Jounalists never satisfied

I was impressed by the news that the Holy Father had consented to give an interview to four German journalists and I was looking around for some interesting comment on it. I was fairly cheerful until I found a post on the Ratzinger Forum by "Studiosus" who is in fact Michael Gutner, a clerical student at Salzburg.

He reports on an interview given by Fr Gemmingen SJ about the interview of the Pope. Bear in mind that this man is not employed by a secular newspaper but by the Vatican.

I have translated Gutner's Italian version. The original German text (although differing in some respects from Gutner's) is on this page at Kath.net. I would be grateful for any corrections from those who know German better than I do (not difficult). This interview has prompted me for the first time to use the red comments device. I leave it to the laity to add the appropriate expletives which would not be right on a priestly blog.
Rev Fr Eberhard von Gemmingen SJ, head of the German section of Vatican Radio, was one of the 4 journalists who interviewed the Holy Father. After that interview, he spoke about the papal interview.

P. Gemmingen SJ: The interview took place in a large room at Castel Gandolfo. In the middle of this room with a marble floor, there is a circle with a diameter of perhaps 2 metres. His Holiness sat on one side, we journalists on the other side of this circle. So there was about 4 metres distance between the Holy Father and us, [err - not actually. If the diameter was 2 metres, you were about 2 metres apart - as indeed the photograph shows] and before the beginning, we asked His Holiness, “Holiness, must we shout now so that you can hear us?” But the Pope heard well. [So journalists can speak in such a way that a person can hear them six feet away. Hold the front page!]

Journalist: “And what was the atmosphere of the conversation?”

P. Gemmingen SJ: “Notably cold, I would say. The Pope said “Yes, I feel as though I am before a tribunal” but also we journalists were sat as if in a court. [There have been times when you would have been excommunicated - or even served a cup of suspiciously strong coffee - but actually, you were being given an interview with a Pope for the first time in history in case you didn't notice.] The Pope spoke fairly briefly, and so the interview did not last 45 minutes – as was planned – but only 36 minutes. [Translation - after AIDS, contraception and ecumenism you guys just ran out of questions.] When the interview was finished, His Holiness said: “Thanks be to God, it is finished at last!” [With "friends" like Fr Gemmingen, I don't blame him.]

Journalist: “And why did His Holiness not feel good being interviewed?”

P. Gemmingen SJ: “I think his intellect said to him: “with an interview, I can reach into many, many living rooms and therefore I can say all that I want to say” Besides, the Pope did not impose it on himself, but was asked, and the Vatican permitted it. [Eh what?! He's the Pope. He doesn't need "The Vatican's" permission] Then, it must be said, the Holy Father is a very profound man. He knows how to respond to very many topics: from AIDS, to the family, to the deepening of the faith, then to ecumenism; so to say something with only 3 minutes at most for each topic - it is not easy. I think one would have felt better in other situations, not sat in front of a court, of a tribunal, and one could have deepened the questions. But that was not possible today, unfortunately.
Here is a photo of Fr Gemmingen. (Click for a dartboard-sized version.)

Popular posts from this blog

1962 Missal pdf online

Request for Novena to Blessed Pius IX

Saint Gabriel

Saint Ignatius on heresy, and the capsizing boat

Downloadable booklets for Vespers