Pope Benedict XVI’s personal secretary to publish tell-all book which will lift the lid on mysteries and scandals that sullied the reputation of the pontiff he stood by for nearly three decades
- Archbishop Georg Gaenswein, 66, will reveal his tell-all novel, Nothing But The Truth: My Life Beside Pope Benedict XVI, this month
- He stood by Pope Benedict XVI for almost three decades
- Gaenswein’s book contains ‘a personal testimony about the Pope’s greatness
- However, it also includes an account that would correct some ‘misunderstood’ aspects of the pontificate
Pope Benedict XVI’s personal secretary has written a tell-all book which will reveal the mysteries and scandals that sullied the reputation of a pontiff best known for his historic resignation.
Archbishop Georg Gaenswein’s Nothing But The Truth: My Life Beside Pope Benedict XVI is being published this month by the Piemme imprint of Italian publisher Mondadori.
His publisher has promised the novel would tell the truth about the ‘blatant calumnies’ and ‘dark manoeuvres’ the Archbishop encountered during his service for almost three decades.
Pope Benedict died on Saturday, aged 95, and his body was put on display on Monday in St Peter’s Basilica ahead of a funeral on Thursday to be celebrated by his successor, Pope Francis.
Pope Benedict XVI’s personal secretary, Archbishop Georg Gaenswein, has written a tell-all book which will reveal the mysteries and scandals that sullied the reputation of the pontiff
Archbishop Gaenswein, a 66-year-old German priest, stood by Benedict’s side for nearly three decades, first as an official working for then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, then starting in 2003 as Ratzinger’s personal secretary.
Gaenswein followed his superior to the Apostolic Palace as secretary when Ratzinger was elected pope in 2005.
And in one of the most memorable images of Benedict’s final day as pope on February 28, 2013, Archbishop Gaenswein wept as he accompanied Benedict through the frescoed halls of the Vatican, saying goodbye.
He remained Benedict’s gatekeeper, confidant and protector during a decade-long retirement, while also serving until recently as the prefect of Francis’ papal household.
Archbishop Gaenswein, a 66-year-old German priest, stood by Benedict’s side for nearly three decades
It was Archbishop Gaenswein who celebrated the sacrament of the anointing of the sick last Wednesday, when Benedict’s health deteriorated, and it was he who called Francis on Saturday to tell him that Benedict had died.
According to Piemme, Archbishop Gaenswein’s book contains ‘a personal testimony about the greatness of a mild man, a fine scholar, a cardinal and a pope who made the history of our time.’
But it said the book also contained a first-hand account that would correct some ‘misunderstood’ aspects of the pontificate as well as the machinations of the Vatican.
‘Today, after the death of the pope emeritus, the time has come for the current prefect of the papal household to tell his own truth about the blatant calumnies and dark maneuvers that have tried in vain to cast shadows on the German pontiff’s magisterium and actions,’ a press release said.
Archbishop Gaenswein’s account would ‘finally make known the true face of one of the greatest protagonists of recent decades, too often unjustly denigrated by critics as ‘Panzerkardinal’ or ‘God’s Rottweiler,’ it said, referring to some common media nicknames for the German known for his conservative, doctrinaire bent.
Specifically, the publisher said Archbishop Gaenswein would address the ‘Vatileaks’ scandal, in which Benedict’s own butler leaked his personal correspondence to a journalist.
It also included sex abuse scandals and one of the enduring mysteries of the Vatican, the 1983 disappearance of the 15-year-old daughter of a Vatican employee, Emanuela Orlandi.
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