The complex stain of Pope Francis’ legacy is further addressed in the NunS vs the Vatican, a sensitive and alarming documentary after women who have long been a Catholic Church for sexual abuse, and a broader system that protects and enables predators.
Nuns, directed by Emmy winner Lorena Luciano and executive, created by Law & Order: Special Victims Star Mariska Hariska Harisska and Premiere at the Toronto Film Festival on Saturday, basically in the center around Gloria Branciani and Mirjam Kovac. Jesuit Pest. abuse.
2020 Rupnik was excommunicated for the sins of beginners with whom he had sex. But that excommunication was abolished in the same month after the Rupnik repented. One expert in the documentary emphasizes that excommunication may have been abolished only with the permission of Pope Francis.
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Rupnik was also a famous artist who became a mosaic to hang in the Vatican. In a documentary, it is called John Paul II Pope Michelangles, committing a major influence on his suspected crimes.
In Nunn, Branciani, who, together with Kovac, was part of the Loyola community, Ignac, who founded Rupnik in Slovenia, tells how the Jesuit priest allegedly looked after, and then sexually and psychologically harassed her increasingly aggressive and violent.
He persuaded her to join Loyola, so she did not lose contact with Christ. He would tell about religious art and iconography, describing the paintings of the Virgin’s mother, which, for example, sensually reveal the baby’s leg of Jesus. He would say that the connection with Catholicism includes both spirit and body, which indicates that sex with him is like touching the divine. Eventually, he quoted the Holy Trinity to seek an orgy with Branciani and another monk.
According to Branciani, when she reported abuse, Loyala’s mother’s supreme sister Ivanka Hosta punished her, and her father Tomáš Špidlík in Rome forced her from a religious life in Rome, which would even write a resignation letter on her behalf. These actions left her exiled by the community she considered about the family and encountered suicide ideas, says Branciani.
Branciani joins a few other nuns who have suffered similar abuse in the Catholic Church, including Barbara Dorris, Director of the Priestly Clear Network (Snap), which describes that the doctor is sexually harassed, impregnated and forced to endure life -threatening Balled with whitening.
It is one of the votes in documentary films, in paintings, how these crimes are widespread. A study showing anonymous answers reported that one of the three monks is experiencing sexual abuse of a priest-and as a system ensures that the victims are silent. In the end, the nuns take on poverty, chastity and vows of silence, a system that distinguishes and facilitates prey, especially those priests they confess, considering power not only to them but also to their families and communities. It is claimed that Rupnik himself strengthened that power dynamics, comparing God’s relationship with man as a man’s relationship to women.
Dorris emphasizes that adding the problem of priests blaming the abuse of homosexuality by stigmatizing sexual orientation and eliminating women’s quest for the process.
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The patriarchy of the Church is fully visible in a documentary, when protesters turn to the priest about the unveiling of Rupnik’s art, despite his suspicion, his art, whose Catholics knelt and pray earlier, was created when he allegedly enforced violence. One priest simply responds to the camera that such suspicions are angry.
Since then, the Vatican has ordered the removal of all Rupnik’s art from his websites, partly a slow response to the allegations, as Pope Francis first publicly acknowledged Nuns abuse in 2019. At a press conference on his plane before the summit in the Vatican.
2021 Pope Francis amended the Vatican Canon Act to prosecute priests accused of abuse of adult. In 2023, in response to public retardation, he refused the Rupnik’s restrictions on the Statute of the case, allowing the submission of Branciani and Kovac reports.
However, Rupnik’s case, after the priest was transferred between the diocese, will still be tried under the Vatican Canon Act, which has long been in operation to protect the Church rather than a criminal court. The difference, as one documentary expert emphasizes, is that his abuse will not be treated as a crime, but a sin.