Liz

Bookmakers in London have him as the favorite.

Posted a few days ago. Yes, I know it's in poor taste.


5 posted on 04/10/2005 3:13:27 PM PDT by Finalapproach29er (America is gradually becoming the Godless,out-of-control golden-calf scene,in "The Ten Commandments")
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To: Cicero

The buzz is the guy is lobbying for the job---which may work against him.


6 posted on 04/10/2005 3:14:18 PM PDT by Liz (One of it's most compelling tenets is Catholicism's acknowledgement of individual free will.)
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To: Liz
but liberal when it comes to issues of social justice.

Sounds like a fiscal socialist.

7 posted on 04/10/2005 3:15:26 PM PDT by July20
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To: Liz

Sorry. I do not trust the Italian Church to maintain conservative values. The next Pope should come from Africa, the most conservative bastion.

Regards, Ivan


8 posted on 04/10/2005 3:16:06 PM PDT by MadIvan (One blog to bring them all...and in the Darkness bind them: http://www.theringwraith.com/)
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To: Castro

Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani of Lima, Peru is supposedly the world’s lone Opus Dei cardinal.


9 posted on 04/10/2005 3:16:35 PM PDT by Liz (One of it's most compelling tenets is Catholicism's acknowledgement of individual free will.)
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To: MadIvan

I'll continue to pray it's Arinze (or maybe Ratzinger or Schoenborn).

I don't like the idea of rewarding a campaigner.


10 posted on 04/10/2005 3:17:49 PM PDT by Petronski (I thank God Almighty for a most remarkable blessing: John Paul the Great.)
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To: cyborg

Forgot to ping you to my previous post.


11 posted on 04/10/2005 3:20:04 PM PDT by Petronski (I thank God Almighty for a most remarkable blessing: John Paul the Great.)
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To: Liz

I'd favor that dude from Nigeria. From what I read, he is orthodox and a non compromiser.


12 posted on 04/10/2005 3:21:31 PM PDT by Hacksaw (Real men don't buy their firewood.)
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To: Petronski

Arinze and Ratzinger are the only ones I trust so far.

I am suspicious of creeping liberalism in the Church. We need the Church to maintain a hardline stance, perhaps an even harder stance than it does at the moment, not surrender to political correctness.

Regards, Ivan


13 posted on 04/10/2005 3:21:37 PM PDT by MadIvan (One blog to bring them all...and in the Darkness bind them: http://www.theringwraith.com/)
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To: Constitution Day

John Paul III: The Search for Spock


14 posted on 04/10/2005 3:21:48 PM PDT by ChicagoHebrew (Hell exists, it is real. It's a quiet green meadow populated entirely by Arab goat herders.)
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To: Cicero
I'm a bit suspicious that the New York Times was pushing this guy yesterday, and now the Daily News is pushing him today. They say he is conservative. I wonder.

He is socially conservative, but on economics (he has written, and talks about it, he also supported the anti-globalization protests in Italy during the G-8 conferance) he is liberal, if not outright socialist, and is not a believer in the free markets.

In some essence, you could argue that he is a throwback populist, on religion, culture, and doctrine, he is as conservative as one can get, on economics and politics, he is in the left wing brigade.

15 posted on 04/10/2005 3:22:44 PM PDT by Sonny M ("oderint dum metuant")
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To: MadIvan

A harder line on obedience to Roman Catholic dogma, agreed.


None of this lukewarm AmChurch 'democracy' garbage. I've had it up to my neck with it.


16 posted on 04/10/2005 3:24:05 PM PDT by Petronski (I thank God Almighty for a most remarkable blessing: John Paul the Great.)
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To: Constitution Day
What about John Pauls 3 - 10?!

They were all before World War 11

:^D

17 posted on 04/10/2005 3:24:31 PM PDT by NeoCaveman
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To: ChicagoHebrew

Heh!


18 posted on 04/10/2005 3:24:41 PM PDT by Petronski (I thank God Almighty for a most remarkable blessing: John Paul the Great.)
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To: Liz

Yikes! Now I can't gamble either? :)


19 posted on 04/10/2005 3:28:37 PM PDT by pa mom
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To: Liz
They're right that a 71-year-old cardinal is unlikely to have a 26-year reign if elected pope.

There's a good chance that whoever is elected will be someone who isn't being talked about now...after the election of Karol Wojtyla in 1978, the NY Times had to admit he had not been mentioned even as a dark horse.

Of the 117 cardinals, subtract the 11 Americans and the known liberals among the European cardinals...the new pope will almost certainly be from among the remaining cardinals (although they could in theory pick someone who hadn't yet been named cardinal, that's unlikely).

20 posted on 04/10/2005 3:30:29 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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