Jerónimo Podestá Explained

Type:Bishop
Jerónimo Podestá
Birth Date:8 August 1920
Birth Place:Ramos Mejía, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
Death Place:Buenos Aires, Argentina
Religion:Catholic Church
Education:Pontifical Gregorian University
Occupation:Catholic priest (since 1940)
Catholic bishop (since 1962)
Rank:Diocesan bishop (1962-1967)
Titular bishop (1967-1971)

Jerónimo José Podestá (August 8, 1920 – June 23, 2000) was an Argentine Catholic bishop.

Life

Podestá was born in Ramos Mejía, Greater Buenos Aires, Argentina, on August 8, 1920. He entered the seminary of La Plata in 1940. He was ordained a priest in 1946. He also studied at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. After graduating in 1950 he taught at the seminary until 1962. On September 25, 1962, he was named a bishop along with other progressive priests, including Eduardo Pironio and Antonio Quarracino, both later cardinals.[1] [2] He received his episcopal consecration on December 22, 1962 from Antonio José Plaza, Archbishop of La Plata.[3]

Podestá was 2nd bishop of Diocese of Avellaneda-Lanús from 1962 until 1967. He participated in three of the Second Vatican Council's four sessions, having missed the first and part of the second because he was not yet a bishop.[3]

In 1966, Podestá met Clelia Luro, who was separated from her husband and with six children. He began a relationship with her that led to his resignation in the following year.[4]

Luro recounts that in 1967 he had a confrontation with the papal nuncio, Umberto Mozzoni, but she gives no details except to say that it was decisive for his replacement as Bishop of Avellaneda. On November 1, Mozzoni requested his resignation. According to Ezequiel Perteagudo, this was part of an agreement between President Juan Carlos Onganía, Archbishop Antonio José Plaza of La Plata and Archbishop Mozzoni, whereby the government took no action with regard to the 1965 crash of the Banco Popular de la Plata in return for the removal of Podestá;[5] and Luro said in a book published in 2011 that Podestá's removal by the Church was paid for by a government subsidy for the Catholic University of Argentina, and that Plaza gained by the government covering up the bank affair. Podestá agreed to resign on condition that he could speak to Pope Paul VI in January. Sources cited by the New York Times blamed his removal on his "outspoken attacks on the Government's economic policies", his appearance at labor union rallies, and the influence of conservative Catholics who opposed his enthusiastic support of the Second Vatican Council's reforms. Onganía, who had taken power in a coup d'etat that its leaders called the Argentine Revolution, had told Podestá in July 1967 that he was "the main enemy of the Argentine Revolution".[5] Podestá denied charges that he maintained contact with the followers of Juan Perón, who had ruled Argentina from 1946 to 1955.[6] Perteagudo says that, after being asked to resign, Podestá went to Rome and was assured by Pope Paul VI that nothing would happen, but that, three days after his return to Argentina, he received notification from Rome that his resignation was accepted.[5] News of his resignation was published on L'Osservatore Romano on 2 December 1967.[7] After his resignation became public in December, he attacked Mozzoni for leaking the news. Church officials suggested Podestá had resigned due to health problems and denied any pressure from the government.[8]

In 1972, Podestá married Luro.[9] At times he and his wife celebrated Mass together. While he is sometimes spoken of as laicized, he was only suspended from the exercise of the priesthood.[10]

He left Argentina in 1974 after repeated threats from the death squads of the Alianza Anticomunista Argentina (Argentine Anti-Communist Alliance) and returned in 1983 after the overthrow of the military dictatorship.[11]

Podestá was the president of the Spanish; Castilian: Federación Latinoamericana de Sacerdotes Casados (Latin American Federation of Married Priests).[9]

By the time of his death he was poor and had largely been forgotten. When Podestá was dying, Archbishop of Buenos Aires Jorge Mario Bergoglio, S.J. (later Pope Francis), reached out to him and his wife.[12] He was the only Argentine church official to visit Podestá in the hospital.[13] Luro later said that Bergoglio defended her from the sharpest Vatican attacks on her for marrying Podestá.[14]

He died in Buenos Aires on June 23, 2000. Argentine writer Ernesto Sabato later said he had "suffered injustice, lack of understanding, slander and gossip".[9]

Clelia Luro de Podestá died in Buenos Aires on November 4, 2013.

Works

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Rubin. Sergio. A los 79 años murió Jerónimo Podestá, el obispo que se casó. March 17, 2013. Clarín. June 24, 2000. es.
  2. News: Bruschtein. Luis. Monseñor Jerónimo Podestá, el obispo que no tuvo miedo al amor . March 17, 2013. Pagina 12. June 24, 2000. es.
  3. Web site: Bishop Jerónimo José Podestá. Catholic Hierarchy. March 17, 2013.
  4. Web site: La viuda del polémico monseñor Podestá habló con Francisco . 25 March 2013 . 2 December 2013. es.
  5. Web site: Letter from Ezequiel Perteagudo to Juan Perón . 12 December 1967 . 23 July 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150323054815/http://www.blayney.nsw.gov.au/ArticleDocuments/329/3h%20-%20Hobbys%20Yards%20Heritage%20Items.pdf.aspx . March 23, 2015 . es.
  6. News: Bishop in Argentina Resigns under Fire. March 17, 2013. New York Times. December 4, 1967.
  7. Annuario Pontificio 1969 (Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana 1969), p. 673
  8. News: Argentines Organize Protest Against the Removal of Pro-Labor Bishop in Big Buenos Aires Suburb. March 17, 2013. New York Times. December 5, 1967.
  9. News: De Vedia . Mariano. A 30 años renace la sombra del relevo de Mons. Podestá. March 17, 2013. La Nacion. August 26, 1996. es.
  10. http://www.moceop.net/spip.php?article343 Inauguran muestra dedicada a Jerónimo Podestá
  11. News: Brienza . Hernán . El mártir de los sacerdotes casados . March 17, 2013 . Crítica de la Argentina . April 13, 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100314121242/http://criticadigital.com/impresa/index.php?secc=nota . March 14, 2010 . es.
  12. News: Magister . Sandro. Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Profession: Servant of the Servants of God . March 16, 2013. L'espresso. December 2, 2002.
  13. News: Hebblethwaite. Margaret. The Pope Francis I know. March 16, 2013. The Guardian (UK). March 14, 2013. Luro talked to me at length about her friend, of whom she has the highest opinion, and told me how she would write to him almost weekly, and he would always reply by ringing her up and having a short chat. When Podesta was dying, Bergoglio was the only Catholic cleric who went to visit him in hospital, and, when he died, the only one who showed public recognition of his great contribution to the Argentinian church..
  14. News: Calloni . Stella . Papa Latinoamericano - Acusado de tener vínculos con la dictadura; la derecha lo defiende. March 16, 2013. La Jornada. March 13, 2013. es.