Prevost Praises a homosexual Priest who had pedophile fantasies —and Calls Him a Prophet
Leo XIV Praises Again Homosexual and Heretic Priest
In an address on 11 October to the faithful of the Tuscany dioceses, Pope Leo XIV delivered a tribute to the controversial priest Don Lorenzo Milani (1923–1967).
Leo XIV said: "Don Milani was a prophet of the Tuscan and Italian Church Pope Francis described him as a witness and interpreter of social and economic transformation. His motto was 'I care', meaning 'I am interested', 'I am concerned', 'I care deeply'."
Already in a talk to the Roman clergy on 12 June, Leo XIV had claimed that "in recent times, we have had holy priests who have been able to combine a passion for history with the proclamation of the Gospel, such as [...] Don Milani, a prophet of peace and justice".
Leo XIV walks again in Francis' footsteps. Francis began the rehabilitation of Don Milani by visiting his tomb in 2017 and praising him on several occasions.
Homosexual and Heretic
Don Lorenzo Milani was a Florentine priest who was ordained in 1947. He was also a teacher and social activist.
In 1954, he was sent to Barbiana, a remote hamlet (100 souls) in Tuscany, effectively as an exile.
One of Don Milani's main critics is Cristina Siccardi. In Corrispondenza Romana, she offered a critical view of Don Milani, correcting the tendency to portray him simply as a “believer wounded by the Church and a passionate educator”.
According to Siccardi's research, Don Milani was homosexual and a heretic who sublimated his deviation through his educational activity.
She suggests that his school model, pedagogy and social advocacy reflect a 'revolutionary' or secular ideological shift. This helped to usher in a “chaotic and deleterious culture of dis-education”, which lacked respect for hierarchical authority and discipline.
Quotes from Don Milani Revealing Psychological and Moral Deviation
In 1954, he wrote to his mother: "It is obvious to everyone that I have been sent here [to Barbiana] as the homosexual and heretical demagogue priest, who perhaps even confessed his guilt because he did not defend himself."
A letter to Giorgio Pecorini, from Barbiana, dated 15 November 1959, is particularly revealing. In it, Don Milani wrote about his male pupils: "If there is a danger for my soul, it is certainly not that I have loved too little, but that I have loved too much — that is, even to the point of taking them to bed! And then, who will ever be able to love boys to the bone without, in the end, putting it up their backside, if not a teacher who, together with them, also loves God, fears hell, and longs for heaven?”
As recalled by his biographer Michele Gesualdi, Don Milani said 1965 to pupils that he wants to take them in his arms but "must not, because they are men". Even the defender Gesualdi admitted that Don Milani had paedophilic fantasies.
Don Milani's main work is Pastoral Experiences. In 1958, La Civiltà Cattolica wrote that it was "full of obsessions and contradictions". In the book, Milani writes about himself: "I have taken peace away from my people. I have sown only discord, discussions, and contradictory approaches. I have always treated souls and situations with the harshness befitting the master. I had no manners, no consideration, no tact."
Milani's main work is Esperienze pastorali ("Pastoral Experiences"). La Civiltà Cattolica wrote in 1958 that it was "filled with obsessions and contradictions".
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