ROME (RNS) Italy reacted with disgust last week to the lavish funeral procession held for alleged Mafia boss Vittorio Casamonica, including a gilded horse-drawn carriage procession, rose petals dropped from a helicopter, and the âGodfatherâ movie soundtrack.
Now the Roman Catholic Church is grappling with its role in the extravagant funeral as it wrestles with how it might continue to offer the sacraments to members of crime syndicates without appearing to condone their lifestyles.
During Thursdayâs (Aug. 20) funeral, the walls of Romeâs San Giovanni Bosco Catholic Church were adorned with posters, reading âKing of Romeâ and âYou have conquered Rome, now you will conquer heaven.â
In the days following the funeral, the church tried to distance itself from the elaborately orchestrated spectacle, with Auxiliary Bishop Giuseppe Mariante stating church officials did not know the ceremony would be accompanied by âMafia propaganda.â
âOf course, if we had had the suspicion of a show of this type, we would have taken precautions,â Mariante was quoted as saying in LâOsservatore Romano, the Vaticanâs semiofficial newspaper. âWe absolutely would not have accepted conducting that funeral.â
The church does not deny last rites, including Communion, to Mafia members or other criminals if requested by relatives, said Bishop Vincenzo Bertolone of Catanzaro-Squillace in Italyâs southern Calabria region, the heartland of the powerful âNdrangheta crime syndicate.
âBut the directions for the ceremony ask that it is done in a simple way, without pomp, nor flowers, nor music, nor songs, nor beatifying commemorations,â Bertolone added.
Giancarlo Maria Bregantini, who for 13 years was bishop of Calabriaâs Locri-Gerace Diocese, said that in his experience in southern Italy, Mafia bosses use funerals and processions to assert themselves and impose their power.
âIn this sense the Church in Calabria has suffered and now has a lot to teach other churches,â he said.
Pope Francis has taken a strong line against the Mafia. During a visit to Calabria last year, he lambasted the Mafia for its âadoration of evilâ and said mobsters had excommunicated themselves.
But the pontiff gave religious gangsters a glimmer of hope in February, saying criminals could be welcomed back into the Catholic Church if they repent.
âOpen your hearts to the Lord, he said. âThe Lord is waiting for you and the church will welcome you if your willingness to serve good is as clear and public as your choice to serve evil was.â
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