Even 80 years later, the Reds can't stop desecrating Churches and dishonouring the dead! At least they didn't kill the monks, as they would have 80 years ago.
From the Catholic Herald
The exhumation fails to respect the inviolability of the abbey of the
Valley of the Fallen as a sacred place, the prior said
The prior of the Benedictine Abbey at the Valley of the Fallen,
whence the body of Francisco Franco was exhumed Thursday, has written
that the exhumation fails to respect the inviolability of the abbey as a
sacred place.
Fr. Santiago Cantera, prior of the Abbey of the Holy Cross, sent a
message to Pope Francis; the abbot of Solesmes Abbey; and Cardinal
Carlos Osoro Sierra of Madrid noting the violation.
Franco’s body was exhumed from the Basilica of the Holy Cross at the
Valley of the Fallen October 24. It was re-interred in Madrid’s El Pardo
cemetery.
Franco was Spain’s head of state from 1939, at the end of the Spanish
Civil War when the Nationalist forces he led defeated the Republican
faction, until his death in 1975. During the war, Republicans martyred
thousands of clerics, religious, and laity; of these, 11 have been
canonized, and 1,915 beatified.
The Valley of the Fallen is a monumental complex near Madrid which
includes an abbey and basilica, the construction of which Franco ordered
to honor the fallen of both sides during the civil war. The bodies of
more than 30,000 victims of the war are buried in the complex.
The prior of the Abbey of the Holy Cross also filed a complaint in a
Spanish court over the “non-consensual” access by the Civil Guard to the
church.
“We want it to be on record that the actions of the Security Forces
and the workers have been and are totally incompatible with the
principle of the inviolability of places of worship and the rights of
this Benedictine community; which we have made known also to the
ecclesiastical hierarchy,” according to a statement released on October
23 by the Benedictine community.
Europa Press said that the Benedictines have conveyed this complaint
to the Archdiocese of Madrid, the Spanish bishops’ conference, Solesmes
Abbey (their mother house), and the Holy See.
Fr. Cantera filed a complaint on October 21 with the Guardia de San
Lorenzo Court of El Escorial for “preventing access by the monks” to the
basilica.
In the statement the Benedictines said that since October 11, after
the agreement by the Council of Ministers which decreed the closure of
the Valley of the Fallen, “the Civil Guard, without judicial
authorization to allow it, accessed and wandered about the premises of
the abbey and, what is more serious, accessed and wandered about the
basilica.”
According to the religious, the Civil Guard “without any
ecclesiastical authorization and occupying it 24 hours a day, violated
thus both the right to the inviolability of domiciles and the right to
religious freedom.”
The complaint also states that on October 20 the passage of the monks
was prevented, since “chains and padlocks were placed on the access
door between the abbey and the basilica,” despite the fact that the
monks are “the sole owners and custodians of the church.”
However, third parties in fact have been allowed to enter the
basilica and abbey “without the least supervision,” and so the
Benedictines said that they are not sure if these people have not
contravened “the sacred character of the church, not knowing if actions
incompatible with worship, piety, or religion have taken place.”
Of the members of the abbey, the government allowed only Fr. Cantera to be present at the exhumation.
The government of Pedro Sanchez, secretary-general of the Spanish Socialist Worker’s Party, had pledged to exhume Franco’s body.
It is spending some $70,000 on the exhumation and re-burial, the BBC reported.
About 100 supporters of Franco protested the exhumation outside El Pardo cemetery Thursday.
Franco’s grandson, Francisco Franco y Martinez-Bordiu, told Reuters
that “I feel a great deal of rage because [the government] has used
something as cowardly as digging up a corpse as propaganda, and
political publicity to win a handful of votes before an election.”
Spain is due to hold a general election on November 10.
Franco’s family tried to block the exhumation in court, but lost its
appeal. They also asked that if his body were re-interred, it be moved
to Almudena Cathedral in Madrid, but this, too, was rejected.
Fr. Ramon Tejero said Mass at the Franco family mausoleum in El Prado cemetery after the re-burial.
In January, Alessandro Gisotti, then-interim director of the Holy See
press office, said that the exhumation of Franco is a “matter that
concerns his family, the Spanish government, and the local Church.”
Bishop Luis Javier Argüello Garcia, Auxiliary Bishop of Valladolid
and secretary general of the Spanish bishops’ conference, said on
numerous occasions that the Church “is not opposed” to the exhumation of
the remains of Franco according to the ruling of the Supreme Court,
but asked that the country “look forward” and not “reopen wounds.”
Numerous leftist groups have proposed demolishing the 150 meter high
cross that presides over the Valley of the Fallen, to make it a
“memorial.” Some have also called for the site to be deconsecrated and
the abbey closed.
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