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Medjugorje after Twenty -One Years 

1981-2002 

The Definitive History 


CONTENTS 


Foreword 

List of Principal Croatian Persona 

The Six “Seers” 

24 June 1981 — The First Apparitions 

The Charismatic Connection 

A Preposterous Proliferation 

Credibility of the Messages 

Secrets 

The Sign 

The Position of Monsignor Zanic 

An Immoral Priest Defended 

Fraud on Film 


l 



The Herzegovina question, 


25 March 1985 

A Letter From Msgr. Zanic to Father Tomislav Pervan, 
23 February 1987 

1987 Communique of the Yugoslav Bishops 

Concerning the Facts of Medjugorje 

25 July 1987 

Declaration of the Bishop of Mostar 
Concerning Medjugorje - 25 July 1987 

20 January 1988 

Letter to Mrs. Marija Davies from the 

Bishop of Mostar 20 January 1988 

11 July 1988 

Marija Pavlovic Contradicts Herself 

31 March 1989 
Visions in Alabama? 

May 1990 

The Truth about Medjugorje 
A Statement by Msgr. Pavao Zanic, 

Bishop of Mostar-Duvno, published in May 1990. 

13 June 1990 

The Irish Bishops’ Conference Statement 
1991 

Alleged Miracles at Medjugorje 

The Medjugorje Industry 

May-June 1993 
Sacrificial Giving 

1993 

Millions Are Deluded 


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24 July 1993 
A New Bishop of Mostar 


October 1993 

An Interview with the Bishop of Mostar (Excerpts) 

10-11 September 1994 
The Pope Visits Croatia 

11 October 1994 

Synod Intervention by Msgr. Ratko Peric 

17 June 1995 
The Film Gospa 

31 August 1995 

A Warning concerning the film Gospa-The Wanderer. 
23 March 1996 

CDF Letter to Bishop Taverdet 
16 June 1996 

The Ban on Pilgrimages Reaffirmed 
4 December 1996 

The Circulation of Alleged Private Revelations 
25 January 1997 

Medjugorje: the State of the Question in 1997 
12-13 April 1997 

Medjugorje in the Light of the Pope's Visit to Sarajevo 
13 April 1997 

The Pope, Medjugorje and the Provincial 
of the Herzegovina Franciscans 

22 June 1997 

What Kind of "Fruits" are These? 


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November 1997 
Medjugorje Incredibilities 

11 November 1997 

The "Confirmation" in Capljina 

and the "Charisma" of Medjugorje 

26 December 1997 

The Grievous Fate of the Truth 

19 March 1998 

Laurentin Visits Monsignor Peric 

22 March 1998 

Laurentin Writes to Monsignor Peric 

23 March 1998 

The Franciscan Rebellion in Herzegovina — Rome Acts 

24 March 1998 

A Letter from Monsignor Ratko Peric to the Abbe Rene 
Laurentin, dated 24 March 1998. Protocol Number: 265/98 

26 May 1998 

Beautiful Gift or Pathetic Delusion? 

21 July 1998 

Private Visits to Unauthentic Apparitions 

15 September 1998 

An Unexpected Endorsement for Monsignor Peric 

16 November 1998 
Implementing Romanis Pontificibus 

21 November 1998 

Dismissal of Three Franciscans from the Order of Friars Minor 
14 December 1998 

Further Implementation of the Decree Romanis Pontificibus 
Communique 


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January 1999 

With Truth Against Lies Concerning the Parish of Capljina 


20 February 1999 

The Franciscan Rebellion in Herzegovina - Rome Acts 

11 January 2000 
Death of Monsignor Zanic 

7 January 2000 

The Position of the French Episcopal Conference Regarding 
Medjugorje 

24 January 2000 

Newsweek Report “Visions of the Virgin” 

7 February 2000 

A Letter From Monsignor Peric Concerning Father Zovko 
1 July 2000 

Confirmation Homily by Bishop Peric 

3 December 2000 
A Medjugorje Canonisation 


2000 

Unexpected Support for the False Apparitions 

from the Catholic Truth Society of England and Wales. 


28 May 2001. 

Communique from Msgr. Luka Pavlovic, Vicar General 

29 May 2001 

Communique of the Bishop's Conference of Bosnia-Herzegovina 


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14 June 2001 

Invalid Confirmations and Attempted Invalid Priestly 
Ordinations. 

Homily by Bishop Peric, given in Medjugorje 
10 October 2000 

Catholic World News Service, 10 October 2001 
Reference 16570 

Mostar, 2001 

Final Chapter of the Book Ogledalo Pravde (“Mirror of 
Justice”) by Monsignor Peric (Mostar, 2001), pp. 313-314. 

5 July 2002 

Catholic Herald Report 
12 July 2002 

Catholic Herald A Defence of Medjugorje 
19 July 2002 

Catholic Herald — My Reply to Monsignor Tutto 
26 July 2002 

Catholic Herald Editorial — The Mixed Fruits of Medjugorje 

8 November 2002 

Crkva Na Kamenu , Prosinac 2002 

A Pronouncement by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the 
Current Spate of Apparitions. 


24 August 2002 
A Bogus Papal Blessing 

29 December 2002 
The Sunday Times 

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Appendix I — Criteria for Discerning Apparitions: 
Regarding the Events of Medjugorje — Part 1: 
Msg. Ratko Peric 


Appendix II — Extracts from the Diary of Vicka Ivankovic. 


Foreword 


Since the Second Vatican Council there has been a grave crisis of authority 
within the Catholic Church. The ordinary faithful have not received the firm and 
unequivocal teaching and guidance from their ecclesiastical superiors to which 
they had become accustomed. Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, the Prefect of the 
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, has noted the extent to which 
individual bishops have abdicated their authority to national episcopal 
conferences which, only too often, have been manipulated into propagating the 
opinions of so-called theological experts of dubious orthodoxy 

Parish priests have frequently abdicated their authority to parish councils, 
and Rome itself has sometimes appeared to speak with an uncertain voice. But 
certainty is what the faithful seek, and when they do not receive it from the 
magisterium they will seek it elsewhere. Some have sought certainty in the 
charismatic movement which, if examined objectively, renders the magisterium 
unnecessary, for what need is there of a teaching authority when each individual 
Christian can communicate directly with the Holy Ghost? 

Other Catholics have put their faith in one of the numerous apparitions 
which are allegedly taking place throughout the world. For the purposes of this 
book a distinction must be made between visions and apparitions. Donal Foley 
is probably the greatest authority on Marian apparitions writing in the 
English-language today. He explains: 

The basic difference between a “vision” and an “apparition” in Catholic 
terms, is as follows: in a vision God produces a concept or image without there 
necessarily being anything external to the viewer, whereas in an apparition, God 
apparently causes something external to the viewer to be perceived through the 
senses, which act normally, even if the “seer” is in an ecstatic state. 1 


l D. Foley, Marian Apparitions, the Bible, and the Modern World (Gracewing 
Press, Herefordshire, 2002), p. 100. 


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This distinction is not always made clear by those promoting 
Medjugorje. It is evident that what the so-called seers claim to receive are, 
according to Mr. Foley’s definition, apparitions, but in Medjugorje 
literature they are described indiscriminately as seers or visionaries. This 
is not a matter of any importance, because, as this book will make clear, no 
individual associated with Medjugorje has ever been the recipient of either 
an apparition or a vision. 

In the years following the Council a very clear pattern of behaviour 
has emerged among supporters of alleged apparitions. It is a tendency to 
make belief in the authenticity of a particular apparition the criterion of 
orthodoxy. True Catholics believe the apparitions, and the faith of those 
who do not is suspect in some way. Those drawn towards these apparitions 
tend to be conservative in outlook, the type of Catholic who might have 
been expected to defend the teaching of the magisterium Once such 
Catholics become "hooked" on an apparition, all their efforts tend to be 
devoted to defending it and propagating it. They have thus been removed 
effectively from the battlefield for orthodoxy. There can be no doubt that 
spurious apparitions are one of Satan's most effective weapons in his war 
against the mystical body. The problem is, of course, to discern authentic 
from spurious apparitions. The principles for making this distinction are 
enunciated clearly in Appendix 1 . 

I recollect very clearly a decade or so ago that I scandalised some 
devout friends by maintaining that the alleged apparitions at Palmar de 
Troya in Spain were inspired by the devil. I was asked how I could make 
such a claim in view of the piety manifested there: all night vigils, heroic 
acts of penance, the rosary, and financial sacrifices of staggering 
proportions. How could Satan have been responsible for such good fruits? 
I knew one devout and highly educated English Catholic who sold 
everything he had and abandoned his profession to go and live in Palmar. 
Later, when Clemente, the self-styled seer, proclaimed himself to be Pope 
and "excommunicated" everyone who did not recognise him as such, this 
friend and others withdrew from Palmar in horror, and admitted that they 
had been deceived. But the tragedy is that there are thousands who did not. 
Their faith had become identified with the authenticity of the Palmar sect. 
Satan had amputated them from the mystical body of Christ. 

How can one reconcile the devotion that I have mentioned with 
diabolic inspiration? The answer should be self-evident. If a seer, claiming 
to be inspired by heaven, denied the doctrine of the Trinity or advocated 
free love, he would hardly be likely to deceive faithful Catholics. Satan 



will obviously seek to introduce error and separate the faithful from the 
Church under a veneer of piety. 

There can be little doubt that when the time comes for adherents of 
Medjugorje to choose between the Church and the illusory apparitions, 
many will choose the apparitions, as was the case with Palmar de Troya. 
Pope Leo XIII warned us in his encyclical Satis cognitum that: 


The Church of Christ, therefore, is one and the same forever: those who 
leave it depart from the will and command of Christ the Lord. Leaving the path 
of salvation they enter on the path of perdition. 

In 1983 I was visited by some good friends who brought me a booklet 
written in Croatian about some apparitions allegedly taking place at Medjugorje 
in the then Yugoslavia. They wished my wife, who is Croatian, to translate it. 
When they had left I asked my wife to give me a resume of the alleged messages, 
and after she had done so with the first three I told her not to waste a second of 
her time translating them as they did not possess a vestige of credibility. I am 
glad to say that these friends now share my opinion. Since that time Medjugorje 
has attracted more attention and more enthusiasm almost daily, and millions of 
Catholics now flock there from throughout the world. 


List of Principal Croatian Persona Mentioned in this Book. 


My proof reader, Mr. Leo Darroch, suggested that it would be a great help to 
the reader if I provided a list of the principal Croatian persona mentioned in the 
book, particularly as a good number of them have the same surnames. The 
reference OP refers to the book Ogledalo Pravde by Monsignor Peric. 


Father Petar Barbaric, OFM — Expelled from the Franciscan 
Order for disobedience — see 23 March 1998. 


Father Slavko Barbaric, OFM — one of the principal mentors of 
the six seers and concealers of the truth concerning Medjurgorje. 
He died in 2003 and received an instant Medjugorje canonization 


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(see 3 December 2003). 


Father Janko Bubalo — author of a book entitled: 

A Thousand Meetings with Our Lady, consisting of 
conversations with Vicka Ivankovic. 


Jakov Colo — youngest “seer”. 

Bishop Cule of Mostar — predecessor of Monsignor Zanic. 

Ivan Dragicevic — “seer”. 

Mirjana Dragicevic — “seer”. 

Archbishop Franic of Split — charismatic and the only prelate in the former 
Yugoslavia to believe the apparition to be authentic. 

Ivanka (Ivica) Ivankovic — “seer”. 

Vicka (Vida) Ivankovic — oldest “seer”. 

His Eminence Cardinal Franjo Kuharic, President of the Yugoslav 
Episcopal Conference. 

Father Ivan Landeka — parish priest of Medjugorje in 1993. 

Sister Leopolda — Religious sister seduced by Father Ivica Vego. 

Father Miljenko-Mici Stojicu — Parish Priest at Medjugorj 1997. 

Marija Pavolvic — “seer”. 

Father Tadija Pavlovic, OFM — Priest quickly disillusioned with 


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Medjugorje. See 24 June 1981. 


Monsignor Ratko Peric — Bishop of Mostar-Duvno from 24 July 2003. 

Father Tomislav Pervan — Parish Priest of Medjugorje from 1984-1988, and 
then Provincial of the Franciscan Province of Jierzegovina. 

Father Ivan Prusina, OFM — Expelled from the Franciscan 
Order for disobedience, but reinstated on a legal technicality. 

Now lives in Germany and is not permitted to exercise 
any ministry in JJerzegovina. See note 38. 

Monsignor Z. Puljic — Bishop of Dubrovnik. 

Father Bozo Rados, OFM — Expelled from the Franciscan 
Order for disobedience — see 23 March 1998. 

Father Ljudevit Rupcic, OFM, — Forbidden to celebrate 
Mass or preach at Medjugorje. 

Father Ivo Sivric, OFM, author of The Hidden Face of Medjugorje . 

Father Emilio Tardif, OFM — charismatic Franciscan who 
initiated seers into the movement. See “The Charismatic 
Connection.” 

Jelena Vasilj — “locutionist”. 

Marijana Vasilj (not related) — “locutionist”. 

Monsignor Pavao Zanic — bishop of Mostar-Duvno 1980-2000. 


li 



Father Jozo Vasilj, OFM — Franciscan Provincial in 
Herzegovina who was so disillusioned with the members of 
his province that he moved to Zaire and will not return. 

See May 1990, Part 23. 

Father Ivica Vego, OFM — laicised after making 
Sister Leopolda pregnant. Now married to her 
and still actively involved with Medjugorje. 

Father Jozo Zovko — parish priest of Medjugorje when 
the “apparitions” began. Forbidden to celebrate Mass 
for the faithful or to preach in Herzegovina 
(see 25 March 1985). 


The Six Seers 


In the interests of clarity, before entering upon an account of the events at 
Medjugorje in chronological order, brief biographies of the self-styled seers will 
be provided. In several cases they have the same surname which tends to cause 
confusion. They are, in order of age: 


Vicka (Vida) Ivankovic, born on 3 September 1964 is the oldest of the 
seers. She has been receiving daily apparitions since 24 June 1981, although on 
some days there were no apparitions while on others she received five or more. 
She has received nine of the ten secrets and still receives daily apparitions. 
Vicka is always willing to speak to any large number of pilgrims who wish to 
meet her, and to put their questions to Our Lady and to transmit her answers to 
them. 

She claims that for two years, from 7 January 1983 until 10 April 1985, Our 
Lady recounted her life story in great detail, and that this autobiography will be 
published in due course. She also stated in an interview for an Australian 
television network, which I have on video-cassette, that Our Lady took her on a 

12 



guided tour of heaven, hell, and purgatory. Jakov Colo, the youngest visionary, 
was also invited on the tour. Our Lady took Vicka by the right hand and Jakov by 
the left and they floated off. Vicka wondered how long the journey would take, 
and was amazed to find that it lasted only one second. The tour itself took 20 
minutes. Vicka did not explain how she was able to be so precise about the time 
taken. Heaven is a very large room in which people wearing grey, yellow, and 
pink gowns are walking, praying, and singing while small angels float above 
them. Purgatory is a big space in which no one can be seen, but it was possible to 
feel that the souls there were beating and thumping each other. There is a large 
fire in hell into which the souls enter and emerge as beasts. 

Another of her stories is of a taxi driver who had been given a bloody 
handkerchief which he was about to throw in a river. A mysterious women in 
black, who, of course, turned out to be Our Lady, prevented him just in time, 
because, had he done so the world would have been destroyed (see May 1990, 
Part 6). No open minded person who reads Monsignor Zanic's account of Vicka 
(see May 1990 — Parts 6-11), or of her attempt to defraud Dutch benefactors of 
Medjugorje by telling them that Our Lady wished them to finance the 
construction of an hotel by the father of one of her friends, can escape the 
conclusion that she is an habitual liar (see November 1997, Medjugorje 
Incredibilities .) 

In January 2002 Vicka married Mario Mijatovic from the parish of Gradino. 
They live in the parish of Medjugorje. 


Mirjana Dragicevic was born in Sarajevo on 18 March 1965. Her first 
vision was on 24 June 1981 and after receiving the tenth secret on 25 December 
1982 she ceased to have daily apparitions. Mirjana said that parting from Our 
Lady caused her great sorrow, and they found it hard to part from each other even 
after being together for 45 five minutes. Our Lady assured Mirjana that she must 
return to a normal daily routine and live in future without her motherly advice. 
She warned Mirjana that the first few months without their daily meetings would 
be very hard for her, and this proved to be the case. Mirjana fell into a state of 
deep depression, avoided everyone, and locked herself in her bedroom weeping, 
hoping that Our Lady would appear to her, and calling out her name. Our Lady 
bestowed a great gift to her, that of promising to appear upon her birthday for the 
rest of her life. However, a year is a long time, visitors were coming from all 
sides, and so Our Lady had a change of mind. On 2 September 1987 Mirjana 
received an internal locution, and from then on, on the second of every month, 
she has received an internal locution or an actual apparition of Our Lady, and 
sometimes they pray together for unbelievers. From 2 January 1997 these visits 
ceased to be on a private basis. Mirjana is made aware of the exact time when 


13 



Our Lady will appear, from 10am until 1 lam, and this monthly meeting is now 
open to the public. 

Mirjana has received all ten secrets. She claims to have received them from 
Our Lady on a parchment which has been examined by “linguistic experts” who 
pronounced that it is written in an unknown language. This is fortunate as had 
this not been the case they would no longer have been secret. The only precedent 
for a document in an unknown language is that of The Book of Mormon One 
wonders why Our Lady would have given the ten secrets to Mirjana, who speaks 
only Croatian, in an unknown language, and whether by some miracle she is able 
to understand it. It is also claimed that, having been carbon tested for date and 
substance, the parchment has been documented as made from an unknown 
substance. 2 Mirjana was married to Marko Soldo on 16 September 1989 and has 
two children, Marija born on 8 December 1990, and Veronica bom on 19 April 
1994. She is married and lives in Medjugorje. 

Mirjana has the distinction of being the only seer to have had an apparition 
of the devil. He appeared to her on 14 April 1982 while she was waiting for Our 
Lady to appear. He was wearing the same clothes worn by Our Lady, he had a 
terrible black face but with Mary’s features. He stared at her with burning black 
eyes and offered her all the pleasures of the world, but she refused. A little later 
Our Lady appeared and said: “I apologize, but you had to see him in order to 
know that he exists and that you will be tempted in this world.” 3 To the best of 
my knowledge this is the only occasion when Our Lady has apologized to a seer, 
and no explanation is given as to why she did not command the devil to manifest 
himself to any of the other Medjugorje seers to prove to them that he exists. 


Marija Pavlovic was bom on 1 April 1965. She is married, to Paolo Lunetti 


2 See: www.medjugorjeusa.org 

3 R. Franken, A Journey to Medjugorje (1999), p. 37. Father Rudo Franken is a Dutch priest 

who made a journey to Medjugorje to investigate the alleged apparitions . Fie was prompted to do 
so by witnessing its popularity among thousands of his fellow citizens. Fie has read almost all the 
books and pamphlets written concerning the alleged apparitions and quotes them profusely. I 
have made use of a good number of these quotations but in every case I have given the page in 
Father Franken’s book where the quotation can be found. Every serious student of Medjugorje 
should obtain this book which is recommended highly by Monsignor Ratko Peric, Bishop of 
Mostar-Duvno. The distribution of this book is made not only by the publisher Van Spijk 

B.V., but also by the author himself. 136 pages, paperback € 10,. Date of publication: September 
2002 (see p. 127) Available from: Rudo Franken, priest, De Flove 1, NL-6585 AN Mook, The 
Netherlands, rudo.franken@hetnet.nl. Flomepagewww.stichtingvaak.nkFlomepage: 
www.stichtingvaak.nl Van Spijk B.V., p.o.box 1230, NL-5900 BE Venlo, The Netherlands. 


14 


on 1 April 1993, went for a honeymoon on the Cote d’Azur in France. The 
couple now have three children, Mikaele, born on 14 July 1994; Francesco 
Maria, born on 24 January 1996, and Marco Maria born on 19 July 1997. Mrs 
Lunetti now lives in Monsa, Italy, in a “palatial” six storey home. 4 She has 
received nine secrets, and still has daily apparitions. She is on such good terms 
with Our Lady that the Blessed Virgin allows herself to be caressed if Marija 
requests it. A nun who was present while Marija was witnessing an apparition 
relates: 


Marija asked me whether I desired to touch the Virgin. I said yes straight 
away. She then took my right hand and I lifted it to the Virgin's shoulder: she 
then guided my hand down telling me what I was touching. I myself neither saw 
nor felt anything. Thus I caressed her right down to her feet. 


Surely this ludicrous and almost blasphemous nonsense is enough to deprive 
Pavlovic of any credibility. 

Marija receives and reveals Our Lady’s “Message to the Parish of 
Medjugorje and the entire World” on the 25 th of each month. 


Ivan Dragicevic, who is not related to Mirjana, was born in Bijakovici in 
the parish of Medjugorje on 25 May 1965. His secondary education took place in 
Citluk where he failed to pass the first year examinations. In August 1981 he 
entered the Franciscan seminary for Herzegovina where he claimed to receive 
daily apparitions and claimed that Our Lady always gave him the traditional 
Croatian greeting: “Praise be Jesus and Mary”. It is somewhat surprising that Our 
Lady, who is our model of humility, would bestow praise upon herself! He failed 
to pass his first year examinations after two attempts. It was thought that he 
might have more success at the seminary in Dubrovnik where he was sent in the 
autumn of 1982. On one occasion, during the recitation of the rosary, he 
informed his fellow seminarians that Our Lady had appeared upon a picture of 
Our Lord and said: “This is your father.” Our Lord did not once refer to Himself 
as our father in the Bible and is never referred to as such in the Tradition of the 
Church. Once again his academic progress was poor and he left the seminary in 
January 1983 and returned home. He spent, and still spends, a great deal of his 
time touring the world, addressing large audiences, and never fails to delight 
them with purported apparitions of Our Lady. On 23 October 1994 he married 


4 Ratko Peric, Ogledalo Pravda (Mostar, 2001) p. 31. 


15 



Laureen Murphy, an American beauty queen from Boston, and, of course, had a 
wedding day apparition. They have three children. He divides his time between 
his homes in Medjugorje and Boston. He has received nine secrets and by 2001 
more than 7,000 daily apparitions, and still has a daily apparition wherever he is 
in the world. He is now extremely wealthy and drives a custom built BMW with 
“outside the series'” wide sports tyres. 


Ivanka (Ivica) Ivankovic was born in Bijakovici on 21 June 1966. She 
married Rajko Elez on 29 December 1986, and has three children, Kristina, 
Josip, and Ivan. She has received ten secrets and ceased having daily apparitions 
on 7 May 1985. Ivanka claimed that in this final apparition Our Lady had never 
looked more sweet and beautiful, and was wearing the most beautiful dress that 
she had ever seen. It sparkled with silver and gold. The Virgin was accompanied 
by two angels with matching outfits, and asked Ivanka if she had a wish. The 
wish was to see her deceased mother, and then, after embraces and kisses, there 
was a final message: “My dear child, today is our last meeting. Do not be sad. I 
shall return on your birthday every year except for this one. My child, do not 
think that I am not coming because you have done something wrong. You have 
done nothing wrong. The plans which my Son and I had you accepted with your 
whole heart and you carried them out. Ivanka, the blessings that you and your 
brothers (the other seers?) have received have never previously been accorded to 
anyone on earth.” After the conversation had lasted an hour, Ivanka gave a 
farewell kiss to Our Lady who then rose aloft to heaven accompanied by the two 
angels. 

She now has one apparition a year. She states that one apparition a year is 
sufficient for her as she has already received more graces than anyone else on 
earth. In 1997 the visit lasted for six minutes and the message was as follows: 


Dear Children, pray from your hearts so that you will know how to forgive 
and to be forgiven. I thank you for your prayers and for the love that you give 
me. 


Ivanka claimed that when she was preparing to celebrate the New Year at 
midnight in 1982 Our Lady paid her a surprise visit and wished everyone present 
a Happy New Year. Marija, Vicka, and Ivan claim to have had only nine secrets 
confided to them and hence still have daily apparitions. 


Jakov Colo, born in Bijakovici on 6 March 1971, is the youngest of the 
visionaries. He was married on 1 1 April 1993 to Anna-Lisa Barozzi and has two 


16 



children, Ariana Maria bom in January 1995, and David, born in September 
1996. He received daily apparitions from 25 June 1981 until 12 September 1998. 
Between 7 January 1983 and 11 April 1983 Our Lady told him the story of her 
life. During an apparition in 1993, at the height of the war, Our Lady asked him 
to pray for peace in the former Yugoslavia, and convinced him that his prayers 
could bring the war to an end. On 12 September 1998, after visiting the USA, he 
came to the parish office in Medjugorje saying that Our Lady had appeared to 
him for the last time on that day. The apparition lasted for 30 minutes from 11.15 
to 11.45. He did, however, receive the promise of a regular visit on Christmas 
Day each year. The Virgin revealed the tenth secret to him with great sadness, 
but comforted him gently, saying: “Do not be sad, because like a mother I will be 
with you always, and like a true mother I will never abandon you.” Jakov has had 
the privilege of shaking hands with Our Lady: 


On the feast of Our Lady's Nativity (8 September 1981), the Virgin 
appeared to Vicka and Jakov in Jakov's house. So Jakov held out his hand to the 
Virgin, saying: "Dear Holy Virgin, I wish you a happy birthday." Thus it was 
that the little boy had the great good fortune to see the Mother of God shake his 
hand. 


It is claimed that "Jakov's face, eager and upturned, is one of the most 
external outward proofs we have of the authenticity of the events." If one reads 
the accepted criteria for discerning the authenticity of alleged apparitions, eager 
and upturned faces will not be found among them (see Appendix I). 

The situation, according to the June 1996 issue of the Medjugorje Herald is 
that: “Marija, Vicka, and Ivan have each received nine secrets and so continue to 
have daily apparitions.” This is very convenient in order to ensure that the 
pilgrims and the money continue to roll in. The Medjugorje pilgrims expect, as 
part of their package-trip, to see a seer going into ecstasy while experiencing an 
apparition. They are never disappointed. 


Jelena Vasilj and Marijana Vasilj 


In addition to the six seers already listed, there are two who do not claim to 
have apparitions but to receive inner locutions in which they hear the voice of 
Our Lady and see her inwardly with the heart. They are Jelena Vasilj, born on 14 
May 1972, and Marijana Vasilj (no relation) born on 5 October 1972. They have 
established a prayer group which the Virgin not only attends but actually leads 
through the two locutionists. Our Lady leads another prayer group which she 


17 



directs through Ivan and Marija. 5 


24 June 1981 
The First “Apparitions” 

The alleged apparitions began on 24 June 1981 when Ivanka Ivankovic 
claimed to have seen Our Lady while out walking with Mirjana Dragicevic. They 
later claimed that they were looking for their sheep when, in reality, they had 
gone out to smoke, a fact which they hid from their parents (see May 1990, Part 
5). The apparition took place on Mount Crnica, now referred to by tour guides as 
Apparition Hill. A footpath leads up from the village of Bijakovici, where Ivan 
Dragicevic was born, to the place of the apparition itself. This is sometimes 
referred to as Mount Podbrdo which causes confusion as Mount Crnica, of which 
Podrdo is part, is the usual name given. The path is now widened by the feet of 
millions of pilgrims. According to the official Medjugorje mythology, the girls 
ran up this hill over the rocks and thorns barefooted, not even following the path. 

In an interview on 8 September 1988, Vicka Ivankovic described what 
happened on the second day: 


On the second day in the afternoon the three of us, myself, Mirjana and 
Ivanka went walking. We said that we would go and see if Our Lady was 
coming. We expected to see her but still wondering if she would come. We went 
along the same road to the same spot as the previous day. Ivanka was again first 
to see Our Lady. I returned home to bring Marija and Jakov because after the 
first day they asked me, "Vicka, if you see Our Lady, come and get us. We do 
not have to see her but we would like to be with you." So I went to bring the two 
of them but they were already on their way to the hill. 

We had nothing on our feet and it seemed that we were not walking on the 
ground but gliding above it. Suddenly we found ourselves at the apparition site. 
On that second day those who were not so shy could ask questions but mostly 
we were praying with the Lady. 

On the third day I took a glass of holy water and sprinkled it at Our Lady, I 


5 Richard J. Beyer, Medjugorje Day by Day (Ave Maria Press, Notre Dame, Indiana 
46556, 1993). This information appears at the beginning of the book which has no page 
numbers and consists almost entirely of alleged messages delivered to the alleged seers by Our 
Lady. If genuine, they would mean that Our Lady must be the most loquacious and boring 
woman in the history of the world. 


18 



said, "If you are Our Lady, stay with us but if you are not, leave us alone." The 
Lady smiled, and the water which I threw just flowed off her dress. 


Eight days later the girls stated categorically that Our Lady had said four or 
five times that she would appear on three more days only, that is, on July 1, 2, and 
3. On 30 June 1981, Father Jozo Zovko, parish priest of Medjugorje, told the 
seers that he would prefer the last three apparitions to take place in the parish 
church. The seers expressed anxiety that this might result in many of those 
attending the apparitions on the hill ceasing to come, but they eventually agreed. 
The following conversation is recorded on a tape which is available in the 
archives of the bishopric of Mostar: 


Zovko: What are you going to say to the people? 

Ivanka: I could say to them that Our Lady has appeared to us at some other place... 

Vicka: ...and that she has told us that we will see her tomorrow in the church, but that 

others will not be able to see her. 

Zovko: All right tell this to the people... 6 


Can one imagine St. Bernadette of the children of Fatima instructing Our 
Lady on where she should or should not appear? On 1 July the apparition duly 
took place in the presbytery and was accompanied by Mass and a Rosary During 
the Mass Father Jozo told the faithful: “At the end of Mass, the children who 
have met the Gospa will pray for you and your families.” 

Commenting on this statement Father Rudo Franken states: 


This is incredible. Father Jozo guarantees the apparition is true. Did he 
not know that only a bishop is to give such a guarantee? Did he not know a 
deep investigation is required before such a guarantee can be given? Jozo 
Zovko spoke without any restriction and this was the beginning of a mass 
movement. 7 


6 Franken, p. 13. 

7 Franken, p. 18. 


19 



On 3 July 1981, the date specified for the final apparition, Father Tadija 
Pavlovic, pastor of a neighbouring parish, came to Medjugorje to help hear 
confessions. Fie was present in the presbytery when what was to be the final 
apparition took place. There were, in fact, two apparitions, one lasting ten 
minutes and one five minutes. All six seers affirmed that the apparition had told 
them this would be her last appearance. Father Pavlovic was shocked when he 
learned from one of his parishioners that there had been further apparitions on 4 
and 5 July. Never again has he gone to Medjugorje to celebrate Mass or hear 
confessions. 8 

According to the seers the apparition had a change of mind concerning her 
final appearance, and decided to visit them each day. Two years later, in 1983, 
Vicka was asked by a Father Janko Bubalo why the apparitions had continued 
after 3 July 1981. She replied: “Really, I can’t remember any of this. If someone 
(i.e. one of the seers) has said this, then it must have been intended to ensure that 
we were left alone.” 9 On other occasions Vicka seems to have had no problem 
with her memory: 


I remember very well asking her: Our Lady, for how long will you stay 
with us?. ..She answered: As long as you wish, my angels. Imagine, as long as 
we wish! That means: forever. We did not have the courage to tell her . 10 


On another occasion when asked the same question, the apparition replied: 
“Have you had enough of me already?” 11 Can one imagine Our Lady saying 
this? 

Britain’s National Medjugorje Centre tells us that: 


The visionaries are able to see, and even touch the Virgin during the 
apparitions. They can converse with her, but are oblivious of noise, light, and 
pain — as numerous scientific tests have proved. Exhaustive psychiatric 
investigation has also shown them to be normal in every way. 

Mary stands a few feet away upon a small cloud. Her presence is preceded 
by a brilliant light. The visionaries describe her as beautiful beyond words, 
radiant with holiness. She looks no more than nineteen, with dark hair and blue 


8 Franken, p. 55. 

9 Ibid. 

to Franken, p. 56. 

it Ibid. 


20 



eyes. She usually wears a grey dress with a white veil down to her feet, and a 
crown of 12 stars. 

The Virgin’s conversations with the children express motherly tenderness 

and love, and she has assumed the role of both mother and teacher, guiding them 

12 

in prayer, and advising and directing them in their lives. 


This very sentimentalised image of Our Lady would appear to have been 
concocted on the basis of well known pictures of the Immaculate Conception 
reproduced on the type of holy cards to which those of a peasant background in 
Herzegovina would have access. The claim that while witnessing an apparition 
the seers are oblivious to the outside world, and the description they give of Our 
Lady, correspond very closely with what is claimed at Garabandal . 13 

The self-styled, and now very rich, "seers" claim to have witnessed 
thousands of apparitions of Our Lady. The six of them claimed initially to have a 
daily apparition. Why Our Lady needed to appear to six people every day to 
deliver her message was never explained. Even on the occasions when all six 
purported to have gone into ecstasy together, each received a different message. 
The six “seers” claimed that each of them would be entrusted with ten secrets, 
and that once a "seer" had received ten secrets the apparitions would be reduced 


12 Children of Medjugorje, PO Box 29, Inverness, IV 1 2FT. This is the address for 
all references to Britain’s National Medjugorje Centre. 

13 

When the vision appeared, the girls fell instantaneously on their knees, striking the 
sharp rocks with a loud noise that was frightening, yet they showed no signs of injury. The 
expression on their faces was suddenly transformed. Their look became extraordinarily 
beautiful, sweet, one of profound mysticism. There are no words that can properly describe the 
change. They were completely absorbed in their rapture, unaware of anyone or any material 
thing around them except for each other. They did not react to pricks, bums or blows. All 
attempts to distract them failed. Powerful beams of strong light were focussed on them, yet 
their eyes did not even flicker, blink or show any signs of discomfort. Quite the contrary, their 
eyes remained wide open, expressing a look of intense joy. 

The Virgin is dressed in a white robe with a blue mantle and a crown of golden stars. 
Her hands are slender. There is a brown scapular on her right arm, except when she 
carries the Child Jesus in her arms. Her hair, deep nut-brown, is parted in the centre. Her 
face is long, with a fine nose. Her mouth is very pretty with lips a bit thin. She looks like 
a girl of eighteen. She is rather tall. There is no voice like hers. No woman is just like 
her, either in the voice or the face or anything else. See: http://www.garabandal.org/ 


21 


to one a year plus extra appearances on special occasions. 

During the course of this book I will not on every occasion refer to “alleged” 
apparitions, “the alleged seers”, or to the fact that they “claim “ to have seen Our 
Lady or to have received messages from her. It would become tedious to use 
these terms on almost every page. But the fact that I will not be using such terms 
does not indicate in any way that I believe there is the slightest possibility that the 
individuals involved are genuine seers, or that even one of them has had an 
apparition of Our Lady on a single occasion, or that Our Lady has conveyed a 
message to one of them on a single occasion, even by an inner locution. Thus, 
when I state below that Vicka “has received nine of the ten secrets and still 
receives apparitions daily”, this must not be taken as implying I believe that she 
has received a single secret or experienced a single apparition. I will put 
“apparitions” in parenthesis only when quoting a source that has done so such as 
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith which invariably puts the word in 
parenthesis. Like the two bishops of Mostar-Duvno during the period of the 
Medjugorje phenomenon, I am convinced that all the apparitions and all the 
messages have been fabricated by the seers. Claims have been made that the 
seers have indeed had apparitions, but that they are of satanic origin as seems to 
have been the case at Palmar de Troya. I am sure that this is not the case, and 
agree completely with the judgement expressed by Monsignor Zanic, bishop of 
the diocese of Mostar-Duvno, in a letter to Father Hugh Thwaites, SJ, dated 17 
August 1987: 


I am sure that Our Lady does not appear. No miracles. The “Messages” 
cannot be of our Virgin. They are the fruit of a fabrication, fraud and 
disobedience to the Church. It is about big money and personal interest too. 


This judgement is shared by the successor of Monsignor Zanic, Monsignor 
Ratko Peric. 


The Charismatic Connection 


In 1967 the Catholic Charismatic Renewal was founded in Pittsburgh by two 
Catholic professors from Notre Dame University who had received what they 
termed “baptism of the spirit” through the laying on of hands by Protestant 
Pentecostalists. There is no basis in Catholic theology for this so-called 


22 



“baptism of the spirit” which amounts to an eighth sacrament. We receive and 
become temples of the Holy Spirit when we are baptised. 

Father Rene Laurentin, the principal propagandist for Medjugorje, is one of 
the original members of the charismatic movement which he believes to be of 
great importance for the future of the Catholic Church. There has been a close 
connection between Medjugorje and the charismatic movement from its very 
inception. Many of the best known members of the movement have given their 
complete support to the authenticity of the Medjugorje apparitions during which, 
as a quid pro quo, it is purported that Our Lady has endorsed their movement. It 
is claimed that on 25 July 1982 she said: “Pray for the sick! Fast for the sick! 
Lay your hands on them! Administer them charismatic anointings with oil! 
Any layman can do it!” Father Franken asks whether this does not suggest that a 
layman can administer the sacrament of the anointing of the sick which is 
reserved for priests. 14 

On the three days 23, 24, 25 August 1983 charismatic services were held at 
Medjugorje and all six seers and a number of priests and nuns of the parish 
received the “baptism of the spirit” Some had received it on previous occasions. 
Father Emilio Tardif taught the faithful to prophesy, to speak in tongues, and to 
sing. 15 As mentioned above, the two locutionists, Jelena Vasilj and Marijana 
Vasilj have established a prayer group which the Virgin leads through them. Our 
Lady is also said to lead another prayer group which she directs through Ivan 
Dragicevic and Marija Pavolvic. The seers claim that prayer groups on the 
Medjugorje model should be established in every parish in the world: 


In every church community, and therefore also in every parish, prayer 
groups should have a mediating, assisting, and uniting task. Pilgrims should 
integrate in parish life at home and offer assistance, even in cases where parish 
priests do not yet accept the events of Medjugorje and the message of Our 
Lady. 16 


A Preposterous Proliferation 


A convincing reason for questioning the events at Medjugorje is that they 
are so strikingly unlike all previous Marian apparitions. Which other apparitions 


14 Franken, p. 49 

15 Ibid 

16 Franken, p. 52. 


23 



have gone on almost daily for 23 years with no sign of coming to an end, and 
have involved tens of thousands of messages most of which are notable only for 
their banality? 

Monsignor Peric, the present bishop of Mostar-Duvno, has calculated that 
the number of alleged apparitions had reached a total of 31,860 by December 
2002. 17 This total alone deprives Medjugorje of any credibility when set beside 
the number of appearances made by Our Lady in apparitions approved by the 
Church as authentic. The words spoken by Our Lady in all these approved 
apparitions could be recorded in the exercise book of a six year old child, and 
leave most the pages blank. When asked why Our Lady found it necessary to 
appear on thousands of occasions, a phenomenon unprecedented in the history of 
the Church, Vicka replied: “If she had come for only 10 or 20 times and then 
would have disappeared forever, no one in these hasty times would have 
remembered for long that she has appeared. Who would still have believed she 
really had come?” Father Franken comments: 


Now compare Medjugorje to Lourdes. How many times did Mary appear 

in Lourdes? How many years have passed since she last appeared in Lourdes? 

Still, every year millions of pilgrims from all over the world visit Lourdes. So 

1 8 

Vicka’s argument does not stand ground. 


Medjugorje is following a pattern quite different from that of earlier (and 
approved) apparitions — Lourdes, La Salette, Pontmain, Fatima or Beauraing, for 
example. In his encyclopaedic study of Marian apparitions in the modern world, 
Donal Foley explains: 


The various Marian apparitions are classed as "private" revelations, in that 
the public revelation of the Church was completed during Apostolic times, and 
is now closed. All that the Church has done since then is to develop and clarify 
those public truths, and Catholics are bound to believe them as truths of the 
Faith. Private revelations, though, including the approved Marian apparitions, 
are given to an individual or group for their own good or that of others; 
Catholics are not obliged to believe in them, and they do not add to the sum total 
of public revelation, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church (67) makes clear: 


Throughout the ages, there have been so-called "private" 
revelations, some of which have been recognized by the 
authority of the Church. They do not belong, however, to the 
deposit of faith. It is not their role to improve or complete 


17 Crkvci na Kamenu. December 2002, page 13 

18 Franken, p. 24. 


24 



Christ's definitive Revelation, but to help live more fully by it in 
a certain period of history. Guided by the magisterium of the 
Church, the sensus fidelium knows how to discern and welcome 
in these revelations whatever constitutes an authentic call of 
Christ or His saints to the Church. 


There is always the danger of illusion or deception in visions or 
apparitions, and that is why the Church, in the person of the local bishop 
initially, has always been reluctant to accept them without a great deal of 
scrutiny... The decision as to the authenticity of an apparition rests in the first 
place with the local bishop, who is the "Pope" of his own diocese. If, after 
sufficient study, there is solid evidence to support the apparition, in terms of the 
facts surrounding it and the activities of the seer or seers, and also regarding 
such matters as miraculous healings, then the bishop is empowered to issue 
some form of edict declaring the authenticity of a particular apparition... 

In sum then, the Church has consistently taken a very cautious attitude 
towards Marian apparitions, with only a very small minority of such reported 
events being accepted. Episcopal approval is the first step in such acceptance, 
but other factors such as general Church approval, expressed in the building of a 
basilica, for example, or a papal visit, are also necessary if an apparition is to be 
fully acknowledged. 19 


Episcopal approval is the first step in the acceptance of an apparition as 
authentic, and no apparition has been recognised by the Church without such 
approval. As regards the factor of a papal visit, it is very significant that during 
his visit to Croatia in 1994 and to Sarajevo in 1997, Pope John Paul II did not 
even mention Medjugorje let alone pay it a visit, much to the dismay of its 
proponents (see 10-11 September 1994, 12-13 April 1997). 

The pretentious pseudo-science deployed to authenticate the "ecstasies" of 
the "visionaries" (including the use of an electroscope to measure the intensity of 
" spiritual energy " developed during apparitions) can only be described as 
grotesque. 


Credibility of the Messages 


The Medjugorje messages are almost invariably of the utmost banality and 


19 Foley, pp. 104-106. 


25 



could be put together by any ten-year-old familiar with a few traditional Catholic 
prayers and devotions, and at least a minimal knowledge of doctrine. A typical 
message published in the 6 October 1996 issue of The Catholic Times (England) 
reads: 


Dear Children, 

Today I invite you to offer your crosses and suffering for my intentions. 
Little children, I am your mother and I wish to help you by seeking for you grace 
from God. Little children, offer your sufferings as a gift from God so they 
become a most beautiful flower of joy. That is why, little children, pray that you 
may understand that suffering can become joy and the cross the way of joy. 

Thank you for having responded to my call. 


One might note that it is normal to offer the prayers, sufferings, and joys of 
each day for the intentions of Our Lord through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, 
and not for the intentions of Our Lady. 


90 

I wish to give you messages in a way unprecedented in history." 


One can hardly deny that by the “apparition” making thousands of 
appearances whenever called upon by one of the seers, these messages are 
certainly unprecedented in history! 


By praying you have helped me realize my plans. I shall implore my Son 

21 

that all my plans will be realized. 


22 

Dear children, without you I cannot help the world."" 


Does this mean that the intercession of our most gracious 
advocate depends entirely on the seers of Medjugorje? 


I shall leave behind a sign for the infidels. 


This is an interesting development, because, as will be shown below, the 


20 Franken, p. 36. 

21 Ibid. 

22 Ibid. 

26 



promised sign was originally intended to prove the veracity of the apparitions to 
the faithful. 

Dear children, I ask all of you to live and change all negativity within you, 
so that everything will become positive and living." 


This message seems to have come straight from a New Age manual. 

Some of the messages are of very dubious orthodoxy. On 1 October 1981 
the apparition announced: “To God all religions are the same” using the Croatian 
word “iste” In a more detailed statement the apparition insists that all religions 
are equal: 


There is but one God for all people, but people have conjured up several 
religions. My Son is the one Mediator and Saviour of all people, but, as I see it, 
people get on well if they live their own religion well, if they follow their 
conscience. 


Is Our Lady saying here that the Catholic religion was conjured up by men? 
How can a religion founded by the incarnation of God the Son be put on the same 
plane as religions conjured up by men? 


Secrets 


Each seer has a secret destined for a particular group. Vicka Ivankovic and 
Jakov Colo for the sick, Ivan Dragicevic for the young and for priests, Marija 
Pavolic for the souls in purgatory, and Ivanka Ivankovic for families. 24 They 
claim that they cannot reveal the nature of these secrets by the very fact of their 
being secret, but information concerning them has been included in a leaflet 


23 Franken, p. 37. 

24 R. Laurentin, La Vergine appare a Medjugorje? (Brescia, 1984), p. 44. 


27 



published by Britain’s National Medjugorje Centre. It states that Mary has 
promised to leave a visible sign at the place of the apparitions for all mankind to 
see, but before the appearance of this visible sign there will be three warnings to 
the world in the form of events upon the earth. Mirjana will be their witness. 
Three days before one these warnings she will give advance notice of it to a priest 
of her choice. This testimony will be a confirmation of the apparitions and an 
incentive to the conversion of the world. After the warnings the visible sign will 
appear as a testimony to the authenticity of the apparitions and to call men back to 
the faith. The ninth and tenth secrets refer to a chastisement for the sin of the 
world. The chastisement is inevitable. It can be mitigated by prayer and penance 
but it cannot be prevented. Those who remain alive after the visible sign will have 
little time for conversion which is why the Gospa requests conversion and 
reconciliation as a matter or urgency. According to Mirjana we are very close to 
these events. These secrets have evidently been fabricated by the seers and bear a 
striking similarity to the messages of other apparitions, approved such as Fatima, 
and unapproved such as Garabandal, e.g. the prophecies of great and coming 
chastisements. 25 


The Sign 


On 4 September 1981 Ivan Dragicevic was promised that a sign would 
appear at the end of the apparitions. Our Lady contradicted herself by assuring 
Vicka that she would continue to appear after giving the sign. 26 Vicka Ivankovic 
states that the sign will be given on Mount Podbrdo (part of Mount Crnica) where 
she first appeared. At one moment it will not be there and at the next moment it 
will. Everyone who visits Medjugorje will be able to see it. It will be a great 

25 Conchita, one of the seers of Garabandal, claims that Our Lady has promised a great 
miracle in Garabandal so that all may believe the apparitions and be obedient to the message. 
"As the punishment which we deserve for the sins of the world is great, the miracle must also 
be a great one, for the world needs it." There will remain a permanent sign at "The Pines" as a 
proof of Our Lady's tremendous love for all her children. Conchita has been granted 
permission by Our Lady to announce the date of the miracle eight days in advance. Before The 
miracle takes place Our Lady has said that all mankind will receive a warning from heaven. 
The day of The miracle may be the last opportunity given us by God and may be also Our 
Lady's last effort to save the world from the punishment already threatened. See 
www.garabandal.org. 


26 


Franken, p. 19. 


28 


basilica in honour of the apparitions. The seer most involved in the prediction of 
a sign is Ivan Dragicevic. His predictions will be examined in more detail below. 
Mirjana assures us that: 


The sign will be big. On Mount Podbrdo, on the very spot of the first 
apparition, it will be visible on earth. Not in the sky. All of a sudden it will be 
there and everyone visiting Medjugorje will see it. It will be long lasting and no 

27 

one will be able to destroy it.“ 


The Position of Monsignor Zanic 


Monsignor Pavao Zanic, the bishop of Mostar-Duvno, Herzegovina, the 
diocese in which Medjugorje is found, was initially well disposed towards the 
seers and the apparitions. He did his best to shield the children from the 
communist police who feared that the apparitions could arouse opposition to the 
regime. As will be made clear below, he changed his mind when it became 
apparent that the seers were lying when they told him on thirteen occasions that 
Our Lady had supported two disobedient Franciscan priests in their opposition to 
him. Monsignor Zanic ’s own account of the incident will be provided below (see 
May 1990). 

The attitude of the then communist government of Yugoslavia to the 
Medjugorje phenomenon was transformed into an attitude of enthusiastic 
co-operation once it became clear that the pilgrims provided an extremely 
lucrative source of foreign currency. The bishops and clergy of the former 
Yugoslavia had every reason to be predisposed in favour of Medjugorje. If the 
visions were authentic they would have been a tremendous asset to the Church in 
a country with so many atheists and adherents of non-Catholic religions who 
might have been convinced by them of the truth of the Catholic religion. In 
addition, the income from the pilgrimages would not only have benefited their 
poor country, but it would have provided badly needed financial help for the 
Church. Monsignor Zanic in particular, who had a great devotion to Our Lady, 
and had led pilgrimages to Lourdes, would have been delighted to have a Lourdes 
in his diocese, but soon concluded that the Medjugorje phenomenon was the “fruit 
of fabrication and fraud (see May 1990). 


27 


Franken, p. 21. 


29 



Only one Croatian bishop, Archbishop Franic of Split, a charismatic, 
expressed belief in the apparitions, and not one of the 100 diocesan clergy in 
Herzegovina accepts them as authentic. Only two members of the 15 man 
commission which examined the events at Medjugorje, accepted the authenticity 
of the apparitions (and they were both Franciscans). The Franciscans themselves 
are divided on the matter. Some of the most influential among them support the 
position of bishops Zanic and Peric. Supporters of the authenticity of the 
apparitions have been unable to suggest any credible ulterior motive to explain 
the rejection of their authenticity by the clergy of every rank in the former 
Yugoslavia outside the Franciscan Order. 

My object in this study is simply to show that the case against the authenticity 
of the Medjugorje apparitions is unanswerable, a viewpoint which has been kept 
from most Catholics due to the vast publicity campaign in favour of their 
authenticity conducted in the mainstream Catholic media, which derive 
considerable financial benefits from Medjugorje advertising. Advertisements for 
literature critical of the apparitions have been refused by the British Catholic 
press, including one for an extremely important statement by Monsignor Ratko 
Peric, the present bishop of Mostar, which is included here as Appendix I. It is not 
without significance that Catholic journals which have not shown the least 
interest in the Fatima message are enthusiastic in their support of Medjugorje. I 
know that it was the view of the late Hamish Fraser that Medjugorje was a means 
being utilised by Satan to subvert the message of Fatima. 28 


An Immoral Priest Defended 


28 Hamish Fraser, a convert from Communism, and editor of the journal Approaches 
(Scotland) until his death in 1986, was one of the world’s greatest authorities on Fatima. 


30 



Before providing documentation to prove the falsity of the alleged 
apparitions, I will give just two examples of the degree of credibility which 
should be given to the self-styled seers of Medjugorje. The first incident is 
documented in the 1990 statement by Monsignor Zanic which is printed in full 
under the date May 1990. It concerns a Franciscan priest, expelled from the 
Franciscan Order by a direct command of Pope John Paul II. Father Vego 
seduced a nun, Sister Leopolda, and when she became pregnant they both left the 
religious life and began to live together near Medjugorje where their child was 
born. They now have two children. But prior to this, Father Vego refused to 
accept his expulsion and continued to celebrate Mass, administer the sacraments, 
and pass the time with his mistress. Why mention such a distasteful event? The 
reason is that the seers claimed that Our Lady appeared to them on 13 occasions 
stating that Father Vego was innocent, that he was as entitled to celebrate Mass as 
any other priest, and that the bishop was harsh! Any reader with a true sense of 
being a Catholic, a sensus catholicus, will need to read no further to realise the 
full extent of the mendacity of the seers, a mendacity which cannot be excused 
simply on the grounds that they have been manipulated by their Franciscan 
mentors. What credibility can be given to those who claim that the Mother of God 
told them repeatedly that an immoral priest, expelled from his order on the 
instructions of the Holy Father himself, is innocent, and that the bishop, who had 
taken the only course open to him, was the guilty party! And how does a 
supposedly reputable theologian, such as Father Rene Laurentin, who has made a 
great deal of money from books on Medjugorje, react when confronted with such 
facts? Monsignor Zanic gave us the answer. Laurentin begged him not to publish 
details of the incident. Monsignor Zanic stated that this has been Laurentin's 
consistent position — to hide the truth and defend falsehood. Despite the fact that 
the truth about Father Ivica Vego can no longer be denied, his prayer book is still 
sold in Medjugorje and beyond in hundreds of thousands of copies! 
Propagandists for Medjugorje still insist that Ivica Vego is the innocent party and 
the bishop, the guilty one. Their "proof" is that Our Lady is supposed to have told 
Vicka that this was the case, and, where they are concerned, any statement by 
Vicka is a self-evident truth. In a pro-Medjugorje booklet published in 1991, Our 
Lady is alleged to have spoken as follows to Vicka on 3 January 1982: 


Ivica is not guilty. Have him keep the faith even if he is expelled. I do not 
cease to repeat, "peace, peace, peace," and in the meantime agitation increases. 
He is not guilty (Our Lady repeated this three times). The bishop does not keep 
order. That is why he is responsible. The justice which you have not seen will 
come back. 29 


Bishop Zanic — What Went Wrong? (Saint James Publishing, P.O. Box 380244, 

31 


29 



Fraud on Film 


The former Father Vego played a prominent part in the second incident. The 
"seers" and their Franciscan manipulators have consistently maintained that 
during their "ecstasies" they are immobile and without communication with the 
outside world. On 14 January 1985, a French cameraman named Jean-Louis 
Martin wished to test this claim while the "visionaries" were purporting to be in 
ecstasy in St. James’ Church. He made a stabbing movement towards the eyes of 
Vicka Ivankovic with his fingers. Vicka gave a start and jerked her head 
backwards. Fortunately, the entire incident was filmed and I possess a 
video-cassette which shows the incident in slow motion. The girl left the room 
and returned a few minutes later accompanied by no less a person than her old 
friend Ivica Vego who was wearing a very smart blue overcoat. Vego was very 
much in command and did most of the explaining. The fact that after his expulsion 
from the order he is still so actively involved with the visionaries is of no little 
significance. The hastily fabricated explanation which Vego had instructed Vicka 
to give went as follows: 


When I arrived in the chapel I saw Jean-Louis, I saw all the people, but 
when the ecstasy began I saw nothing except the Virgin Mary who had the Infant 
Jesus in her arms, and at that time I saw that the Infant Jesus would fall on the 
floor so I made a gesture to catch the Infant Jesus because He should not fall on 
the floor. 


There could hardly be a more evident case of outright lying. It is 
inconceivable that during an apparition of Our Lady with the Child Jesus, the 
child could possibly slip. If, per impossible, this did happen, it is stretching 
coincidence beyond the bounds of credibility to be asked to believe that it 
happened at the precise moment that the journalist made the movement towards 
Vicka's eyes, and, finally, if she had been speaking the truth she would have 
moved forward towards the apparition and not backwards ! 

One might add, almost as an afterthought, that if Our Lady had truly appeared 
at Medjugorje on more than 31,000 occasions by the end of 2002, a claim which 


Birmingham, Alabama), p. 5. 


32 



in itself defies credibility, she did not bother to warn the Croatian people of the 
coming onslaught which they would have to undergo from fanatically 
anti-Catholic Serbia. 


The Herzegovina Question 


While reading this book it must be kept continually in mind that Herzegovina 
has been the scene of a longstanding and bitter dispute between the Franciscan 
Order and the diocese, a problem referred to as the “Herzegovina Question.” 
During the Turkish occupation of Bosnia-Herzegovina the Franciscans remained 
to care for the Catholic people together with several diocesan priests and priests 
from the parishes of the diocese of Trebinje. 30 They were admired for their 
courage and devotion even by the Turks. Since 1968 there has been a bitter 
dispute between the Franciscans and the diocese, the former refusing to hand over 
parishes to diocesan priests even when ordered to do so by the Holy See (see May 
1990, no. 23.) The principal significance of the Medjugorje phenomenon is the 
extent to which it has been used as a very effective weapon by the Franciscans in 
their dispute with the diocese, and a lucrative source of income which provides 
the finance necessary to maintain them their state of disobedience. 


25 March 1985 


A Letter From Monsignor Zanic To Father Tomislav Pervan 


Father Pervan was the parish priest of Medjugorje from 1984-1988, and then became the 
Provincial of the Franciscan Province of Herzegovina. 


Reverend Father Tomislav, 

Most certainly the pastoral personnel (clergy) of the Medjugorje parish know 
about the latest developments and the circumstances of the letter of the 


30 This diocese has been administered by the diocese of Mostar-Duvno since 1890. 

33 



"visionary" Ivan Dragicevic on the sign that he described on 9 May 1982 during 
his stay in the seminary in Visoko. With a copy of that letter we are also supplying 
you with a copy of the minutes of the last meeting of the commission on the 
events of Medjugorje held in Mostar on 7 March 1985, on the occasion of the 
opening of Ivan Dragicevic's letter. This letter contains the described sign which 
would occur in order to confirm the "apparitions" of the Madonna in Medjugorje. 
Last year, in a conversation with [members of] the investigating commission, 
Ivan Dragicevic declared that the sign we speak of will be the Madonna's shrine 
and that the sign will appear suddenly one morning. 

Even before this, the bishop had come to the firm conclusion that the 
apparitions of the Madonna in Medjugorje are not a reality. Meanwhile, in 1982, 
the bishop's office had formed the commission to investigate the events and to 
study the case thoroughly. Because of it, the bishop's office has refrained from 
making any official statement on the real state of affairs. However, several times 
through letters, the bishop's office expressed its desire, and even demanded, that 
the propaganda stop because of the disobedience of the pastoral personnel and the 
"visionaries." This was a futile attempt. I present the documents which have been 
sent to you, and the subject of each one of them: 

- 13 December 1981, (N 977): attitude toward the events in Medjugorje; 
- 12 April 1983, (N 241): letter to the parish priest, instructions to be followed; 

Invitations for meetings: 31 March 1983, (N 297); - 27 September 1983, (N 
982); 19 July 1984, (N 777). 

Following a two-day session, the commission on the events of Medjugorje 
declared that the pastoral personnel and the seers in Medjugorje are requested to 
abstain from any public statement or declaration to the press about the contents of 
the visions and the alleged miraculous cures. 

At our meeting, held in the chancery office in Mostar on 31 October 1984, 1 
demanded that Medjugorje's occurrences "be toned down and eliminated little by 
little." 

In the meantime, matters remain as they were, and a great disgrace is 
expected to befall the Church. Now, without any delay, after all this, I demand 
from you that you remove the "visionaries" from public display and put an end to 
their "visions" in the parish church. They have had "visions" in Mostar, and 
earlier in Sarajevo, Visoko and Dubrovnik. Let them now have them at their 
homes: people say that they had them at their homes during 1981. In ten days the 
new statue of the Gospa in front of the main altar ought to be discreetly removed 
late one evening and replaced by the old one. You must stop talking about 
apparitions and also cease publicizing messages. The devotions that grew out of 
the "apparitions" and their messages must be eliminated, sales of souvenirs and 


34 



printed material which propagate the "apparitions" must also stop. The faithful 
can go to the sacrament of reconciliation and attend Mass. I do not allow the other 
priests, especially Fathers Jozo Zovko, Tomislav Vlasic and Ljudevit Rupcic, to 
celebrate Mass for the faithful or to preach. 

The "visionaries" must give you whatever they wrote, especially what 
pertains to the so called "Biography of the Madonna." No excuse that “that's a 
secret” can justify them from not handing over that material to you. Since there 
was so much public talk about their diaries and their other writings, and since all 
this had a great influence on the events of Medjugorje, thus all these documents 
and [written]) materials fall under the supervision of the ordinary and become 
subject to the investigation of the phenomenon of Medjugorje. 

We do hope that you will execute what we demand from you in this letter. 
With greetings and a prayerful wish for God's blessing. 

Monsignor Pavao Zanic 

Bishop of Mostar-Duvno and Apostolic Administrator of Trebinje-Mrkanj. 


23 February 1987 

1987 Communique of the Yugoslav Bishops 
Concerning the Facts of Medjugorje 


Verbatim from L'Osservatore Romano, English Edition, 23 February 1987. 


We publish below the text of a communique published in the official bulletin 
of the diocese of Zagreb, 1, 1987. p. 35, signed by His Eminence Cardinal Franjo 
Kuharic, President of the Yugoslav Episcopal Conference, and Most Rev. Pavao 
Zanic, Bishop of Mostar-Duvno, concerning the facts of Medjugorje. 


In conformity with the canonical norms concerning the discernment of 
alleged apparitions and private revelations, the diocesan commission instituted 
for this purpose by the bishop of Mostar, ordinary of the place, has conducted an 
inquiry into the events of Medjugorje. In the course of the investigation it 
emerged that the events went far beyond the diocese in question. Consequently, 
on the basis of the above-mentioned norms it seemed fitting to continue the 
investigation on the level of the episcopal conference with the institution of a 
new commission for that purpose. 

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith was informed. It expressed 
appreciation for the work carried out under the responsibility of the local 


35 



ordinary, and it encouraged the continuance of the work at the national episcopal 
level. 

The episcopal conference, therefore, is establishing a commission to 
continue the investigation of the events at Medjugorje. While awaiting the results 
of the commission's investigation and the Church's judgement, pastors and 
faithful should observe an attitude of prudence customary in such situations. 

Therefore it is not permissible to organise pilgrimages and other 
manifestations motivated by the supernatural character attributed to the facts of 
Medjugorje. 

Legitimate devotion to Our Lady, recommended by the Church, must 
conform to the directives of the magisterium and especially those contained in 
the Apostolic Exhortation Mariali Cultus of 2 February 1974 (cf. AAS, 66, 1974, 
pp. 113-168). 


Zagreb 29th January 1987 
Pavao Zanic, Bishop of Mostar 
Franjo Card. Kuharic, 

President of Yugoslav Episcopal Conference . 


25 July 1987 

Declaration of the Bishop of Mostar 
Concerning Medjugorje - 25 July 1987 


After a version of this declaration, translated into English not from the original Croatian, 
but from an Italian translation, had been circulating for some time, the bishop asked Father 
Hugh Thwaites, an English Jesuit, to have an accurate translation made from the original 
Croatian. The task was undertaken by my wife Marija, who is Croatian, and my son Adrian, 
who has a Cambridge degree in Serbo-Croatian. 


Brothers and Sisters, 


Today in Medjugorje, on the occasion of administering the sacrament of 
confirmation, you are perhaps expecting me to say a few words concerning those 
events about which the whole world is talking. The Church must concern herself 
with them, and whatever is of concern to the Church, she refers to particular 
individuals and commissions. You know that at the moment this subject is being 
discussed by the commission which was convened by the conference of Bishops 

36 



of Yugoslavia, because the Church cannot expose her credibility lightly before 
the 20 th century world which seeks to discredit and criticise her, so that it can say: 
"There you are — there is Jesus Christ for you." 

I can assure you that I prayed, studied, and kept silent for six years. Others 
have prayed too, and I thank them for it. In every Holy Mass that I have said 
Medjugorje was present in my intentions. In my daily rosary I prayed to Our Lord, 
and to the Holy Ghost, to give me light from God. This has helped me to form a 
firm and certain conviction concerning everything that I have heard, read or 
experienced. There is a great deal of praying and fasting going on here (in 
Medjugorje), but it is in the belief that all the events are truly supernatural. 
However, to preach falsehood to the faithful concerning God, Jesus, and Our 
Lady - that merits the depths of hell. 

In all my work, prayers, and studies I had one aim before me — to discern the 
truth. With this aim, as early as 1982, 1 formed a four-member commission which 
later, with the help of some bishops and fathers provincial, I expanded to 15 
members drawn from nine theological centres from seven dioceses and four 
provinces, and two leading psychiatrists who were enabled to consult their 
colleagues. They worked for three years. The Holy See was informed about their 
work, and the events. This commission of the Conference of Bishops of 
Yugoslavia continues to concern itself with the same problem. 

However, there were impatient people who went ahead before the judgement 
of the Church, and declared that miracles and supernatural events were taking 
place. They preached on private revelations from the altar, something which is not 
permitted until the Church declares such revelations to be authentic. That is why 
the various authorities demanded that pilgrimages should not be organised, that 
the Church's judgement should be awaited. This was first done on 24 March 1984 
when the commission on Medjugorje warned against it, but, unfortunately, 
without effect. Then, in October of the same year, the Conference of Bishops 
declared that there should be no more officially organised pilgrimages to 
Medjugorje. By "officially organised" is meant those who gather or come in a 
group. That had no effect either. Then the Congregation for the Doctrine of the 
Faith in Rome, on 23 May 1985, sent a letter to the Conference of Italian Bishops 
asking them to try to reduce the number of organised pilgrimages, and likewise to 
minimise all forms of propaganda. That too bore no fruit. Finally, when the 
second commission was formed, Cardinal Franjo Kuharic and the Bishop of 
Mostar, in the name of the Conference of Bishops of Yugoslavia, declared 
publicly on 29 January 1987: "For this reason it is forbidden to organise 

pilgrimages or other manifestations motivated by the supernatural character 
attributed to the events in Medjugorje" This pronouncement came from the 
highest level in the Church and must not be ignored as if it were of no 

37 



significance. Ever since the first news appeared concerning the unusual events in 
this diocese, the bishop's office followed the reports carefully, and collected 
everything that could serve in the search for truth. The bishop allowed the seers 
and religious involved full freedom, and even defended them from political and 
press attacks. We taped all the conversations, collected chronicles and diaries, 
letters and documents. The commission of our professors of theology and 
physicians studied all this for three years. The three year work of the commission 
concluded as follows: two members voted in favour of the truth and supernatural 
nature of the apparitions. One member abstained from voting. One accepted that 
something had happened at the beginning. Eleven voted that there had been no 
apparitions — non constat de supernaturalitate . 31 

I am firmly convinced that all the members of the commission worked 
conscientiously and examined everything which could have aided their search for 
truth. The Church cannot risk her credibility, and often, in similar cases, she has 
studied events like these carefully and rebuked groups who gathered in places 
where it had been established that the events were not supernatural. Let us 
remember Garabandal in Spain, San Damiano in Italy, and dozens of similar 
places in the past few years. The seers at Garabandal claimed that Our Lady 
promised a great sign for the whole world. Twenty-five years have passed since 
then, and still there is no sign. If Our Lady had left a sign it would be clear to all 
what this is about. 

It was said that Our Lady started to appear at Podbrdo on Mount Crnica. 
When the police stopped people going there she appeared in people's homes, on 
fences, in fields, in vineyards, and tobacco fields. She appeared in the church, on 
the altar, in the sacristy, in the choir-loft, on the roof, in the bell-tower, on the 
roads, on the road to Cerno, in a car, on a bus, in schools, at several places in 
Mostar and Sarajevo, in monasteries in Zagreb, in Varazdin, in Switzerland, in 
Italy, then again at Podbrdo, in Krizevac, in the parish, on the presbytery and so 
on. This does not list even half the number of locations where apparitions were 
alleged to have taken place, so that a sober man who venerates Our Lady must 
ask: "My Lady, what are they making of you?" 


There are three possible verdicts on claims of 
supernatural apparitions: Constat de supernaturalitate which constitutes recognition of the 
supernatural character of the events in question; non constat de supernaturalitate denotes that 
there is no evidence of the supernatural character of the events while not ruling out the 
possibility that such evidence could be forthcoming; constat de non supernaturalitate, a final 
negative judgement by Ecclesiastical authority that there is definitely no supernatural character 
attached to the events in question. 


38 



By divine law I am the pastor in this diocese, the teacher of the faith, and the 
judge in questions concerning the faith. Since the events in Medjugorje have 
caused strife and division in the Church — some people believing, others not 
believing — because there are those who have refused to submit themselves to the 
authority of the Church. Because the recommendations and decisions of the above 
mentioned authorities, commissions, congregations of the bishops' conference 
had no effect, I, the bishop of Mostar, answerable before God for the discipline in 
this diocese repeat and confirm earlier decisions of ecclesiastical bodies, and I 
forbid pilgrimages to come here and attribute a supernatural character to these 
events before the Commission of the Bishops' Conference completes its work. 

I turn to you, O Immaculate Virgin and Mother, Mother of God, and Mother 
of the Church, Mother of the faithful who seek, pray to, and love you. I, your 
servant, the bishop of Mostar, turn to you, and before the whole world declare my 
deep and constant faith in all the privileges God bestowed upon you according to 
which you are the first and most excellent of His creatures. I express my profound 
and unswerving faith in your intercession before Almighty God for all the needs 
of your children in this vale of tears. 

I declare my profound and constant faith in your love towards us sinners, that 
love to which you have testified by your apparitions and assistance. I myself have 
led pilgrimages to Lourdes. It is precisely with the strength of this faith that I, 
your servant the bishop of Mostar, before the great multitudes who have called 
upon you, discern and accept your great sign which after six years, has become 
clear and certain. No special sign is necessary for me, but it was necessary for 
those who believed in a falsehood. The sign you have given is that for six years 
you remained silent continually whenever they prophesied that there would be an 
apparition on the mountain which would be permanent and for all to see. "It will 
be soon, quite soon, just be patient a little longer" They were saying this as early 
as 1981. Then they claimed that it would be on the feast of the Immaculate 
Conception, then at Christmas, then for the New Year and so on. 

Thank you, Blessed Lady, for manifesting by your six year silence whether or 
not you have spoken here, whether or not you had appeared or given messages, 
revealed secrets, or promised a special sign. Most holy Virgin, Mother of Christ 
and our Mother, intercede for peace in this restless region of the Church, the 
diocese of Mostar. Intercede especially for this village, this parish where your 
holy name has been mentioned countless times in messages. Accept, most holy 
Virgin, in reparation, the sincere prayers of those devout souls who are far from 
fanaticism and disobedience within the Church. Help us all to come to the real 
truth. Beloved, humble, and obedient Maiden of God, help Medjugorje to follow 
with a firm step the shepherd of the Church on earth, so that we all may glorify 


39 



you and thank you in truth and love. Amen. 


Pavao Zanic 
Bishop of Mostar 


20 January 1988 

Letter to Mrs. Marija Davies from the 
Bishop of Mostar 20 January 1988 


Dear Mrs Davies, 


Thank you very much for getting in touch with me. Thank you especially for 
the translation of my statement about Medjugorje, and thank you for taking the 
correct attitude over this great source of confusion. God knows how this will all 
end, not well, you can be sure of that. The Church is divided. Factions are at war 
in the name of the Queen of Peace. I, who saw the beginning of this falsehood, of 
this lie, have before my very eyes a great deal about which it is impossible to 
write, or to describe, for various reasons. A huge amount of money is involved, 
and so the propaganda has no bounds. In my office there are some 50 books about 
Medjugorje, a vast number of cassettes, newspapers, and magazines, and new 
material is arriving all the time, and yet the position I have taken hurts them. For 
an average Catholic the first question to ask is: "What does the ordinary (bishop) 
of the place think about this matter?" The position which I have taken brings 
many people to their senses. Of course the fanaticism of some is incorrigible, and 
no argument avails in their cases. 

Archbishop Franic has caused me dreadful problems, although the mere fact 
that he thinks something does not mean that it must be true. One of the first 
questions asked by the sectaries of Medjugorje is: "How is it that Archbishop 
Franic believes?" I, for my part, say to them, that there are thirty-five bishops in 
Yugoslavia, and that he is the only one who believes, so that argument is 
worthless. For them, however, it is enough that one archbishop believes. 

I am firmly convinced that no responsible person will dare to defend the 
apparitions. The contrary arguments are too strong. It is only necessary to be 
aware of them. 

Thank you once more for your work, and for the confidence that you have 

40 



shown in me. 

I give you and your husband my pastoral blessing. 


+Pavao Zanic. 


11 July 1988 

Marija Pavlovic Contradicts Herself 


As Monsignor Zanic makes clear (May 1990, Part 15), Marija Pavlovic has 
proved beyond any possibility of doubt that no confidence whatsoever can be 
placed in her veracity — “Marija has consciously spoken falsehoods.” In 1987, 
Father Tomislav Vlasic, the Svengali figure who has been the principal 
manipulator of the alleged seers, and was no longer a member of the Franciscan 
community in Herzegovina, established a bizarre community in Parma, Italy, with 
an enigmatic German lady named Agnes Heupel who claimed to have been cured 
of an illness at Medjugorje. The community had the rather long title of “Queen of 
Peace, wholly Thine; to Jesus through Mary” ( Kraljice Mira, potpuno tvoji po 
Mariji klsusu ). In this community, guided by Vlasic and Heupel, young men and 
women lived together, which, Monsignor Zanic comments, is something unheard 
of in the history of the Church. 

Like his fellow Franciscan Father Vego, Father Vlasic had also made a nun 
pregnant. 32 When their child was born at the beginning of 1977, he did not leave 
the order to marry the woman named Mada (formerly Sister Rufina), but begged 
her not to name him as the father, assuring her that it she kept the matter secret she 
would be like Mary, and God would bless her! 33 He advised Mada to lie, and even 
composed a story for her: 


I think it’s best to say that you met someone passing by and he gave you a 
false name, and he told you he wants to marry you. Later he left and did not call 


32 


The full details of this scandalous event can be found in the book by E. Michael 
Jones, Medjugorje: The Untold Story (Fidelity press, 206 Marquette Avenue, South 
Bend, IN 46617, USA). 

33 Ibid., p. 85. 

41 



and you got pregnant. It’s best to say that you don’t know him, because they 
won’t bother you then and it would be better for the child later. 34 


This was the priest who was virtually the spiritual director of the Medjugorje 
seers! Mada complied with his wishes initially, but later, feeling abandoned, 
revealed the whole story to Monsignor Zanic. As he did in the case of Father 
Vego, Father Laurentin resorted to a cover-up. Fie evidently felt that the 
credibility of the seers could be endangered if the immorality of their spiritual 
director became known, and fabricated a story that a Franciscan named Pehar, 
who had left the order and gone to live in the U.S.A., was the father of the child. 
His evident presumption was that no one would be able to find Pehar, but he was 
mistaken. The former priest, now laicised and married, was located and made it 
clear that by no possible stretch of the imagination could he have been the father 
of Mada’ s child. He had no hesitation in stating categorically that Laurentin was 
lying. 35 

The founding of the Vlasic/Heupel community was a cause of scandal even 
to some devotees of Medjugorje. Vlasic decided that his critics would be silenced 
if it could be shown that he had acted in obedience to a command from Our Lady. 
Marija Pavlovic was a member of the community from February 1988 until July 
of the same year. It was here that she met her future husband, Paolo Lunetti. In 
response to a request by Vlasic for an endorsement of his community by Our 
Lady, Marija duly "revealed" the fact that it had been established at Our Lady’s 
express command. In July 1988 great consternation was caused among the 
Medjugorists when Pavlovic swore before the Blessed Sacrament that her 
previous statement had been false and that the Vlasic/Heupel community was in 
no way endorsed by Our Lady. Even Father Laurentin would find it hard to cover 
up the fact the Pavlovic must have been lying on at least one occasion. The full 
text of the 11 July 1988 retraction follows: 


I feel morally bound to make the following statements before God, Our 
Lady, and the Church of Jesus Christ: 

(1) The message of the text An Invitation to the Marian Year and the 
deposition which bears my signature is that I brought Our Lady's answer to 
Brother Tomislav Vlasic's question. That answer was supposedly: "This is 

God's plan." In other words, it follows from these texts that I transmitted to 
Brother Tomislav Vlasic, Our Lady's confirmation and express approval of this 
work and of the programme set in motion in Italy with the Medjugorje prayer 
group. 


34 

35 


Ibid. 

Ibid., p. 91. 


42 



(2) I now declare that I never asked Our Lady for any confirmation 
whatsoever of this work begun by Brother Tomislav Vlasic and Agnes Heupel. I 
never expressly asked Our Lady whether I should take part in this work and I 
never received from Our Lady any instruction connected with the group, apart 
from her instruction that each of us should be free to make a choice for his or her 
own life. 

(3) From the texts and depositions which bear my signature it appears that 
Our Lady suggested that the community and the programme of Brother Tomislav 
Vlasic and Agnes Heupel are God's way for myself and the others. I now repeat 
that I never received from Our Lady nor gave Brother Vlasic or anybody else 
such a statement or instruction from Our Lady. 

(4) My first statement in its published form in Croatian and Italian does not 
correspond to the truth. I personally had no desire to make any written statement. 
Brother Tomislav Vlasic advised me, stressing the point again and again, that I, 
as a seer, ought to write a deposition which the world expected. 

(5) I must, moreover, declare that the contents of the letter as set out and 
my having signed it give rise to a number of questions. For the time being, I can 
give to all possible questions only this one answer, which I give, I repeat, before 
God, Our Lady, and the Church of Jesus Christ: everything which might be 
understood as a confirmation and approval of this work of Brother Tomislav 
Vlasic and Agnes Heupel by Our Lady through myself is absolutely untrue and 
no less untrue is the idea that I spontaneously conceived the wish to write down 
that deposition. 

(6) I consider myself morally bound to repeat the following statements 
before God, Our Lady and the Church: After seven years of daily visions, after 
my most intimate experience of Our Lady's kindness and wisdom, in the light of 
all that I can remember of Our Lady's advice and of Our Lady's answers to the 
questions which I personally put to her, I can say publicly that the idea that 
heaven's plan and the message of Our Lady to the world at Medjugorje have as a 
holy consequence and a process desired by Our Lady this work and the 
programme begun in Italy by Brother Tomislav Vlasic and Agnes Heupel is 
unsustainable. It must, however, also be said that the daily apparitions are 
continuing. 

I sign this declaration before the Holy Sacrament, and destine it for all those 
devoted to the "Work" of Our Lady in Medjugorje. 


Marija Pavlovic 
11th July 1988 

Before leaving the subject of lying, it should be noted that Father Ivo Sivric, 
OFM (who was born in Medjugorje) reveals that two Franciscans, who were 
members the bishop's first investigative commission, had detected "thirteen 
apparent cases of deliberate and conscious lying" on the part of the alleged 


43 



visionaries.” 36 

The Community “Queen of Peace, wholly Thine; to Jesus through Mary”, is 
still directed by Father Tomislav Vlasic who insists that he is not the founder of 
the community, for the true founder is the Holy Spirit Who inspires people to 
respond to His call. The entire history of salvation, he explains, is marked by the 
Spirit's intervention, just as the apparitions of Our Lady at Medjugorje are. 37 


31 March 1989 
Visions in Alabama? 


Excerpted from "Letter from London", by Michael Davies, The Remnant, 31 March 1989 


I have excerpted from some cuttings, unfortunately not dated, concerning a 
recent visit to Alabama, USA, by Marija Pavlovic, one of the so-called seers of 
Medjugorje. Miss Pavlovic was in Alabama for 53 days, and readers will certainly 
be wondering whether she had any visions during her visit. Miss Pavlovic claims 
that she did. How many, you may be wondering? Fifty-three of course! One a 
day. She had come to Birmingham to donate one of her kidneys to her brother in 
an operation performed at the University Hospital, and she deserves our 
admiration for this fine gesture. During the operation, while unconscious under an 
anaesthetic, she claims to have had a vision — which must be a first in the history 
of apparitions. 

During her stay, Miss Pavlovic stayed with a Mr. Terry Colafrancesco who, it 
appears, works full time for a non-profit organisation called Caritas which he 
established in 1986 to promote Medjugorje: "Since then he has let his business, 
Country Landscaping, go dormant." Mr Colafrancesco purchased a 90-acre field 
adjacent to his property for $400,000. In that field there is a pine tree. Mr 
Colafrancesco mowed a path from his home to the tree, mowed around the tree, 
and placed a crucifix and a Madonna on the site. He asked Miss Pavlovic to have 
a vision under the tree, and she duly obliged. It is somewhat remarkable that Mr. 
Colafrancesco had been able in advance to distribute information about the date 


36 

Ivo Sivric, The Hidden Face of Medjugorje ( Editions Psilog, 1989, CP 300, 
Saint-Frangois-du-Lac, Quebec, Canada, J0C 1M0), p. 14 

37 To contact die Community: lamamira@genie.it 


44 



and time that Miss Pavlovic would have her vision under the pine tree on his 
newly acquired property. Thousands of pilgrims are now visiting the field, much 
to the delight of the Alabama Bureau of Tourism and Travel. The Shelby County 
Sheriffs Deputy, a gentleman by the name of Gene Hamby, predicted, while 
directing a steady stream of cars to the field, "It's just beginning." 

A Mr. Cyril Auboyneau, Miss Pavlovic's translator, confirmed that 
Colafrancesco asked for a vision in the field: "Terry wanted a vision in the field 
under that tree - he prayed about that. So we asked Marija to ask Our Lady if she 
would appear in the field on Thanksgiving Day. Our Lady said she would appear 
in the field." 

Well, what can one say? I am astounded that anyone with a modicum of 
intelligence can give one second's credence to anything connected with 
Medjugorje, apart from the statements of Bishop Zanic. 


May 1990 

The Truth about Medjugorje 

A Statement by Monsignor Pavao Zanic, Bishop of Mostar-Duvno, 

published in May 1990. 


1. The truth regarding the events in Medjugorje is being sought out by a 
commission of the Bishops' Conference of Yugoslavia (BKJ). Their work is 
progressing slowly. Therefore, with this statement I wish to help the commission 
in coming to a decision as soon as possible. Propaganda in favour of Medjugorje 
is being rushed in order to place the Church and the world before a fait accompli 
This has been the intention of the defenders of Medjugorje from the beginning. It 
must be admitted that they have succeeded, because the other side is either 
working too slowly or remaining silent. For these reasons and due to the 
motivation that I have been given from many from all over the world who realise 
that the truth has been trampled upon, I have decided to make another statement 
according to my duty and my conscience, and help the commission. With this 
statement I wish to awaken the consciences of those who defend Medjugorje. 
Their path is simple, wide and downhill all the way, while mine is difficult, thorny 
and uphill The Church and Our Lady have no need of falsehoods. Jesus says: "The 
truth will make you free" (Jn 8:32). "I am the way and the truth and the life" (Jn 


45 



14:6). "For this I was bom, and for this I have come into the world to bear witness 
to the truth. Every one who is of the truth, hears my voice" (Jn 18:37). For a short 
description of the falsehoods about Medjugorje we would need 200 pages, but for 
now all I will give is this short summary without a scientific approach. I am 
somewhat uneasy because of the fact that in some statements my name is in the 
forefront, yet from the beginning of the "apparitions" I have been in the centre of 
the events due to my episcopal position and duties. I am sorry as well for having 
to mention some "unpleasant things," but without them the arguments lose their 
strength. However, the most unpleasant things will not be mentioned. 

2. A characteristic attitude: Marina B., a tourist guide for Atlas Travel, 
brought a priest from Panama to my office in August 1989. His name: Presbitero 
Rodriguez Teofilo, pastor of Nuestra Senora de Lourdes. With him came Carmen 
Capriles — a journalist, Gerente General of the IATA agency, and Averrida 
Alberto Navarro, Apartado 1344 Zona 7, Panama. Marina presented herself as a 
tour-guide, translator for English and a convert of Medjugorje. The priest asked 
me for the reasons why I do not believe in the "apparitions". I told him that I have 
at least 20 reasons not to believe, of which only one is necessary for those who are 
sober and well instructed in the faith to come to the conclusion that the 
apparitions are not of the supernatural. He asked me to please tell him at least one 
reason. I told him about the case of the ex-Franciscan priest Ivica Vego. Due to 
his disobedience, by an order of our Holy Father the Pope, he was expelled from 
the Franciscan religious order OFM by his General, dispensed from his vows, and 
suspended a divinis He did not obey this order and he continued to celebrate 
Mass, administer the sacraments and pass the time with his mistress. It is 
unpleasant to write about this, yet it is necessary in order to see of whom Our 
Lady is speaking. According to the diary of Vicka and the statements of the 
"seers", Our Lady mentioned 13 times that he is innocent and that the bishop is 
wrong When his mistress, Sister Leopolda, a nun, became pregnant, both of them 
left Medjugorje and the religious life and began to live together near Medjugorje 
where their child was born. Now they have two children. His prayer book is still 
sold in Medjugorje and beyond in hundreds of thousands of copies. 

I asked Marina to translate this into English. Marina cannot be blamed for 
having fallen into a community which is concealing the truth. She spontaneously 
responded according to the practice in Medjugorje: "Do we have to tell them these 
ugly things?" I responded by saying that if you had not held back and covered 
these "ugly events" these people from Panama would have found out earlier and 
they would not have had to travel to Medjugorje for nothing. It is an injustice and 
a sin to hide this truth, even though it be unpleasant, it must be said. 


46 



3. The Marian theologian Rene Laurentin behaves in the same manner. He 
came to visit me around Christmas 1983, and I offered him dinner. He asked me 
why I do not believe in the apparitions. I told him that according to the diary of 
Vicka, and the words of the other "seers", this "Lady" has been speaking against 
the bishop. Laurentin quickly responded: "Don't publish that, because there are 
many pilgrims and converts there." I was scandalised by this statement of this 
well known Mariologist! Unfortunately this has remained Laurentin's position: to 
hide the truth, and defend falsehoods. He has written around ten books on the 
topic of Medjugorje and in almost all of them, the truth and Bishop Zanic are 
under fire. He knows well what people like to hear. Therefore, it was relatively 
easy for him to find those who believe him. "A veritate quidem auditum avertent, 
adfabulas autem convertentur ” — "They will turn away from listening to the truth 
and wander into myths" (2 Tim 4:4). The "seers" and defenders of Medjugorje, 
led by Laurentin, from the very outset have seen that the modern believer in a 
communist country very quickly believes in everything "miraculous", in apparent 
miraculous healings and apparent messages from "Our Lady". 

4. The main players on which Medjugorje rests are retired Archbishop F. 
Franic, Father Rene Laurentin, Father L. Rupcic OFM, Father Amorth, Father 
Rastrelli S.J., and some Franciscans and charismatics from all over the world. 
Many books have been quickly published, as well as articles, brochures, films and 
souvenirs. On the move are tourist agencies, pilgrimages, prayer books written by 
two Franciscans Vego and Prusina who were expelled from the Franciscan 
Order, 38 published in many languages in 600,000 copies, fanatical prayer groups 
that are inspired by the alleged messages of Our Lady and the greatest motivator 
of all — money. No one even mentions anything which throws doubt on the 


38 


Two Franciscan chaplains in Mostar, Ivan Prusina and Ivica Vego, who later left the 
from the order, were expelled from the order, dispensed from their vows, and suspended a 
divinis in accordance with the instruction from the Holy See dated 11 December 1980. 
Father Onorio Pontoglio, Vicar General and Procurator of the Order, made an 
announcement concerning their dismissal on behalf of the order on 29 January 1982. As a 
result of a procedural error in the process against them the sentence was annulled, but 
without calling into question the facts on which the sentence has been based. In the case of 
Vego the annulment is irrelevant as he has married his mistress and is hence no longer a 
Franciscan.. See Peric, p. 64. Prusina now lives in Germany and is not permitted to 
exercise his priesthood in Herzegovina. 


47 



"apparitions". The bishop has been warning everyone, but the "machinery" has 
been breaking forward. There have been mentioned 50 miraculous healings, then 
150, 200, 300 and so on. Laurentin chose 56 dossiers and sent them to the "Bureau 
Medical de Lourdes". Dr. Mangiapan responded in their Bulletin April 1986, that 
these dossiers have no practical value, and they cannot be used or considered as 
serious proofs of the apparitions in Medjugorje. Much has been written about the 
healing of Diane Basile. I sent the dossier to Dr. Mangiapan who studied the case 
and then took the position: " opinion plus que reservee". It is a case of sclerosis 
multiplex. More will be written about this later in a book. 

5. The credibility of the "seers" — Mirjana Dragicevic. One month after the 
beginning of the "apparitions" I went to Medjugorje to question the "seers". I 
asked each of them to take an oath on the cross and demanded that they must 
speak the truth. (This conversation and oath was recorded on tape.) The first one 
was Mirjana: "We went to look for our sheep when at once . . ." (The associate 
pastor in the parish interrupted and told me that they actually went out to smoke, 
which they hid from their parents.) "Wait a minute Mirjana, you're under oath. 
Did you go out to look for your sheep?" She put her hand over her mouth, 
"Forgive me, we went out to smoke." She then showed me the watch on which the 
"miracle" occurred because the hands of the watch had gone haywire. I took the 
watch to a watch expert who said that it had certainly fallen and become 
disordered. After bringing the watch back to her I told her not to mention that a 
miracle occurred. Yet, on cassettes taped later on, she went on to speak of how a 
miracle occurred with the watch and that initially they had gone out to search for 
their sheep. Later on, she claimed that Our Lady stated that all faiths are equal. To 
what extent can we believe Mirjana? 

6. Vicka Ivankovic has been the main "seer" from the beginning, and 
through her the creator of Medjugorje, Father Tomislav Vlasic, OFM, has 
launched the main portion of falsehoods regarding Medjugorje. He presented 
himself to the Pope in a letter dated 13 May 1984 as follows: "I am Father 
Tomislav Vlasic, the one according to Divine Providence who guides the seers of 
Medjugorje." It would have been better for him to have withdrawn into the desert 
and remained silent, because his past speaks enough about him. Vicka spoke and 
wrote much, and in so doing she fell into many contradictions. Professor Nikola 
Bulat, a member of the first commission, questioned her and wrote a 60 page 
study on her. He numbered all the illogicalities and falsehoods of her diary. Here 
I will only mention the bloody handkerchief. Word spread around that there was 
a certain taxi driver who came across a man who was bloody all over. This man 


48 



gave the taxi driver a bloodied handkerchief and he told him to: "Throw this in the 
river." The driver went on and then he came across a woman in black. She stopped 
him and asked him to give her a handkerchief. He gave her his own, but she said: 
"Not that one but the bloody handkerchief." He gave her the handkerchief she 
wanted and she then said: "If you had thrown it into the river the end of the world 
would have occurred now." Vicka Ivankovic wrote in her diary that they asked 
Our Lady if this event was true and she said that it was, and along with this, "That 
man covered with blood was my son Jesus, and I (Our Lady) was that woman in 
black." 

What kind of theology is this? From this it appears that Jesus wants to destroy 
the world if a handkerchief is thrown into a river and it is Our Lady who saves the 
world ! 


7. On the 14th of January 1982, Vicka, Marija and little Jakov came to visit 
me. Vicka began to speak quite nervously because she was speaking falsehoods. 
She said: "Our Lady sent us to you to tell you that you are too harsh with the 
Franciscans ..." In what way? "We don't know!" Two Franciscan chaplains in 
Mostar, Ivica Vego and Ivan Prusina, whom the bishop sought to remove from 
Mostar because of disorder and disobedience towards the faithful of the newly 
established cathedral parish in Mostar, defended themselves before their 
superiors by saying that they would not leave Mostar because Our Lady, through 
Vicka, told them not to leave. This was mentioned to me by a member of the 
Franciscan Provincial council. I asked Vicka at our meeting: "Did Our Lady 
mention anything about the Mostar chaplains, Vego and Prusina?" "She did not, 
we don't know them," responded all three. Our conversation lasted 30 minutes 
and I taped all of it. I brought up the question of the chaplains of Mostar several 
times and they always responded: "We don't know them." Later on, I found from 
Vicka's diary that they knew the chaplains very well. It was clear to me that they 
were lying, yet I did not want to mention this to them in order to maintain their 
confidence during our conversations. 


8. On the 4th of April 1982, Vicka and Jakov came to visit me ". . . sent by 
Our Lady." The chaplains of Mostar, Father Vego and Father Prusina, were 
expelled from the Franciscan Order OFM in January of that year by the superiors 
of their order. Many followers and "Our Lady" defended the expelled chaplains. 
During our conversation Vicka very excitedly began: "The last time we were with 
you we didn't tell you everything and for this reason Our Lady scolded us. We 
spoke of many things and therefore we forgot . . ." "What did you forget?" Our 
Lady told us to tell you that those chaplains Vego and Prusina are priests and 


49 



therefore they can celebrate Mass just as other priests." "Wait a minute. Did Our 
Lady tell you this before our last meeting?" "Yes, that's why she sent us to you 
Last time I spoke of many other things and I forgot to mention this." During that 
previous meeting I asked her directly several times if Our Lady mentioned 
anything about the two chaplains. It was clear to me that Vicka was lying and this 
was proof enough for me not to trust her statements. Marija and Jakov also 
participated in this lie. 

9. Towards the end of January 1983, Father Grafenauer, a Slovenian 
Jesuit priest, came to me with the intention of searching out the phenomenon of 
Medjugorje. He listened to 20 cassettes and after having listened to them he said 
that he would not go to Medjugorje because he concluded that Our Lady is not 
there. Upon my insistence he went to Medjugorje and after a few days he came 
back as a "convert" of Father Vlasic. He brought some documents, threw them on 
the table and said: "Here's what Our Lady wishes to tell you! " I understood this as 
a plot to overthrow the bishop with the help of Our Lady. The documents he 
brought were a compilation of Vicka's diary, the parish chronicle, and hand 
written documents. For this reason it is difficult to establish where they were first 
written. Vicka and those who defend Medjugorje hid this from the bishop for 
more than a year. 39 


10. Vicka never denied that Our Lady said these things or that she wrote 
these things down in her diary. The assurance and authenticity of this can be best 
confirmed by a cassette taped by Father Grafenauer during his talks with Vicka 
and Marija. He left taped copies of the cassette in the parish of Medjugorje, with 
the bishop and also with the bishops' conference in Zagreb. The cassette should 
be heard! 


A conversation with Vicka 

Graf: The bishop has the duty to judge whether or not this is Our Lady. 

Vicka: He can judge as he wants, but I know it's Our Lady. 

Graf: The Church says of those who are confident in themselves, that this itself 

is a sign that Our Lady is not in question here. 


39 The relevant extracts from Vicka’s diary are provided in Appendix n. 


50 



Vicka: Let those who are doubtful remain doubtful, I'm not. 

Graf: This is not a good thing . . . you once told the bishop that he should pay 

more attention to Our Lady than to the Pope. 

Vicka: Yes I did. 

Graf: This means that the bishop should listen to you more than to the Pope. 

Vicka: No, not me. 

Graf: But the bishop doesn't know what the phenomenon is and perhaps it is 

not Our Lady. 

Vicka: Yes it is Our Lady. 

Graf: You told the bishop that he is to blame and that those two (Vego and 

Prusina) are innocent and that they can perform their priestly duties. 

Vicka: Yes I did. 

Graf: Can they hear confessions? Did Our Lady mention this? 

Vicka: Yes. 

Graf: If Our Lady said this and the Pope says that they cannot . . . 

Vicka: The Pope can say what he wants. I'm telling it as it is! 

Graf: See, this is how one can come to the conclusion that this is not Our Lady 

. . .when the Pope says no, they cannot celebrate Mass, and they cannot 
hear confessions, and then on the other hand. Our Lady says they can do 
both. This cannot be! 

Vicka: I know what is right (What Our Lady said). 

Graf: This cannot be true. I would put my hand into fire to testify that this is not 

Our Lady speaking. When a person has a greater gift there also exists a 
greater danger that the devil could be at work upon this person. 

What a degrading humiliation of Our Lady! From these statements she is 
destroying obedience in the Church, obedience to the bishop, to the heads of the 
OFM Order, and to the Holy Father. She is defending Vego! 

11. The apparition in Cerno. Cerno is a village not far away from 
Medjugorje. The eighth day after the beginning of the apparitions in Medjugorje 
there was an "apparition" near Cerno. The "seers" told Father Jozo Zovko, the 
pastor of Medjugorje at the time, of this happening the evening of the event. 

They mentioned that Our Lady said four or five times that she would appear 
three more days, that is, on July 1, 2, and 3. This was taped on cassette publicised 
by Father Ivo Sivric OFM. The cassette was reproduced. A few years later Father 
Janko Bubalo published a book entitled: A Thousand Meetings with Our Lady 
This is a book of conversations with Vicka. Vicka does not mention this event, 


51 



therefore Father Bubalo asked whether or not Our Lady said "only three more 
days." Vicka responded that she does not remember! 

It is evident that Vicka is speaking falsehoods and that Our Lady cannot say 
that which Vicka is saying. Vicka is fabricating these statements. Should this 
remain unknown to the rest of the world? Evil (such as speaking falsehoods about 
Our Lady) must not be done in order to obtain a good (such as pilgrimages, 
prayers, etc.) 

12. "Seer" Marija Pavlovic. Here is a written account of the taped 
conversation between Father Grafenauer and Marija: 


Graf: Did Our Lady say that the bishop is to blame? 

Marija: Yes. 

Graf: Did she say that Vego and Prusina were not to blame? 

Marija: Yes. 

Graf: When Our Lady says that the bishop is to blame this immediately appears 

suspicious and we could conclude that . . . this is not Our Lady speaking. 
The seers are apparently . . . spreading word around that the bishop is to 
blame. 

Marija: Our Lady told us this. 

Graf: This is causing revolt in Herzegovina and these are not good fruits. 

People will be angry with the bishop and will defame his reputation. How 
can Our Lady do such things? The Church knows . . . well that Our Lady 
is good and that she would never do such things. 

Marija: Our Lady told us this. 


Archbishop F. Franic, Father Laurentin and many others know all this, yet 
they remain silent. What kind of theology can accept these statements by Our 
Lady through the declarations of the "seers" that their teacher, pastor and 
liturgist — the bishop, who has legally received his duty from Christ through the 
Church — has no love of God in his heart, that he is declared a sinner throughout 
the world, that he should convert and that prayers will be said in Medjugorje for 
this intention? There were even statements made that Jesus himself would pray 
for the bishop so that the bishop would believe and then take better action in 
favour of the events in Medjugorje. To say that the bishop is to wait for Our 
Lady's judgement is an absurdity. It is an offence against Our Lady the Mother of 
the Church. God knows that I am not without sin, and that Our Lady could 
criticise me, yet God alone is the judge. I have never been reprimanded or warned 


52 



by the Holy See for my episcopal service. 


13. The creator of Medjugorje, Father Tomislav Vlasic, amongst other 
things, has published and distributed in many languages a 17 page booklet titled: 
A Calling in the Marian Year, Milano, 25 March 1988. This regards the founding 
of a prayer group for young men and women (from Medjugorje) who would live 
together at Parma in Italy, something which has been unheard of in the history of 
the Church. They would be the ones who would save the world. Our Lady 
apparently gave Father Vlasic and Agnes Heupel (a German woman supposedly 
healed in Medjugorje) the inspiration to establish and to lead this community 
together in a manner similar to Saints Francis and Clare, as described by Vlasic. 
In order for this action to succeed, Father. Vlasic asked Marija Pavlovic to add 
"her witnessing" on three pages. She is a member of this community and on 21 
April 1988 she wrote: " Sento il bisogno ..." - 1 feel the need . 


As can be concluded, Our Lady has given a set program to this community 
of the "Queen of Peace” and she leads this community through Father Vlasic and 
Agnes who give messages to the community. I have been in the community for a 
month and a half. I have apparitions and Our Lady leads me in the mystery of 
suffering which is the foundation of this community. I must write down 
everything and publish this once Our Lady tells me to. I have understood God's 
plan which He began through Mary in the parish of Medjugorje. 


This quote is taken from pages 15 and 16 of Father Vlasic's text. The 
defenders of Medjugorje quickly understood that this community of young men 
and women living, sleeping, working and praying together in the same house 
would eventually destroy itself and Medjugorje. Therefore, they sent their 
Provincial, Father Jozo Vasilj to Parma. He went together with the Bishop of 
Parma, Monsignor B. Cochi and Father T. Vlasic to the Congregation in Rome. 
They were told there that the Church cannot allow such a community to exist and 
Father Vlasic was ordered to dissolve the community and to return to 
Herzegovina. Vlasic did not obey immediately, yet he returned later. This is what 
was explained to me by Father Jozo Vasilj regarding the community. 


14. The same Marija Pavlovic made another public declaration on 1 1 July 
1988. The declaration was printed on a single sheet of paper and distributed in the 
same manner as the statement of 21 April 1988 (referred to in paragraph 13). In 
this statement she retracted her claim that Our Lady had given her approval to the 
Vlasic/Heupel community in Parma. She explained that Father Vlasic had 


53 



pressurised her into making this statement which did not correspond to the truth. 
(The full text of this statement was cited May 1990). 


15. Marija does not deny that she made her first statement. Father Vlasic 
sought statements from her many times and this obviously turns out to be 
manipulating one of the "seers". So we can conclude that Marija has consciously 
spoken falsehoods on either the first or second occasion. She has lied and this she 
attributes to Our Lady. It is evident that she (Marija) is a toy in Father Vlasic's 
hands. This was clear to me even earlier, yet up till now I didn't have material 
proof to back this up. Father Vlasic has manipulated all the "seers" in the same 
fashion. 40 Under this type of manipulation Marija saw how Our Lady cried when 
someone mentioned the bishop at a prayer meeting: "From Our Lady's eye flowed 
forth a great tear. The tear ran down her face and disappeared into a cloud under 
her feet. Our Lady began to cry and she ascended to heaven crying" (22 August 
1984) — an obvious fabrication by Father Vlasic intended to frighten the bishop. 

Why don't the defenders of Medjugorje mention these two statements of 
Marija? Must these "ugly" things be hidden from the world because there are 
many "conversions" in Medjugorje? Father Laurentin writes in his book 
DernilJres Nouvelles 3, on page 27, that a certain monsignor asked Marija to pray 
for a message from Our Lady for his priests. Marija answered: "Our Lady said 
that they should read Laurentin's book and spread it around!" 

It is a terrible sin to attribute one's own lies to Our Lady. When the world 
learns of this, who will believe them anymore? They have been discredited. No 
one can destroy this material evidence. It will be reproduced and spread by word 
of mouth. I know well that there are many who disregard such material. They 
accept the events of Medjugorje irrationally, with great emotion and with 
personal interests. They are blind, but these documents will remain a part of the 
history of the Church and of Mariology. 

16. The "seer" Ivan Dragicevic. Regarding the "great sign", Vicka 
mentions this 13 times in the diaries, it is mentioned 14 times in the Parish 
chronicle, 52 times on the cassettes, and on numerous occasions in talks with the 
bishop. In the spring of 1982, 1 asked the "seers" to write everything they knew 
about the sign without making the "secret" public. The way I suggested they do it 
was to write down information on paper in duplicate. Then this would be sealed in 


40 A German photographer named Walter Fuerhoff had witnessed Marija Pavlovic in the 
company of Vlasic copying messages that he had written for her. 


54 



an envelope and one copy would remain with them, and one with the bishop. 
Then, when the "sign" occurs, we would open the envelopes and see whether or 
not the "sign" was predicted. Father Tomislav Vlasic, pastor of Medjugorje at the 
time, told the "seers" to say that Our Lady had told them not to write anything 
down for anybody, and so they did not. Ivan Dragicevic was in the Franciscan 
minor seminary at Visoko, Bosnia at that time and he wasn't informed of this on 
time. Two members of the first commission, Dr. M. Zovkic and Dr. Z. Puljic (now 
bishop of Dubrovnik), went to visit Ivan in Visoko. They gave him a sheet of 
paper which was somewhat greenish in colour with questions typed out on it. Ivan 
wrote down the content of the "sign", dated the document and signed it in their 
presence without a word or any sign of fear. A few years later, Father Laurentin 
wrote that Ivan told him personally that he wrote absolutely nothing down on that 
sheet of paper and that he tricked the two members of the commission. On 7 
March 1985, three members of the commission went to ask Ivan if what Laurentin 
writes is true. Ivan said it was true, and that they could freely go ahead and open 
the envelope in the chancery office because in it they will only find a white sheet 
of paper. They came back to Mostar where the commission was having a meeting 
and before all the members, they opened the envelope. In the envelope on a 
greenish sheet of paper they found written the content of the sign: 


Our Lady said that she would leave a sign. The content of this sign I reveal 
to your trust. The sign is that there will be a great shrine in Medjugorje in honour 
of my apparitions, a shrine to my image. When will this occur? The sign will 
occur in June. 


Dated: 9 May 1982. Seer: Ivan Dragicevic. 


After having heard this lie, the members of the first Commission wanted to 
end all further work, yet they stayed on. Within a few days of this event Father 
Slavko Barbaric OFM, took the "seers" somewhere and instructed them all, 
including Ivan, to write a declaration that Ivan did not disclose the sign! 

Ivan sent messages from Our Lady to the bishop. On 24 April 1984 Our Lady 
said the following regarding the bishop: 


“My son Jesus is praying for him so that he (the bishop) would believe and 
therefore take better action in favour of Medjugorje." She added: "How would 
he react if my Son were to appear on earth? Would he then believe?" 


55 



Regarding the commission, Our Lady says only the following: "Pray, pray, 
pray! Think over and live the messages I have given and you will see why I have 
come." 


Ivan Dragicevic, 
Medjugorje. 


17. According to Ivan: 


Tell the bishop that I seek a quick conversion from him towards the 
happenings in Medjugorje before it is too late. May he accept these events with 
plenty of love, understanding and great responsibility. I want him to avoid 
creating conflicts between priests and to stop publicising their negative 
behaviour. The Holy Father has given all bishops the duty to fulfil certain tasks in 
their respective dioceses. Among these, the parishes in Herzegovina. For this 
reason I seek his conversion towards these events. I am sending my second-last 
warning. If what I seek does not come about, my judgement and the judgement of 
my Son await the bishop. This means that he has not found the way to my Son 
Jesus." Our Lady told me to give you this message. 


With greetings 


Bijakovici, 21 June 1983 


Father Tomislav Vlasic brought this document to me, which he more than 
likely wrote himself in a moment of exaltation. 


18. Ivan kept his own diary of the apparitions for a couple of years. This 
has not been made public as Vicka's has not, nor the writings of the others. These 
are original fonts of the events, yet they are full of naive statements, clear 
falsehoods and absurdities. They are good proof of the fact that the "seers" do not 
see Our Lady or receive messages from her. These messages were written by 
someone else and they were given to Ivan for him to sign as his own. When Father 
Grafenauer brought excerpts from Vicka's diary to me I later asked Vicka to bring 
her diary to me. She wrote to me on 7 May 1983: "I have found out that excerpts 
from my diary are being distributed ..." This was a very important point which 
the commission accepted as good argument that the diary was written by Vicka 


56 



herself or that she considered it her own. Later on, Father T. Vlasic also came to 
this conclusion, and therefore in 1984, he declared before the Commission and 
myself, that Vicka did not write that letter to me but rather that a Franciscan did 
(probably Vlasic himself) and that he gave it to her to sign! There are many 
similar examples of manipulation, but none have such clear cut evidence as this. 


19. Secrets and secrecy. From the beginning of the "apparitions", in order to 
evade the detection of discrepancies in their accounts, the "seers" have obviously 
been instructed to claim that "Our Lady" speaks differently to each of them. When 
the "secrets" were fabricated, each was to have his/her own (60 in total) and no 
one was to reveal them to anyone. Mirjana and Ivanka received a letter from Our 
Lady which nobody was to read. In the beginning there were no moments of 
ecstasy nor avoiding the community. They admitted that they were consulted, 
they asked "Our Lady" if they could write down the content of the "great sign" on 
paper and seal it in an envelope. "Our Lady" responded: "No!" Ivan though, 
wrote down the sign and later on he said (which has been taped as well) that "Our 
Lady" did not scold him for doing this. The secrets were to be given to a priest (a 
Franciscan). Why were they not given to the commission, the bishop, or to the 
Pope? In the first months they often said that the "great sign" would come: very 
soon, quickly, and so . . . When the first year ended, they changed their tone. 
Vicka wrote "Our Lady's life," for a year and a half, and this is a great secret 
which shall be published "when Our Lady permits." The commission asked for 
this diary about Our Lady, yet "Our Lady" did not comply with their demand. Can 
the commission just see the diary without taking it or opening it? No, it cannot! 
This turns out to be a plot to make fools out of all those who are naive enough to 
wait for this sign until the end of the world. I have already declared earlier, and 
now I repeat the same declaration, that if Our Lady leaves a sign which the "seers" 
are speaking of, I’ll make a pilgrimage from Mostar to Medjugorje (30 km) on my 
knees and beg the Franciscans and the "seers" for forgiveness. 

20. Slander against the bishop. "The bishop also believed in the 
beginning." This is not true! While the communists were persecuting the 
Franciscans, the "seers" and pilgrims, I defended all of them and therefore I did 
not change my mind "because of threats by the Republic commission or because 
the diocesan priests sought this from me." This is simply fabricated slander by 
many. While I was publicly defending the imprisoned Franciscans, Father Jozo 
Zovko said during the investigations that the bishop is a "wolf" and a "hypocrite". 
These are the exact words written down in his sentence. Zovko's lawyer, N.N. 
asked through a colleague what I had done to Zovko to deserve such heavy 


57 



accusations. Father T. Vlasic often put "Our Lady's" words into the mouths of the 
"seers", such as "Our Lady's" affirmation that Satan (in this case the bishop) is out 
to destroy her plan. He wrote this more clearly in a letter to friends in the Vatican. 
I complained about this accusation — that he had called the bishop Satan, in front 
of Vlasic and his Provincial. He did not deny my objection but rather, he justified 
his words by saying that he wrote this while under the influence of extreme 
emotion. A person can say something while under emotion, but this cannot be 
written down and translated into foreign languages. 

21. By their fruits. The most common argument of the defenders of 
Medjugorje is that the fruits of the events in Medjugorje prove that Our Lady is 
appearing there. Those who know a little more than the pilgrims who come to 
Medjugorje say: The fruits of the staunchest defenders of Medjugorje show that 
they themselves do not believe in the apparitions. If all the "ugly things" could be 
made public then surely the answer would be clearly negative to everyone. Yet 
Fathers Laurentin, Rupcic, Vlasic, Barbaric and others meticulously hide the 
truth. If the defenders of Medjugorje come across someone who is sceptical of the 
apparitions, they quickly isolate this person, accuse him of something or declare 
him mad (Jean Louis Martin). The majority of the pious public has naively fallen 
victim to the great propaganda, the talk of the apparitions and of healings. These 
people themselves have become the greatest propaganda for the events. They do 
not even stop to think that the truth has been hidden by deliberate falsehoods. 
They are unaware that not even one miraculous healing has occurred that could 
have been verified by competent experts and institutions such as the Bureau 
Medical de Lourdes No one knows of anyone healed from Herzegovina. 
Everyone knows that little Daniel, old Jozo Vasilj, Venka Brajcic and others cited 
in the first books about Medjugorje were not healed. 


22. Promises of healings are characteristic of the events. When they don't 
occur as promised, then they are denied because they were never taped or written 
down on paper. There have been many promises that have ended tragically. What 
interests us is whether or not "Our Lady" is giving these promises, or whether or 
not they are thought up by the "seers". The tragic end of Marko Blaze vie as 
described by the retired archbishop of Belgrade, Monsignor Turk, says much 
regarding "promises" of healing. The archbishop writes 22 May 1984, that he was 
received as a patient of the cardiology clinic at the Belgrade hospital. The 
archbishop was given the bed that was previously occupied by Marko Blazevic of 
Buna, near Mostar, who was to go in for an operation. Mr Blazevic told the 
archbishop and many other patients, doctors and hospital staff that Our Lady had 


58 



promised, through the "seers", that the operation would succeed. A nun who 
assisted in the operation, wrote to me later that Blazevic's wife and his daughter 
spoke to her with a fanatical type of faith in "Our Lady's promise." A certain 
doctor was also convinced in this promise. The patient did not wake up after the 
operation. During the operation, a group of patients prayed fervently outside the 
doors of the operating room. Many spoke of this incident which left many very 
disappointed and ashamed before people of other faiths and atheists. Father 
Vlasic, in his typical fashion of hiding the truth, succeeded in convincing the 
daughter of the late Mr. Blazevic to go to the bishop to tell him that Our Lady only 
told them to pray, not that she promised them that the operation would succeed. I 
told her not to make a liar out of her late father or liars of the others to whom he 
spoke. 

23. The Franciscan and diocesan clergy. The relations between the 
Franciscan and diocesan clergy regarding pastoral duties in the parishes of 
Herzegovina were established by a decision of the Holy See in 1899 by the 
suggestion of the Franciscans themselves and then Bishop Paskal Buconjic OFM. 
According to this decision the parishes were to be divided equally into two groups 
of 50% of the faithful (between the Franciscan and diocesan clergy). Since there 
were no diocesan clergy at the time, the parishes that rightfully belonged to them 
were, in 1923, left to the Franciscans ad nutum S. Sedes Bishop Cule, the first 
diocesan bishop of Mostar, in 1948 was sentenced to 1 1 years and 6 months in jail 
(by the communist regime). He served eight and a half years of this sentence 
before being released. After his jail term the number of diocesan clergy began to 
rise. In 1968, the Holy See ordered the Franciscans to hand over five parishes to 
the diocesan clergy. They barely gave two parishes. In 1975 after many years of 
talks and consultations a Decree of the Holy See was issued regarding the division 
of parishes in Herzegovina ( Romanis pontificibus of 6 June 1975). The 
Franciscans publicly and collectively denounced this decree even though they 
administer to over 80% of the faithful in the diocese of Mostar. In 1976, due to 
disobedience, the hierarchy of the Franciscan province, along with the provincial 
Sialic, lost their authority and since then, the province has been without its 
independence, and the General of the Order rules directly over the province ad 
instar. Another penalty was that in 1979, the Franciscans from Herzegovina were 
not allowed to participate in the election of the general. The first point mentioned 
by the new general of the order to his brothers in Herzegovina was: "The 
development or creation of obedience to, and cooperation with the bishop in 
Herzegovina." Disobedience prevails today as before, and "Our Lady" from the 
beginning has been defending disobedient Franciscans. Vicka writes in her diary 
of the apparitions, that Our Lady said that the bishop is to blame for all the 


59 



disorder in Herzegovina (see no. 109). This is repeated many times. The 
Franciscans themselves are divided. The Franciscan opposition that defends 
Medjugorje succeeded in toppling their own ad instar superiors who had 
developed good relations with the bishop, and they installed a group that defends 
Medjugorje. The new Provincial ad instar, Father Jozo Vasilj, did not succeed in 
creating peace and order amongst his brothers so he escaped to the missions in 
Zaire and will not come back! (Fruits?) He has been replaced by the 
vice-provincial and the general has called for obedience from all or else the 
province shall be abolished. "It is time that everyone take their own personal 
responsibility before judicial sanctions are made or the province is abolished." 
( Acta Ordinis F. M. fasc. 1/89). The province will not receive its own hierarchy 
until the decree {Romanis pontificibus ) is implemented. Three visitors of the 
OFM order who came to the province in 1988, said that there is not one 
Franciscan in the province who is in favour of complying with the decree. This 
opinion is exaggerated yet still important. 


24. This is only a portion of the "good fruits" of the events. The pilgrims, 
though, only know that the bishop "hates the Franciscans." There are a good 
number of Franciscans in the province who cooperate well with the bishop and 
these Franciscans do not believe in the apparitions either. Some of them have 
never set foot in Medjugorje. 

A number of good Franciscans have begged me to write something so that, 
together, we could start a battle against the lies of Medjugorje, because they 
believe that "God will punish us Franciscans severely because we have spread lies 
and falsehoods throughout the world and made money from them." 

Of the 100 diocesan priests in the dioceses of Herzegovina, not one believes 
in the apparitions. Of the 42 bishops of Yugoslavia (ordinaries, auxiliaries and 
retired), only one has been outspoken in declaring his belief and has defended the 
events. Of the 15 members of the first commission, which was formed by the 
bishop of Mostar with the help of the bishops and provincials from Yugoslavia, 
11 of the members said that there is nothing supernatural in the events of 
Medjugorje, two (Franciscans) claimed that the apparitions are authentic, one 
member said that there was something in nucleo (in the beginning) and one 
abstained. Contrary to what has been spread by the defenders of Medjugorje, the 
Holy See has never asked for, seen, or passed a judgement on the three-year work 
of the commission. Neither did the Holy See abandon the bishop. 

25. From the beginning of the events I warned the Franciscans that they 
must wait for the judgement of the Church, so that together we can search for the 

60 



truth. The leaders of the events though, had as their aim to bring the masses as 
soon as possible to Medjugorje, obtain a lot of money for propaganda and use Our 
Lady for their battle against the bishop. They fabricated miracles regarding the 
sun. Many pilgrims damaged their eyes from staring into the sun. They cited 50, 
150, 200 and 300 healings and they spoke of all sorts of things seeing that the 
faithful believed everything they said, especially when Archbishop F. Franic and 
Father Laurentin were there to back them up. The faithful in Medjugorje look 
upon the events as they are instructed, as is the case in all other places of 
apparitions be they true or false. The marvelling and excitement here has been 
regarded at times as leading to great blindness and fanaticism. 

26. The Italians know well the "story" of Gigliole Ebe Giorgini, the 
foundress of the false order of "Pia Opera di Gesu Misericordioso." Separated and 
remarried civilly, she spent time doing quackery. She gathered young women for 
her order and she received and earned great amounts of money. She had two 
priests in her service and many houses. She led a double life and had false 
stigmata which she made herself. Her "sisters" followed her fanatically and they 
called her Mamma Ebe. She had male vocations as well, but some who left her 
later on declared that she led an immoral life. She had many jewels and gold, two 
yachts, 32 furs, etc. Many in the Church objected to her way of life, while others 
fanatically defended her, citing good fruits. She even received praise from two 
bishops. Twice during the night police raided her room in the mother house and 
they found her in bed with one of her seminarians. A scandal broke out and she 
was sentenced twice to many years in prison along with a Franciscan who was her 
confessor. The press wrote for years about this scandal. An illicit film was made 
as well, yet her followers fanatically and blindly defended her even when the 
order fell apart. According to them, she was a saint who attracted many vocations 
and this was argument enough for many that from the "fruits" she was obviously 
inspired by God! Religious blindness is extremely hard to cure. Fanaticism 
brought the beginning of the heresies in the Church, today it is the foundation of 
sects. 

The Protestant pastor, Jim Jones, developed a great charitable organisation in 
southern Chicago and he gathered great sums of money and many fanatical 
followers of his sect. In order to be freer in their work, about 1 ,000 of them went 
to Guyana, South America where they established "Jonestown" as their new 
home. They established a dictatorship and fanatical obedience to their "Messiah". 
Much was written about terrible things that went on, about the immorality of 
Jones and how some tried to escape the community but were caught and killed. 
Then they were without money. Rumours spread that the American army would 
intervene, so Jones ordered them to retreat to the jungle. Seeing no way out, he 

61 



called on everyone to give up their lives in order to travel to eternity. Over 900 of 
them came with cups to a huge pot in order to drink poison and then fall dead. 
What gave them the strength to commit suicide? Fanaticism! Yet when the 
Christian faithful hear of apparitions and miracles they easily accept these events 
as facts without being at all critical of the events. They are then caught up in their 
blindness and fanaticism. Whatever is spoken is believed automatically, such as 
the claim that ordinary rosaries in Medjugorje turn to gold! And people actually 
believe this ! 


27. This blindness towards the events in Medjugorje has also caught some 
priests and bishops. Many priests from Italy, (such as Amorth, Restrelli and 
others), easily could have heard that the bishop, the Commission, the bishops of 
Yugoslavia, a portion of the Franciscans and all the diocesan priests do not 
believe in the events. Yet, they avoided the truth, even though I received everyone 
who inquired about the events and gave them my time. I'm particularly surprised 
at the lack of collegiality by some bishops. Nobody has to accept my judgement, 
but everyone is obligated by conscience to study well the events of Medjugorje 
before taking a position, especially if that person has a position of authority in the 
Church, as bishops do. 

What have they done to you Our Lady! For nine years they have been 
dragging you along as a tourist attraction. They have been speaking with you 
whenever it pleased them, as if you were a bank teller. They have fabricated 
messages, and they say that you come and appear there, but beyond their own 
arguments they have nothing to prove that what they say is true. The whole world 
is in expectation of a "great sign" and the naive still wait and believe. 
Unfortunately this false sensation will bring great disgrace and scandal upon the 
Church. Those who lead the events are not converting even though the threat of 
the abolition of the province by the general hangs over them. 

This is only a small compilation of that which I would like to write about. I 
hope that I will have the opportunity to expand further, with precise 
documentation and publish a book on these events. 


28. There are many prayers and pious activities in Medjugorje. Some say 
that there have been conversions as well. I have received indeed many truly 
touching letters, and I feel sorry for those who will sooner or later be 
disappointed. But there has also been fanaticism, superstition and misinformation 
in the events of Medjugorje. I have also received many rude accusations in the 
mail which I cannot mention, all in the name of the "Queen of Peace". That which 
is positive in these events cannot justify the falsehoods and lies that have been 

62 



spread in order to win the world over for God. Jesus said: "I have come into the 
world to give witness to the truth" (Jn 18:37). The Church would easily be able to 
attract the masses if it dropped the sixth commandment, if divorce were allowed, 
if it let everyone believe and do what they wanted. But, Jesus died on the Cross 
for the truth, and the martyrs gave up their lives for the truth. St. Paul writes to his 
faithful: "If anyone preaches to you a gospel besides that which you have 
received, let him be anathema" (Gal. 1 :9). Today, many prayer groups all over the 
world pray from Father Ivica Vego's prayer book and meditate over the supposed 
messages of Our Lady as if these things were more important than the Bible and 
the teaching magisterium of the Church. I do believe, despite these events, that 
Our Lady shall beg the necessary graces for the Church in order for it to live 
Christ's truth. 

I know that there will probably be many sincerely pious souls that will 
misunderstand me and consider me an enemy of Our Lady. I have been to Lourdes 
many times and to other shrines of apparitions that the Church has recognised. 
What I am doing is defending the truth, defending the Church, and I pray to God 
that I be able to give up my life for this. 


29. Those who have written about Medjugorje have sold their books well 
and have made great profits. Unfortunately, those who have written critically, 
have not fared as well because they have come across an organised boycott. For 
the other side of the story, people should read: 


Sivric, Dr. Ivo, OFM. (A Franciscan bom in Medjugorje and now living in 
St. Louis, MO, USA), The Hidden Side of Medjugorje ( Editions Psilog, 1989, CP 
300, Saint-Frangois-du-Lac, Quebec, Canada, JOC 1M0. Tel. (514) 568-3036. 


Gramaglia, P.A. L'Equivoco di Medjugorje, Apparizioni Mariane o 
Fenomeni di Medianita? Claudiana, Toronto, Canada, 1987, pp. 172. 


Jones, E. Michael., Medjugorje: The Untold Story (Fidelity Press, 206 
Marquette Avenue, South Bend, IN, 1994, pp. 144.) 


Pavao Zanic, 
Bishop of Mostar 


63 



13 June 1990 

The Irish Bishops’ Conference Statement 


The Irish Bishops' Conference issued a five point statement on the subject of 
Medjugorje. Point fours stated "Until the Church gives its decision no one is 
entitled, on behalf of the Church, to presume a favourable judgement regarding 
the apparitions in Medjugorje. That is why the Church does not approve 
pilgrimages and other manifestations organised on the presumption that a 
supernatural character can be attributed to the facts of Medjugorje." 


1991 

Alleged Miracles at Medjugorje 


Monsignor Zanic has been cited as denying that even one miraculous healing 
has taken place at Medjugorje that would be accepted as authentic by such an 
institute as the Bureau Medical de Lourdes, which, indeed, passed a negative 
verdict on 56 dossiers sent to it from Medjugorje. Despite this claims of 400 or 
more miraculous healings are cited in Medjugorje propaganda. In the 1991 
Australian Television documentary, Terry Willesee, a well known Australian 
reporter, went to considerable trouble to find evidence to confirm the authenticity 
of even one of these cures. When pressed, Father Slavko Barbaric, OFM, who has 
been actively involved with the Medjugorje events since the early years, admitted 
that only ten of the alleged 400 cures years had been thoroughly checked, and 
what he meant by thoroughly checked is far different from what the Bureau 
Medical de Lourdes would mean. The reporter was told of a woman who had 
been cured instantaneously of cancer, but when he asked for proof none was 
forthcoming. He was offered the chance to meet a cripple, a native of 
Medjugorje, who had been miraculously cured and could now walk. He went to 
the man's home to record the miracle on film to find that he could not even stand 
up. He had, however, a little movement in his left leg. There is, ample evidence 
of promised cures that did not materialize. In 1981 a child from Grude suffering 
from leukaemia was promised an unconditional and certain cure, but died before 


64 



the end of the year In 1983 the doctor of a young girl suffering from cancer 
advised an operation and the removal of her breast. She consulted the "seers" at 
Medjugorje who spoke to the Virgin who replied that there was no need for an 
operation. The girl died on 24 December that year after agonizing pain. 

Miracles of the sun are an every day occurrence at Medjugorje. Many of the 
pilgrims stare at the sun convinced that it is not harming their vision. It is hardly 
surprising that the sun appears to spin or pulsate. Terry Willesee wished to film a 
solar phenomenon which he was assured was taking place. When the film was 
played back the sun appeared to be pulsating. His hopes of having filmed a 
miracle were dashed when his cameraman told him that this was simply a reaction 
of the iris of the camera. I have heard the personal testimony of someone who was 
present when a lady began screaming at the top of her voice: "A miracle! A 
miracle!" The miracle consisted of the fact that she could see an image of the 
Host on the back of a man in front of her who was wearing a black leather jacket. 
This, of course, is exactly what would happen to anyone who stares at a bright 
light and then looks at something black. 

The most widely cited Medjugorje "miracle" is that of rosaries turning to 
gold. There is not a single documented case of any rosary turning to gold there. 
What has happened is that in some cases silver coloured links on rosaries have 
changed to a goldish colour. This has happened at the sites of other alleged 
apparitions such as Bayside in New York. The official explanation is that this is a 
miracle performed by Our Lady, but those with real love for the Mother of God 
know that she would not engage in such cheap conjuring tricks. An obvious 
explanation is that this could be the work of the Satan seeking to delude faithful 
Catholics into putting their faith in spurious apparitions. 


The Medjugorje Industry 


In a letter to Father Hugh Thwaites, dated 17 August 1987, which has already 
been cited, Monsignor Zanic stated bluntly that the alleged apparitions are “the 
fruit of a fabrication, fraud, and disobedience to the Church. It is about big money 
and personal interest too." When he wrote this letter in 1987 the good bishop can 
scarcely have imagined the extent to which what can only be described as the 
Medjugorje industry would expand by 1993. The 1991 Australian documentary 
on Medjugorje showed the great material prosperity the "apparitions" have 
brought to what was a previously impoverished area which most of the men had to 


65 



leave to find employment. Everyone in the area is now employed and many have 
become immensely wealthy by the standards of Herzegovina. Everyone with a 
spare room lets it out to pilgrims and in many cases houses have been expanded 
by knocking down external walls to provide more rooms to let. Medjugorje is now 
crammed with souvenir shops, restaurants, and pizza parlours. If any of the 
"seers" were ever to admit that the whole story has been a fraud from the 
beginning they would almost certainly be lynched by their families, friends, and 
neighbours who have made a fortune from the "apparitions". Monsignor Zanic 
has no doubt that "the greatest motivator of all — money — is what inspires the 
"seers" and their manipulators, but it seems probable that more money is being 
made from Medjugorje in other countries than in Herzegovina itself. It must now 
be considered primarily as a multi-million dollar business operation, particularly 
in the United States. The amount of money made by travel operators would be 
impossible to calculate, and many of the so-called Medjugorje centres are, in 
reality, quasi travel agencies. 

An insight into the extent to which financial gain predominates in 
Medjugorje is made clear in an article by the sociologist Max Bax in the June 
1993 issue of Amsterdams Sociologisch Tidschrift It concerned what could be 
described fairly as a dirty little war between different Catholic families engaged 
in the pilgrimage industry in Medjugorje. One family had reached the stage of 
almost exercising a monopoly in this industry, and two other families decided to 
change this situation. Open war broke out. Of the 3,000 inhabitants of 
Medjugorje 140 were killed, 60 disappeared, and 600 fled the village and found 
their homes destroyed when they returned The two formerly less successful now 
operate the pilgrimage and tourist industry within Medjugorje. It should be 
realized that within this context the word “clan” would be more accurate than 
“family”, as extended families in Herzegovina can number dozens or even 
hundreds. This has all been concealed from the outside world as it does not 
correspond to the image of a community dedicated to the Queen of Peace. 


May-June 1993 
Sacrificial Giving 


Documentation has already been provided on the manner in which a certain 
Terry Colafrancesco paid for Marija Pavlovic to bring her brother to Birmingham, 
Alabama for a kidney transplant in 1989, and in return asked for an apparition on 

66 



land he had purchased, which immediately became a lucrative pilgrimage centre. 
In 1986 he had founded an organisation named Caritas to promote the 
Medjugorje messages. 

Colafrancesco's organisation Caritas has expanded considerably, and in 
1993 he was appealing for more than one and a half million dollars to build a 
"Medjugorje Tabernacle". On page 15 of his May-June 1993 Newsletter, which 
has a circulation of 150,000, he described the proposed tabernacle as follows: 


The "Tabernacle of Our Lady's Messages" is a 32,000 square-foot building 
that will house the six different ministries at Caritas It will have three floors, all 
dedicated 100 percent to Our Lady of Medjugorje. Through this tabernacle will 
flow the messages of Our Lady through the printing, producing and shipping of 
newsletters, tapes, booklets, textbooks, flyers, researching the messages and 
researching history, etc., all over the United States as well as into sixty-five 
foreign countries. 


In order to build his tabernacle Mr. Colafrancesco would like $1,600,000. He 
requests his readers to "pray to the Holy Spirit" before reading his fund-raising 
appeal, which bears an uncanny, or perhaps not so uncanny, resemblance to 
techniques employed by Protestant TV evangelists who spread a gospel 
composed almost entirely of admonitions to make sacrificial donations. Mr. 
Colafrancesco warned his readers that the building of the tabernacle would be "in 
jeopardy" unless many of them were moved to help. Those who might be in doubt 
about donating are told to pray to Our Lady as he has heard from many people 
who "after prayer felt Our Lady urging them to do so." Satan, he warns us, would 
do anything to persuade Catholics not to donate to the tabernacle. "We know 
times are difficult for many of you, but they are going to get more difficult and 
Our Lady's plan is what will reverse that in the long run. We are at a point in 
construction where decisions have to be made to proceed to the next steps and we 
need your response immediately. The people of this nation and the world need the 
security of Our Lady, not savings." 

The alleged tens of thousands of messages of Our Lady which are to be 
housed in Mr. Colafrancesco's tabernacle are almost invariably truisms of such 
utter banality that any ten-year- old could compose them: 


Dear children. Today I invite you to live in humility all the messages which 
I am giving you. Do not become arrogant living the messages and saying, "I am 
living the messages." If you shall bear and live the messages in your heart, 
everyone will feel it so that words, which serve those who do not obey, will not 
be necessary. For you, dear children, it is necessary to live and witness by your 


67 



lives. Thank you for having responded to my call. 


Dear children. Thank you for dedicating all your hard work to God even 
now when He is testing you through the grapes you are picking. Be assured dear 
children, that He loves you and therefore He tests you. You just always offer up 
all your burdens to God and do not be anxious. Thank you for having responded 
to my call. 


Can one seriously imagine the Mother of God appearing on earth four to six 
times a day if she has nothing more profound than this to say? 


Celestial Book Reviews 


Mr. Colafrancesco sells the first two volumes of the Poem of the Man God at 
$35.00 dollars each. It would appear that sales had been adversely affected by 
Cardinal Ratzinger's admonition that the book should not be read, and he 
therefore consulted Marija Pavlovic whom he describes as "a close personal 
friend” Miss Pavlovic demonstrated her friendship yet again with a promptness 
equal to that she had displayed in arranging the Thanksgiving Day apparition for 
her benefactor. She used her direct line to heaven to consult Our Lady concerning 
the book, and was assured that we are free to read it. I understand that Our Lady’s 
actual words were: "It makes for good reading." Mr. Colafrancesco assures us that 
there is "no question that she spoke to Our Lady". Conclusive proof has already 
been provided to prove that Pavlovic is a self-confessed liar (see 1 1 July 1988). 


"Remarkable Things" and "Miracles" 


Mr. Colafrancesco claims that Our Lady speaks directly to his Caritas 
community through her daily messages. Each morning they read a randomly 
chosen message which results in "remarkable things". The following "remarkable 
thing" concerned a retreat for children in "the Field" (note the upper case "F"): 


An area Catholic grade school had planned a retreat day at Caritas and the 
Field (the site of Our Lady's apparition to visionary Marija Pavlovic in 
November 1988). Several hundred children from kindergarten through the eighth 
grade joined the Caritas community and staff for our daily rosary as well as 
assisting at a Mass they had planned for the Field. That day at morning prayer, 
before the students arrived, we opened up the following message: 29 April 1983 


68 



- Concerning a group of young people as they leave for their pilgrimage: "I wish 
that you pray throughout your trip and that you glorify God. There you will be 
able to meet other young people. Convey the messages which I have given you. 
Do not hesitate to speak to them about it." 


Not only does the Caritas community experience "remarkable things": but 
cites what it claims are "miracles" at Medjugorje. An account of a "Eucharistic 
Miracle" appeared in the May- June 1993 Newsletter. A non-Catholic lady 
accompanied a Caritas pilgrimage from Birmingham to Medjugorje. Pilgrimages 
to Medjugorje have, of course, been forbidden by the bishop, the lawful authority 
in the diocese, and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and so every 
organised pilgrimage there constitutes an act of disobedience to lawful authority. 
This Protestant lady was annoyed that she could not receive Holy Communion. 
Non-Catholics are permitted to receive Catholic Holy Communion only on very 
rare occasions with specific permission after a number of stringent conditions 
have been fulfilled. But, it would appear, Our Lady was more concerned at the 
displeasure of the Protestant than with adherence to the law of the Church, and so 
she arranged for the lady to receive Communion in circumstances which Mr. 
Colafrancesco describes as miraculous: 


When distribution for Communion came, the first priest off the altar came 
toward the group leader. He and the others around him expected to be given the 
Eucharist, but instead the priest walked through the crowd which opened up. The 
leader, as well as the group, watched stunned as everyone was passed by while 
the priest walked directly to the spot where the woman was sitting in the pew He 
held up the Eucharist for her to receive. The leader and the group and she herself 
stared in disbelief at what they were seeing. Though it was but a moment, it 
seemed the hesitation lasted for minutes. While she sat there and Jesus in the 
Eucharist was held up before her, she hesitated at first, not being sure, then 
wilfully (sic) received Him. Everyone around her who was not weeping were 
(sic) fighting back their (sic) tears because all knew the priest could not have 
seen her until he was before her, much less known that she was not a Catholic. 
Only a few months later, the pilgrim who did not want to become a Catholic, 
received the Holy Eucharist a second time — as a new Catholic. 


1993 

Millions are Deluded 


69 



What is most alarming about the Medjugorje phenomenon is the number of 
Catholics who have been deluded into believing it. It would be a serious matter if 
a few thousand or even a few hundred Catholics were wasting their time and their 
money, and giving their credence and their cash to a fraud that detracts from the 
dignity of Our Lady, presenting her as possibly the most garrulous woman in 
history. But millions of people have now visited Medjugorje and are supporting 
the ever-expanding Medjugorje industry. Every month Twin Circle and the 
National Catholic Register publish what amounts to a Medjugorje colour 
supplement with a monthly message such as the following for August 1993: 


Dear children, I want you to understand that I am your Mother, that I want 
to help you and call you to prayer. Only by prayer can you understand and accept 
my messages and practice them in your life. Read Sacred Scripture, live it and 
pray to understand the signs of the time. This is a special time, therefore I am 
with you to draw you close to my heart and the heart of my Son, Jesus. Dear little 
children, I want you to be the children of the light and not of the darkness. 
Therefore, live what I am telling you. Thank you for having responded to my call. 


These supplements list no less than 177 Medjugorje Centres throughout the 
U.S.A. which include, of course, Caritas of Birmingham together with 
Medjugorje Information centres, Peace centres, Resource centres, Message 
centres, Ventures, centres for Love, centres for Peace (many of these), 
Messengers of Peace, Queen of Peace, Hearts for Peace, Pilgrims for Peace Video 
Ministry, Mary's Touch by Mail, Friends, Coalitions, and Book Centres. There is 
no little irony in the fact that the area in Bosnia where Our Lady is alleged to have 
appeared with the title of "Queen of Peace" was a centre of one of the most 
vicious wars of this century, of which she gave not the least warning in tens of 
thousands of messages. 

There are now many Medjugorje newsletters serving the needs of the 
industry, including the Medjugorje News which is circulated throughout Canada. 
It reports in its issue Number 5 in 1993 that 20,000 people came to hear the "seer" 
Ivan Dragicevic when he came to Marmora in Ontario, where Our Lady is also 
alleged to appear to children and adults of various ethnic backgrounds, including 
a member of the Macedonian Orthodox Church. It is claimed that angels and 
deceased members of families appear there and converse! The literature which 
circulates among Medjugorje devotees lists literally hundreds of apparitions of 
Our Lady allegedly taking place throughout the world, including 25 in Ireland 
alone. News of every new apparition is greeted with uncritical enthusiasm by 
many thousands of devotees. One can only say that whatever all this represents it 
is not Catholicism. 


70 



The appearance of Ivan Dragicevic in Ontario indicated the policy of the 
Medjugorje "seers", during the war in Bosnia. Gullible Catholics could not bring 
their cash to Medjugorje, and so the "seers" left Medjugorje to collect the cash 
from them, and are still doing so. One can refer with complete accuracy to a 
Medjugorje "road-show". It has even reached Kent, the county in England where I 
live. The Autumn 1993 issue of The Children of Medjugorje (published in 
Scotland) recounts the appearance of Ivan Dragicevic at "The Medjugorje 
Ecumenical Day of Prayer" on 28 August 1993 at the Carmelite Priory at 
Aylesford in Kent. The people came expecting an apparition, and: 


The Mother of Jesus appeared (on 28 August) in "an indescribable light, 
wearing a grey dress with a white veil over her dark hair", according to the 
visionary, 27 year old Ivan Dragicevic. Her eyes are blue and she has rosy 
cheeks, he told the gathering of 5,000 Christians . . Ivan said that Mary "was 
joyful and prayed over all of us with outstretched hands. She blessed us all." 


He added that, "She then prayed for peace in a special way for a long time." 
The Virgin gave no special message having given one for the world only three 
days before in Medjugorje. She simply said "Go in peace, my dear children", 
before departing in the light of a shining cross. Ivan's script could well have been 
written by Walt Disney! The report was accompanied by a picture of Ivan wearing 
what appear to be pyjamas, and kneeling by a radiator looking extremely pious. 

A similar event took place at Aylesford in August 1996 and an enthusiastic 
report in the 8 September Universe (which derives considerable revenue from 
Medjugorje advertising) stated that 7000 gathered there to hear Father Slavko 
Barbaric and, of course, Ivan Dragicevic. Seventy-five Catholic clergy were 
present and in keeping with the ecumenical ethos of the messages, thirty 
Protestant ministers. Once again the people came expecting a "miraculous 
apparition" and, as always, Ivan had no problem in providing it: 


As dusk fell, the Blessed Mother appeared to Ivan and afterwards Ivan told 
those assembled that the Mother of God had appeared to him joyful (sic): she had 
brought a private message to Ivan and afterwards she had extended her hands and 
prayed over the crowd for a long period of time. Ivan said that he had asked the 
Blessed Mother to pray and intercede for everybody. The Blessed Mother prayed 
then left in a brilliant light. After the final blessing everyone left in a joyful 
mood. 


In view of the large collection which had been taken up Ivan must have been 


71 



in a particularly joyful mood. 


24 July 1993 
A New Bishop of Mostar 


Monsignor Zanic resigned as bishop of Mostar in 1993 and was replaced by 
Monsignor Ratko Peric, his coadjutor bishop, on 24 July 1993. Monsignor Peric 
had spent ten years in Rome as rector of the Pontifical Croatian College, and was 
consecrated as coadjutor bishop on 14 September 1992. Rumours have been 
circulated that Monsignor Zanic was forced to resign by the Pope who did not 
approve of his intransigent opposition to the veracity of the Medjugorje 
apparitions. "The bishop of Mostar, Monsignor Zanic, was removed from his post 
and removed from the commission of enquiry and totally discredited." These 
claims constitute the type of malicious and totally unsubstantiated calumnies 
which we have come to expect from the Medjugorje industry. Where there is 
money to be made basic standards of decency can quickly be forgotten. The truth 
is that Monsignor Zanic, who was born on 20 May 1918, offered his resignation 
in 1993 after reaching the statutory age of retirement, and was replaced by 
Monsignor Peric who is just as opposed to the authenticity of the alleged 
apparitions as was his predecessor. On 5 February 1996, during a private 
audience with Cardinal Ratzinger, I mentioned the claim that Monsignor Zanic 
had been "removed from his post". His Eminence was visibly shocked that such a 
disgraceful allegation could have been made, and he assured me that the bishop 
had resigned not simply because he had reached the statutory age, but because he 
was very tired. In addition to the stress caused by the Medjugorje scandal, the war 
in Bosnia had caused him great hardship. Monsignor Zanic's residence was 
destroyed and for a time he had been forced to leave his diocese. 

Monsignor Peric is, if anything, more adamant concerning the falsity of the 
alleged apparitions than was Monsignor Zanic. In the October 1993 issue of his 
diocesan journal Crkva n Kamenu (The Church on the Rock), Monsignor Peric 
directed an open letter to St. Francis of Assisi in which he complains to the saint 
that his spiritual sons, the Bosnian Franciscans, are disobedient. The same issue 
contains a long interview with the new bishop in which he makes it clear that he 
believes the alleged apparitions to be devoid of any credibility. A partial 
translation of the interview appeared in the February 1994 issue of Fidelity 
Monsignor Peric testified that his predecessor had been open to the veracity of the 

72 



apparitions in the beginning. He pointed out that Monsignor Zanic would 
evidently have been predisposed to believe in the alleged apparitions. He 
continued: 


What bishop wouldn't be delighted that the Virgin Mary should be 
appearing in his diocese? Especially Monsignor Zanic, a very Marian bishop, 
who as a priest and later as a bishop made eleven pilgrimages to various Marian 
shrines all over Europe: Lourdes, Fatima, Syracuse, etc. And then for the Gospa 
(Our Lady) to have mercy on him and begin to "appear" in his own backyard as if 
to bring an end to all his wanderings all over Europe. 

But after a few months, when he heard the small fibs and large lies, 
insincerities, inexactitudes, and all sorts of fabricated stories from those who 
claimed that the Gospa was appearing to them, he became totally convinced that 
it was not a matter of supernatural apparitions of the Gospa. Then he started to 
bring out the truth and to expose the falsehoods. The greatest satisfaction of his 
ten years of hard work was when the bishops of Yugoslavia at their spring 
meeting at Zadar on 10 April 1991, dutifully declared: "On the basis of studies 
conducted so far it cannot be affirmed that supernatural apparitions and 
revelations are occurring." This is an exceptionally clear ecclesiastical ruling , 
and is a rebuttal of the claims of all those who claim to have seen the Gospa 
everywhere and at any time since 1981. (My emphasis). 


The verdict of the bishops' conference is for me an authoritative 
instruction, responsive and binding unless another kind of verdict is 
brought. But until now there has been no other (ecclesiastical) 

judgement If, after serious, solid, and professional investigation, 

our bishops' conference had the courage to declare that Medjugorje's 
apparitions are not supernatural, in spite of massive stories and 
convictions to the contrary, then that is a sign that the Church, even 
in the 20th century "upholds the truth and keeps it safe" (ITim. 
3:15). I affirm this unequivocally. 

In 1995 Monsignor Peric published a book, The Throne of 
Wisdom, which contains an important chapter entitled "Criteria for 
Discerning Apparitions", which is appended here as Appendix I. It is 
an invaluable source of reference not simply where Medjugorje is 
concerned, but as a means of exposing the falsity of the hundreds of 
spurious apparitions proliferating throughout the world. The bishop 
cites a series of criteria put forward by Professor R. Fisichella of the 
Gregorian University in Rome. Professor Fisichella makes the 
important point that: 


73 



One must also recall that apparitions are always something "extraordinary", 
rare, and this is an important element for their discernment. If apparitions were to 
occur on a daily basis in the life of a believer, or if they were to continue for 
years, this would obviously create serious problems for the theology of faith. 


Monsignor Peric cites a series of positions made public by the Diocesan 
Chancery, which have been conveyed to the Holy See, and which are still 
maintained today. On the so-called fruits he states: 


The fruits which are so often mentioned, are not proof that they result from 
"supernatural apparitions or revelations" of the Madonna, but insomuch as they 
are authentically Christian, they can be understood as a product of the regular 
workings of the grace of God, through faith in God and the intercession of Mary 
the Mother of Christ, and through the Holy Sacraments present in the Catholic 
Church. Not to mention anything at all about the negative fruits. 


Monsignor Peric warns that: 


In some of the statements made by the so-called seers of Medjugorje 
published in the last 14 years, there are such contradictions, falsehoods and 
banalities, which cannot be attributed at all to our heavenly Mother Secies 
Sapientiae — Seat of Wisdom, since there does not exist even a minimal 
guarantee of credibility. On the basis of such statements and the events tied to the 
statements: it cannot be affirmed that these matters concern "supernatural 
apparitions or revelations", of the Madonna or others. The talk of a "great sign", 
of "ten secrets", which Our Lady conveyed to the children, resembles the scare 
tactics which are typical of non-Catholic communities and not the sound 
teachings of the Catholic Church. 


The bishop made clear in this 1995 statement that Medjugorje is not a 
Catholic shrine, and that pilgrimages there are forbidden: 


Neither the diocesan bishop as the head of the local diocese of 
Mostar-Duvno, nor any other competent authority has ever officially declared the 
parish church of St. James the Apostle in Medjugorje as a "Marian shrine" and no 
"cult" of the Madonna based upon so-called apparitions has ever been 
proclaimed. Due to these discrepancies, the local bishop has repeatedly 
forbidden anyone from preaching or speaking in churches on the supernatural 
nature of these so-called "apparitions and revelations", and he has asked that no 
official pilgrimages be organized, be they at the level of parishes, dioceses or 
generally in the name of the Church. These and similar warnings were made by 


74 



our former bishops' conference and the Holy See. Whoever acts to the contrary, 
is directly going against the official statements of the Church, which even after 
14 years of so-called apparitions and widespread propaganda, still remains valid 
in the Church. 


October 1993 

An Interview with the Bishop of Mostar (Excerpts) 


In October 1993, an inten’iew with Msgr. Ratko Peric, Bishop of Mostar and successor to the 
recently-retired Pavao Zanic was published in Crkva na Kamenu ("The Church on 
the Rock”), the newspaper of the Diocese of Mostar-Duvno. The conversation 
covered a variety of topics, including the reported apparitions at Medjugorje, 
and was conducted by Father Ante Tonca Komadina, STD, the paper's editor. 


Father Komadina: You have a parish in your diocese which is known all over 
the world, one in which the Blessed Virgin Mary is supposed to have been 
appearing for over 12 years. What is your opinion of the Medjugorje movement? 


Bp. Peric: Medjugorje was already "phenomenal" in the last century. Father 
Petar Bakula, OFM, noted in a book he wrote in 1867 that people were even 
then claiming to see a very strong and pinkish light in and around Medjugorje. 
So the "phenomenon of light" did not start to fascinate people for the first time 
in 1981. 1 have followed the happenings in Medjugorje carefully. I tried to be of 
help to Bishop Zanic as a secretary, when he used to come to Rome and to 
submit his reports all about the events to the Holy See. I maintain that Bishop 
Zanic took a wise stand in the context of such circumstances. In the beginning 
he was open to accepting the phenomenon... 


Fr. Komadina: Just recently a statement of Monsignor Zanic was misrepresented 
in the March 1993 issue of Glas Mira, as if the bishop had uttered it last night. 
Glas Mira ("The Voice of Peace"), a pro-Medjugorje Franciscan newspaper 
published in Medjugorje, quoted the following statement of Bishop Zanic: 
"Everything indicates that the children are not lying. However, the most difficult 
question remains: Did the visionaries have subjective, supernatural experiences." 
[Glas Mira not only implied that this statement had just been made by Bishop 

75 



Zanic, but also failed to mention that Monsignor Zanic had in fact said those 
words over 12 years earlier, during the first few months of the "apparitions".— Ed.] 

Bp. Peric: Perhaps misinformation is another of Medjugorje's phenomena. But 
let us go back to Bishop Zanic. The whole thing had so caught his interest that 
he became involved in questioning the visionaries himself and closely followed 
the happenings in Medjugorje. What bishop wouldn't be delighted that the 
Blessed Virgin Mary would be appearing in his diocese? Especially Msgr. 
Zanic, a very Marian bishop, who as a priest and later as a bishop made eleven 
pilgrimages to various Marian shrines all over Europe: Lourdes, Fatima, 
Syracuse, etc. And then for the Gospa to have mercy on him and begin to 
"appear" in his own backyard as if to bring an end to all his wanderings all over 
Europe. But after a few months, when he heard the small fibs and large lies, 
insincerities, inexactitudes, and all sorts of fabricated stories from those who 
claimed that the | Gospa was appearing to them, he became totally convinced 
that it was not a matter of supernatural apparitions of the Gospa Then he started 
to bring out the truth and to expose the falsehoods. The greatest satisfaction of 
his ten years of hard work was when the bishops of Yugoslavia at their spring 
meeting at Zadar on 10 April 1991, dutifully declared: "On the basis of studies it 
cannot be affirmed that supernatural apparitions and revelations are occurring." 
This is an exceptionally clear ecclesiastical ruling, and is a rebuttal of the claims 
of all those who claim to have seen the Gospa everywhere and at any time since 
the year of 1981. 

The verdict of the bishops' conference is for me an authoritative 
instruction, responsive, and binding unless another kind of verdict is brought. 
But until now there has been no other (ecclesiastical) judgment. In the same 
declaration the bishops said that a healthy devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary 
necessarily must be in accordance with the teachings of the Catholic Church and 
set about publishing proper liturgical-pastoral directives to that effect. 
(Monsignor Peric has repeated here almost exactly what he stated under the date 
24 July 1993.) The commission also promised to follow and investigate the 
happenings in Medjugorje. I know that the liturgical-pastoral committee met in 
Mostar in June 1991, but that no document was released. In the fall of 1991 the 
Serbian aggression began in the Croatian regions of Eastern Jlerzegovina, and 
in the spring of 1992 the Serbs attacked the entire region of 
Bosnia-flerzegovina. It has become impossible for the commission to meet 
anymore. 


76 



Fr. Komadina: Aren't you delighted by the fact that the world has finally heard of 
us Croatian Catholics, even if only through Medjugorje? 

Bp. Peric: I am delighted for each locality in the world wherever the 
grace of God is at work, as it was in the Acts of the Apostles when Barnabas was 
speaking of his visit to Antioch. But my "joy" with regard to Medjugorje is 
disturbed by several facts. For instance, there have been claims for over twelve 
years of daily "apparitions." If none of these several thousand “apparitions” 
have been recognized by the bishops as supernatural, then there is something 
very rebellious about the Medjugorje "phenomenon" which I cannot 
responsibly embrace in faith. 


Fr. Komadina: It is said that even promoters of Medjugorje maintain that 
everything would go up in smoke if the apparitions stopped. 

Bp. Peric: The official Church recognized only a few of the many 
reported apparitions at Lourdes, and 135 years later, it is still active. If someone 
in Medjugorje is forcing "apparitions," he is probably looking more for quantity 
than quality. 


Fr. Komadina: At present, allegedly, the Gospa is appearing every 25th of the 
month, and is giving the usual messages for fasting and penance. We read these 
messages in the secular newspapers. A few days ago (12 September 1993) we 
have read how one of the "visionaries" who used to transmit urgent messages of 
fasting and penance recently got married, of how she is planning to spend her 
honeymoon on Cote d'Azur [the Riviera] and of how she is going to live in a 
six- storey building in Monza, Italy! 


77 



Bp. Peric: The reports of monthly “apparitions” sound more like 
propaganda than responsible journalism. The Madonna does not deserve this 
kind of propaganda! Prayer, peace, fasting and penance are the core of the 
Christian message, and have been such since the very first appearance of Christ 
right up to the present. The Church ceaselessly preaches this message and tries 
to put it into practice. In this sense nothing new is contained in the Medjugorje 
messages. 


Fr. Komadina: What do you think about Medjugorje's "healings" and 
"miracles"? 

Bp. Peric: Notice that we do not hear so much about miracles today as 
we did earlier. I asked Father Ivan Landeka that he — as a pastor — give me a 
report on the present situation in Medjugorje, which he did in June of this year. 
It ran to six pages. He did not mention the "miracles" at all. Conversions are 
possible everywhere, and some are bound to happen in Medjugorje. But this is 
not proof that the "apparitions" are supernatural. 


Fr. Komadina: Finally, what is your stand on Medjugorje? 

Bp. Peric: The Church recommends prayer, fasting, penance, 
reconciliation, and conversion to each of its members. I do not want to forbid 
anyone to go wherever he wants to pray to God. But I cannot approve that from 
the altar of the church in Medjugorje the priests themselves advertise 
"pilgrimages to the place of apparitions," despite the fact that they have simply 
not been recognized as supernatural by the Church. If, after serious, solid, and 
professional investigation, our bishops' conference had the courage to declare 
that Medjugorje's “apparitions” are not supernatural, in spite of massive stories 
and convictions to the contrary, then that is a sign that the Church, even in the 
20th century, "upholds the truth and keeps it safe" (1 Tim. 3:15). I affirm this 
unequivocally, and I answer it publicly to all those who have written either 
anonymous or signed letters to me with contrary advice. 


78 



10-11 September 1994 
The Pope Visits Croatia 


Proponents of Medjugorje are constantly circulating statements favouring 
the apparitions allegedly made by the Holy Father in private conversations. If His 
Holiness has indeed made these statements, which seems highly improbable, they 
have no doctrinal status as they were made in private conversation, but if the Pope 
does believe in the apparitions it seems strange that as the successor to Monsignor 
Zanic he appointed Mpnsignor Radko Peric, who is, if anything, even more 
opposed to the authenticity of the apparitions than was his predecessor. Despite 
his appointment of Monsignor Peric, proponents of Medjugorje still attempt to 
present the Holy Father as a supporter of the alleged apparitions. It is stranger still 
that if, which God forbid, the Holy Father believed that the Mother of God had 
appeared at Medjugorje on thousands of occasions under the title "Queen of 
Peace", he did not once mention this when, on 10-1 1 September 1994, he visited 
Croatia on a mission of peace. Nor did he mention Medjugorje in any of the 
addresses he had prepared for his proposed visit to Sarajevo which was cancelled 
at short notice. This can be verified by reading these addresses in L'Osservatore 
Romano This was also the case during his visit to Sarajevo on 12-13 April 1997. 

A truly pathetic attempt was made to indicate that the Holy Father does 
indeed accept the authenticity of the apparitions. The Christmas 1994 edition of 
The Children of Medjugorje, published in Scotland, informs us that a group of 
Medjugorje adepts was present at one of the Pope's Masses in Croatia with a 
Medjugorje banner, and that: "This earned them a big blessing from the Pope to 
whom they were quite close." This is not simply a gratuitous but a ludicrous 
claim. I was able to watch the Holy Father's principal Mass in Croatia on TV, and 
when it was over he turned to bless each portion of the vast congregation as he 


79 



always does. It was thus inevitable that he would give a blessing in the direction 
of the Medjugorje banner, but there can be no possible basis for claiming that it 
was directed at that banner or that this particular papal blessing was a "big" one. 
As far as I know, but I am open to correction, papal blessings are not classed in 
such categories as enormous, very big, big, standard, small, and very small. 

The banner argument is typical of the means adopted by proponents of 
Medjugorje businesses to defend their indefensible claims. An incident is related 
in a glossy booklet entitled Medjugorje and the Church which is clearly intended 
to establish papal approval for the alleged apparitions beyond any possible doubt. 
A young lady named Maryjo was present at a papal audience with rosaries which 
"had been blessed by the Gospa during an apparition". A guard whom she asked 
to give them to the Pope refused, but: 

At the sound of the word "Medjugorje" the Pope turned around and a 
radiant smile lit up his face. "Medjugorje?" he asked. Then he came back slowly 
towards Maryjo. Tears filled his eyes as he delicately took the rosaries in his one 
free hand, and said in English: "Do everything you can to protect Medjugorje!" 


While moving away the Pope was seen by Maryjo to kiss the Gospa ' s 
rosaries and press them against his heart! (P.O. Box 1110, Notre Dame, Indiana 
46556, 1995, p. 30). It is very significant that although the Holy Father did not 
mention Medjugorje during his Croatian visit he did send special greeting to 
Msgr. Peric and the "totally discredited" Msgr. Zanic. 

Mention has already been made of the fact that if the Holy Father really 
believed in the authenticity of the apparitions he would, surely, not have 
appointed a new bishop who has stated publicly that they are devoid of 
authenticity. Nor, as has been alleged, was Msgr. Zanic removed from the 
Commission investigating the apparitions. The first investigation into the alleged 
apparitions was, as is normal in such cases, carried out by a diocesan commission 
appointed by him. Its verdict was that nothing supernatural was taking place at 
Medjugorje. In view of the worldwide publicity surrounding Medjugorje a 
second commission was appointed by the then Yugoslavian bishops' 
commission. The conclusions of this commission were made public in the name 
of the bishops’ conference on 10 April 1991. It was concluded with virtual 
unanimity that: 


The bishops have followed events at Medjugorje in contact with the local 
bishop, the local diocesan commission, and the special commission of the 
conference. On the basis of research it cannot be affirmed that the events are 


80 



supernatural apparitions or revelations. 


Previous editions of this book have been described by devotees of 
Medjugorje as “stale hearsay” That this statement is not simply "stale hearsay" 
was confirmed by the then Yugoslav Bishops' Conference on 10 April 1991. This 
was revealed by Msgr. Ratko Peric in a very important statement published in the 
9 November 1994 issue of L'Osservatore Romano (page 7): 


The official position of the episcopal conference, 10 April 1991, 
distinguishes the pastoral work of the Bishop and priests concerned from the 
content of the alleged "apparitions". The episcopal declaration states: "On the 
basis of investigations to date, it is impossible to confirm that we are here 
dealing with apparitions and supernatural revelations". The alleged apparitions 
create great confusion and division, and not only in the local Church. We are 
therefore waiting for the Holy See to exert its powers to restore and strengthen 
the unity of this particular Church. 


Further arguments used to refute earlier editions of my book were claims 
that the Pope had sent large autographed portraits of himself to each of the 
visionaries and that he had said: "If I could have my own way I would be a parish 
priest, and that in the church of St. James (Medjugorje)." These statements are 
completely false, as can be confirmed by writing to the Secretariat of State at the 
Vatican. Those who have done so in respect of similar fabrications emanating 
from the Medjugorje industry in recent years have been informed that there was 
no truth in them. No such allegation emanating from any branch of the 
Medjugorje industry should be given the least credence unless it can be backed up 
by a letter from the Vatican on Vatican stationery with a protocol number to 
provide verification. 

The 29 July 1990 issue of Mary's People, a National Catholic Register 
supplement on apparitions, quoted the Pope as saying: "Let the people go to 
Medjugorje if they convert, pray, confess, do penance." An enquiry regarding the 
same alleged comment had been made to the Vatican in 1988, and the reply 
received from the then apostolic pro-nuncio, Archbishop Pio Laghi, read: 


The statement you cite as a quotation from the Holy Father has never 
been published or officially verified. Although there have been made 
observations about Medjugorje attributed to the Holy Father or other officials of 
the Holy See, none of these have been acknowledged as authentic. 


On 28 July 1998 Cardinal Ratzinger wrote to a correspondent confirming 

81 



that statements attributed to the Pope and to him in favour of Medjugorje had 
been “freely invented”. I possess a photocopy of this letter. 


Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger 
1-00120 C1TTA DEL Vaticano 
22 Juli 1998 


Herrn 

00069 Trevignano Romano (RM) 

Dear Mr. ... 

First of all, I have to apologize for answering your kind letter from 27th 
May only today. The burden (i.e. work load) of the last few weeks has been so 
heavy that I had to postpone my private correspondence again and again so that 
only now, as my vacation is about to begin, I can at last try to answer the more 
important letters. 

I thank you very much for sending me the memorandum by Claus Peter 
Clausen, whom in fact I know as the author of the Schwarze Briefe (Black 
Letters). I can only say that the statements attributed to the Holy Father and me 
are freely invented. 

With my best wishes for your manifold activities. 

Josef Ratzinger 

It is more than probable that the Holy Father was referring to Medjugorje in 
a speech reported in the 18 September 1996 edition of L'Osservatore Romano 
when he stated: 

Some members of the People of God are not rooted firmly enough in the 
faith so that the sects, with their deceptive proselytism, mislead them to separate 
themselves from true communion in Christ. Within the Church community, the 
multiplication of supposed "apparitions" or "visions" is sowing confusion and 
reveals a certain lack of a solid basis to the faith and Christian life among her 
members. 


11 October 1994 

Synod Intervention by Msgr. Ratko Peric 


82 



Bishop of Mostar-Duvno 
Administrator of Trebinje and Mrkan, 

B o snia-Herzego vina 

1. The Catholic Church has been present in Bosnia-Herzegovina for more 
than a millennium. In 1991, the population of 4,250,000 includes 830,000 
Catholics (four dioceses, 272 parishes) with 360 diocesan and about 630 
Franciscan priests, members of the two provinces. Many priests do pastoral work 
abroad. There are four provinces of women's religious congregations, with 690 
sisters, many of whom are abroad. The spiritual and pastoral work carried out by 
religious in this Church has been invaluable, both in the past and today. During 
the present war, the Church has suffered the cruellest blows: more than 400,000 
Catholics have been evicted; 150 parishes have no normal access; more than 200 
ecclesiastical buildings have been destroyed or damaged. It is a sad fact that this 
war seems endless. We express our particular gratitude to the Holy Father for his 
interventions to promote peace. 

2. There are also some intra-ecclesial problems. The ordinary ecclesiastical 
hierarchy with the resident bishops and diocesan clergy was restored in 1881. 
Having heard the opinion of the bishops and religious superiors, the Holy See 
assigned a certain number of parishes ad liberam collationem Episcopi which had 
been administered until that time by the well-deserving Friars Minor. However, 
when the time came to make over the parishes in question to the diocese of 
Mostar, the obedience professed was put to a hard trial. The religious community, 
once rewarded by the Holy See with many privileges for its apostolate, today has 
to receive warnings for its rigidity. 

3. In addition to this is the phenomenon of Medjugorje, a parish 
administered by the religious mentioned. The official position of the episcopal 
conference, 10 April 1991, distinguishes the pastoral work of the bishop and the 
priests concerned from the content of the alleged "apparitions". The episcopal 
declaration states: "On the basis of investigations to date, it is impossible to 
confirm that we are dealing with apparitions and supernatural revelations." The 
alleged apparitions create great confusion and division, and not only in the local 
Church. We are, therefore, waiting for the Holy See to exert its powers to restore 
and strengthen the unity of this particular Church. 


17 June 1995 
The Film Go spa 


83 



The Medjugorje fraud is making so much money for so many people, 
particularly in the United States, that the propaganda in its favour must almost 
inevitably swamp any attempt to make the truth known. Thousands or even tens 
of thousands more well-meaning Catholics will be deluded into accepting the 
veracity of Medjugorje by a Hollywood movie called Gospa produced to promote 
it. Martin Sheen portrays Father Zovko, a Franciscan priest, and a young lady 
named Morgan Fairchild portrays a nun called Sister Fabiana. One can hardly 
deny that she looks very charming in the religious habit. Miss Fairchild reveals 
that she has wanted "to do this kind of stuff for years" because, up to this point, 
she has always had "to do the sex stuff". The publicity blurb for the film presents 
as a miracle the fact that the church at Medjugorje has not been destroyed. It 
claims that three cluster bombs fell on or near the church but failed to explode. 
There are, however, no authenticated reports of bombs falling anywhere near the 
church. 

Confidence tricksters can only succeed if their victims wish to he deluded, 
and there are undoubtedly vast numbers of Catholics today who wish precisely 
that. They yearn desperately for some direct link to heaven, and embrace such 
purported links uncritically. They flock by the thousands to any location where 
the Medjugorje road show puts on a performance and become ecstatic when the 
starring "visionary" is able to produce an apparition of Our Lady more easily than 
a conjurer produces a rabbit from a hat. I have received an account of a show 
co-starring Marija Pavlovic, who is proved in this book to be a self-confessed liar, 
and Father Tomislav Vlasic who seduced a nun and then denied the paternity of 
his child. There were many tables at the show marketing Medjugorje products 
including one selling for a pound a time, slips of paper with a typewritten message 
received from Our Lady: "To the people of England. I am in your midst today so 
that I can be near all of you." Does this mean that Our Lady is not normally in the 
country that is her dowry? There was great excitement when the two stars 
appeared. Miss Pavlovic was gazed upon with awe as if a heavenly being herself, 
and soon people were flocking to her with petitions to take back to Medjugorje 
accompanied by generous sums of money. Marija gave an angelic smile to each 
donor. Father Vlasic took up a collection for "war relief in Bosnia" and received 
£3,000. Marija then gave the exciting news that the Mother of God was standing 
on the crucifix over the high altar and blessing everyone in a "motherly way." One 
elderly lady was so excited by this that she gave Miss Pavlovic about £150 that 
she had saved to pay for her city tax, asking the young lady to take a petition to 
Medjugorje for her. As Our Lady was allegedly present in the church at that very 
moment it is hard to understand why the petition needed to be taken to 
Medjugorje to be presented to her. 


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31 August 1995 

A Warning Concerning the Film Gospa-The Wanderer. 


The chancery of the diocese of Mostar in Bosnia-Herzegovina has issued a 
warning about the movie Gospa, which stars Martin Sheen and purports to be 
about the alleged apparitions at Medjugorje. The announcement, dated 17 
Junel995, states that Gospa exploits the name of Mary, using it as "a commercial 
or to promote propaganda." 

The statement also criticizes the movie for its "false presentation" of the 
previous bishop of Mostar, Monsignor Pavao Zanic, who is accused of being a 
collaborator with the communists, a charge which has "no basis in reality." 


23 March 1996 

CDF Letter to Bishop Taverdet 

Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 

Vatican City, March 23, 1996, Prot. No. 154/81-01985 

Your Excellency, 

In your letter of 14 February 1996 you inquired what is the present position 
of the Church regarding the alleged "apparitions” in Medjugorje, and whether it is 
permitted to the Catholic faithful to go there for pilgrimage. In reference to that, it 
is my honour to make known to you that, regarding the authenticity of the 
“apparitions” in question, the bishops of the former Yugoslavia confirmed in their 
declaration of 10 April 1991 published in Zadar: 

On the basis of investigation up till now it cannot be 
established that one is dealing with supernatural apparitions and 
revelations. However, the numerous gatherings of the faithful 
from different parts of the world, who are coming to Medjugorje 
prompted both by motives of belief and certain other motives, 
require the attention and pastoral care in the first place of the 
bishop of the diocese and of the other bishops with him so that in 
Medjugorje and everything related to it a healthy devotion toward 
the Blessed Virgin Mary would be promoted in conformity with 
the teaching of the Church.. For that purpose the bishops shall 
issue separate appropriate liturgical-pastoral directives. Likewise 
by means of their Commission they shall further follow and 

85 



investigate the total event in Medjugorje. 


The result from this in what is precisely said is that official 
pilgrimages to Medjugorje, understood as a place of authentic 
Marian apparitions, are not permitted to be organized either on the 
parish or on the diocesan level, because that would be in 
contradiction to what the bishops of former Yugoslavia affirmed in 
their aforementioned declaration. 

Kindly accept, your Excellency, an expression of my 
profoundly devoted affection ! 

+ Tarcisio Bertone. 


16 June 1996 

The Ban on Pilgrimages Reaffirmed 


On 16 June 1996 the ANSA News Agency reported that the Vatican had 
reaffirmed its prohibition of pilgrimages to the site of the alleged apparitions at 
Medjugorje. Bishop Leon Taverdet of Langres in France had asked the Holy See 
for a ruling on the status of Medjugorje. The Catholic Times in England reported 
in its 30 June 1996 edition that: 

The Vatican position, which also reflects that of local bishops in the 
former Yugoslav republic was outlined in a letter by Archbishop Tarcisio 
Bertone, secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Archbishop 
Bertone cited a 1991 report by the Yugoslavian bishops which said that, after 
much study, it could not be confirmed that supernatural events were occurring at 
Medjugorje. From what was said, it followed that official pilgrimages to 
Medjugorje, understood as a place of authentic Marian apparitions, should not be 
organized, Archbishop Bertone said. Such pilgrimages would be in 
contradiction with what the local bishops had determined, he added. 


4 December 1996 

The Circulation of Texts of Alleged Private Revelations 


The 4 December 1996 issue of the English edition L'Osservatore Romano 


86 



contained a declaration from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The 
first part was a warning to the faithful against the writing and messages of 
Vassula Ryden. The second part clarified the correct procedure to be followed by 
those wishing to circulate alleged private revelations. It applies to Vassula 
Ryden, Medjugorje, and the hundreds of alleged seers throughout the word who 
claim to be receiving messages from heaven. 

Regarding the Circulation of texts of alleged private revelations, 

The Congregation states: 

1) The interpretation given by some individuals to a declaration approved 
by Paul VI on 14 October 1966 and promulgated on 15 November of that year, in 
virtue of which writings and messages resulting from alleged private revelations 
could be freely circulated in the Church is absolutely groundless. This decision 
actually referred to the "Abolition of the Index of Forbidden Books", and 
determined that — after the relevant censures were lifted — the moral obligation 
still remained of not circulating or reading those writings which endanger faith 
and morals. 

2) It should be recalled however that with regard to the circulation of 
texts of alleged private revelations, canon 823 § 1 of the current Code remains in 
force: "the pastors of the Church have the ... right to demand that writings to be 
published by the Christian faithful which touch upon faith or morals be 
submitted to their judgement". 

3) Alleged supernatural revelations, and writings concerning them, are 
submitted in the first instance to the judgement of the diocesan bishop, and, in 
particular cases, to the judgement of the episcopal conference and the 
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. 

Despite the fact that the law of the Church has been made clear, the "seers" 
of Medjugorje have declined to submit their alleged revelations to the judgement 
of their diocesan bishop, Monsignor Ratko Peric. It has been claimed by 
Medjugorje propagandists that statements made by the bishop represent no more 
than his personal opinion. On the contrary, in the norms for examining alleged 
private revelations issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on 27 
February 1978, it is the diocesan bishop who in the first place has the authority to 
enquire into and pronounce upon such events. It is in precisely this capacity, as 
diocesan bishop, that Monsignor Peric has made his pronouncements. These 
pronouncements conform exactly to the 28 point statement made by Monsignor 
Zanic in May 1990 in his capacity as diocesan bishop explaining why the alleged 
apparitions at Medjugorje are unworthy of credence, and the 10 April 1991 


87 



declaration of the Yugoslav Episcopal Conference that it is not possible to affirm 
that any supernatural apparitions or revelations have taken place at Medjugorje. 


25 January 1997 

Medjugorje: the State of the Question in 1997 

An interview with Monsignor Ratko Peric, Bishop of Mostar, by Yves 
Chiron was published in the French journal Present, 25 January 1997. Monsieur 
Chiron was particularly anxious to obtain clarification from the Bishop 
concerning the claim by propagandists for Medjugorje that superior authorities 
in the Church will overturn the verdict — non constat de supernaturalitate ( that 
there is no evidence of any supernatural happenings at Medjugorje), which 
means that there have been no genuine apparitions. A lengthy extract from the 
interview conducted by Monsieur Chiron follows with his kind permission. YC = 
Yves Chiron. Bp = Bishop. 

YC The last official Church document concerning the events at Medjugorje is 
the declaration published at Zadar on 10 April 1991, by the members of the 
Episcopal Conference of Yugoslavia. This declaration stated in particular: "On 
the basis of studies conducted so far it cannot be affirmed that supernatural 
apparitions and revelations are occurring." It is almost six years since this 
judgement was published, is it still valid? 

Bp The judgement of the Church is the same and it is still valid. There is no 
fact, argument, affirmation or miracle which proves that there is a case of 
"apparitions or supernatural revelations". 

Y C The same 1991 declaration required that at Medjugorje "a healthy devotion 
to the Virgin Mary should be promoted in accordance with the teaching of the 
Church." Certain authors have interpreted this requirement as a recognition of the 
cult of "Mary Queen of Peace", the name under which the Holy Virgin is 
presented at Medjugorje. Can it therefore be said that at Medjugorje there has 
been a "recognition of the cult" as a preliminary to a recognition of the 
supernatural basis of the events at Medjugorje, or does this requirement of the 
conference at Zagreb simply represent a wish that uncontrolled and unrecognized 
liturgical practices and devotions should not develop at Medjugorje? 

Bp. It can not be claimed in any way whatsoever that there has been a 
"recognition of the cult" or that the parish church at Medjugorje has been 


88 



recognized as a Marian sanctuary on a diocesan, national or international level. 
This requirement of the conference for a "a healthy devotion to the Virgin Mary" 
represents no more than the wish that at Medjugorje, as in every other Catholic 
parish in the diocese of Mostar-Duvno, a Marian devotion in accordance with the 
teaching of the Church should be promoted ( Marialis cultis, 1974, Redemptoris 
Mater, 1987, etc.). 

YC Certain authors claim that the enquiry into the events at Medjugorje has 
been withdrawn from the competent authority — your own, in your capacity as 
bishop of Mostar — and that it has been reserved to the Holy See. Is this correct? 
Is one of the commissions of enquiry continuing a work of investigation and 
study? 

Bp I would be very happy if the Holy See would reserve to itself the enquiry on 
the events at Medjugorje, forming its own commission and arriving at a definitive 
judgement. It certainly has the authority to do so. But, right up till today, I have 
received no such request. In 1993 the Episcopal Conference of Yugoslavia was 
dissolved, and was replaced by a number of episcopal conferences of Croatia, 
Slovenia, Bosnia-Herzegovina etc. The commission of enquiry into the events at 
Medjugorje of the Episcopal Conference of Bosnia-Herzegovina (which is 
comprised of four bishops) has the authority to form a new commission 
eventually. I endeavour to visit the parish of Medjugorje on a regular basis. There 
are many disorders there. There are Franciscan priests there with no canonical 
mission; religious communities have been established without the permission of 
the diocesan bishop, ecclesiastical buildings have been erected without 
ecclesiastical approval, parishes are encouraged to organize official pilgrimages, 
etc. Medjugorje, considered as a location of presumed apparitions, does not 
promote peace and unity but creates confusion and division, and not simply in its 
own diocese. I stated this in October 1994 at the synod of bishops and in the 
presence of the Holy Father, and I repeat it today with the same responsibility. 

YC Can we expect a solemn declaration on the events at Medjugorje, made 
either by you or by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith? 

Bp We, the bishops of Bosnia-Herzogovina, are preoccupied with the 
consequences of the four years' war (1992-1995), and of the reconstruction of the 
life of the Church, and we do not see the need to form a new commission of 
enquiry and to make a new declaration concerning Medjugorje. For my part, I 
have included an article entitled "Criteria for Discerning Apparitions: Regarding 
the events at Medjugorje" in my most recent book, Prijestolje Mudrosti ( Seat of 
Wisdom ) published at Mostar in 1995, pp. 266-286). I put forward ten points 

89 



explaining the reasons why one cannot recognize the authenticity of Medjugorje. 
I am, moreover, very grateful to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for 
having, on two occasions, explained and implemented the affirmation of the 
episcopal conference of the ex- Yugoslavia. This was done in a letter to 

Monsignor Daloz, Archbishop of Besangon, on 4 July 1995, and in a letter to 
Monsignor Taverdet, Bishop of Langres, on 23 March 1996. After having cited 
the declaration of the episcopal conference of the ex- Yugoslavia, the 
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith added: “From what has been said, it 
follows that official pilgrimages to Medjugorje, understood as a place of 
authentic Marian apparitions, should not be organized either on a parish or 
diocesan level, because this would be a contradiction of what has been affirmed 
by the bishops of the ex-Yugoslavia in their previously cited declaration.” 


12-13 April 1997 

Medjugorje in the Light of the Pope’s Visit to Sarajevo 

The following commentary appeared on page 52 of Medjugorje: A Millennium Update 
published in August 1999 by the UK Medjugorje Information Group, 14 Trensdale Avenue, 
Coventry, CV6 1AT. 

The Pope has come and gone from Sarajevo ( 12/13 April 1997), and he 
did not visit Medjugorje as many had hoped he would due to the Pope's obvious 
goodwill toward the events in the parish of Medjugorje. We remember that the 
Croatian president. Dr. Franjo Tudjman, immediately preceding the Pope's 
coming to Sarajevo testified before an assembly of politicians and priests that 
Pope John Paul II in their last conversation, said that on the occasion of his visit 
to Sarajevo he wanted also to visit Medjugorje. The local bishop Dr. Ratko 
Peric was also present for this testimony and did not say a word at that. 

What the Pope said behind the scenes to the assembled Church leaders in 
Sarajevo is not known and most likely will not be known. What is known is his 
question about who is the provincial of the Franciscan province in which the 
parish of Medjugorje is located. Also known is his mentioning the name of 
Medjugorje with a smile on the occasion of his arrival in Sarajevo, at the supper 
in the Catholic School of Theology and at his departure from Sarajevo. In general 
no great stir came from all that. 

Spirits were upset only after the usual papal general audience on the 
Wednesday immediately after the Sarajevo visit. According to reports of the 
news agencies, the Pope on that occasion among other things said: "In the course 
of the war pilgrimages of the faithful to the Marian shrine in Bosnia-Herzegovina 
did not stop as also not in other parts of the world, especially in Loreto, in order 
to request the Mother of Nations and the Queen of Peace to intervene in that 
suffering region." These words of the Pope were interpreted by many as his 
indirect recognition of the Medjugorje events. 


90 



This report is typical of the shallow and deceptive nature of those 
promoting the Medjugorje “apparitions”. The first part concerning President 
Tudjman is based on a press bulletin issued by Father Miljenko-Mici Stojicu, 
Parish Priest at Medjugorje. 0 There is, of course, no verifiable evidence of “the 
Pope's obvious goodwill toward the events in the parish of Medjugorje” The 
testimonies of Cardinal Ratzinger and the apostolic pro -nuncio to the USA, 
Archbishop Pio Laghi, have been cited to this effect. As regards the claim by 
President Tujman, that as well as visiting Sarajevo, the Pope also wished to visit 
Medjugorje, Monsignor Peric has testified that during the preparations for the 
Pope’s visit to Sarajevo, and in the course of many visits by the apostolic nuncio 
and delegates from the Holy See, there was never any mention of the Pope 
wishing to visit Medjugorje during his visit to Sarajevo. Had he wished to make 
such a visit his representatives would have made this clear and Medjugorje would 
certainly have been included in his itinerary. As for the statement by President 
Tudjman, Monsignor Peric writes: “I did not consider that a serious proposition 
which is why I made no comment.” 

The fact that Medjugorje propagandists have to base their claims of papal 
support by a gratuitous assertion that he mentioned “the name of Medjugorje with 
a smile” makes clear the paucity of their case, just as does the claim that the Pope 
gave a “big blessing” in the direction a Medjugorje banner during his 1994 visit to 
Croatia. The true significance of his 1994 visit, as explained above, is that he did 
not so much as mention Medjugorje in one of his addresses. 

Grasping desperately at any possible straw which might indicate the Pope’s 
approval of Medjugorje, the UK Medjugorje Information Group claims that a 
reference by the Pope to the Marian shrine in Bosnia-Herzegovina where Our Lady 
is venerated as the Queen of Peace was “interpreted by many as Inis indirect 
recognition of the Medjugorje events” This allegation is nonsensical. Medjugorje is 
not recognised by the Church as a shrine. There is, however, an official Marian 
shrine in Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Monsignor Peric has pointed out that it was to 
this shrine that the Holy Father was referring — the Marian Shrine “The Queen of 
Peace” in Hrasno, in the diocese of Trebinje. The Pope sent a telegram to 
Archbishop Francesco Monterisi, the apostolic nuncio in Bosnia-Herzegovina, 
which he read during a Mass which the nuncio celebrated 1 1 May 1997. The text was 
as follows: 


On the occasion of the 20 th anniversary of the Marian Shrine “The Queen 
of Peace” in Hrasno, the Holy Father, Pope John Paul II, sends greeting and best 
wishes to your Excellency and all those participating in this solemn celebration, 
and hopes that the solemn anniversary of this shrine, a true centre of Marian 
devotion for the whole diocese, will always be a place in which the peace of the 
Risen Christ shines out in the life of the Catholics of this region. It is the Holy 


0 


91 



Father’s prayer that, with Our Lady’s maternal intercession. He (the Risen 
Christ) will support the Catholics of Croatia in building a future of hope and 
peace worthy of their rich and proud Christian heritage which goes back some 
fourteen centuries. The Supreme Pontiff gladly bestows his particular apostolic 
benediction upon you the secular clergy, the religious, and all the faithful of the 
diocese of Trebinje. 

Signed: 

Angelo Cardinal Sodano. 

Secretary of State. 


13 April 1997 

The Pope, Medjugorje, and the Provincial of the 
Herzegovina Franciscans 

The following report also appeared in Medjugorje — A Millennium 
Update, on page 53. 

The visit of Pope John Paul II to Bosnia- Herzegovina 12-13 April was a 
visit which many had hoped would end with a visit of the Pope to Medjugorje, 
since in several references he had expressed such a desire. Unfortunately, that did 
not happen. Nevertheless, the Pope did not forget Medjugorje. 

At the Sarajevo airport 12 April, the very first to await the Pope's arrival 
were the bishops and provincials of Bosnia-Herzegovina. When the provincial of 
the Sarajevo Province, Father Peter Andjelovic, as the first of the provincials 
approached the Pope to greet him, the Pope asked him the question, 
"Medjugorje?" He pointed to Dr. Father Tomislav Pervan, the provincial of 
Herzegovina who said, "I am from Mostar and Medjugorje." The Pope nodded 
his head with satisfaction and twice repeated, "Medjugorje, Medjugorje." All TV 
viewers who watched the presentation of the Pope's arrival also saw it. 

The alleged references by the Pope to Medjugorje consist of no more than 
gratuitous assertions. Why, when he did not visit Medjugorje, or express any 
desire to visit Medjugorje, in the preparations for the visit, mention the place 
immediately upon his arrival. ? 

While the Pope prayed with those gathered in the Sarajevo cathedral, he 
prayed twice referring to the Queen of Peace for Bosnia-Herzegovina. Many of 
those present interpreted it as having recourse to the Queen of Peace from 
Medjugorje. 

It has already been explained that the Pope was referring to the Shrine of 
Our Lady of Peace in Hrasno. 


92 



After supper in the Sarajevo Catholic School of Theology Father 
Tomislav took advantage of the occasion to personally present the Pope with the 
newest photo -monograph on Medjugorje which the Franciscans who work in the 
parish of Medjugorje had sent to him. On that occasion he spoke to him briefly 
about Medjugorje. The Pope did not say anything, but by the expression on his 
face, he accepted both the former and the latter with satisfaction and interest. 

We have yet another gratuitous statement intended to prove papal approval 
of Medjugorje — approval indicated by the alleged expression on his face! 

On the occasion of the Pope's departure from the Sarajevo airport. Father 
Tomislav Pervan by way of greeting said, "Holy Father, we are expecting you in 
Medjugorje." The Pope answered with a smile, "Medjugorje, Medjugorje" as 
was visible also on TV screens. 

Yet another use of an alleged smile cannot overcome that fact that not even 
on one occasion has this Marian Pope John Paul, who is totally devoted to Our 
Lady ( Totus Tuus is the motto for his pontificate), uttered a single word 
concerning Medjugorje in any public address. 

22 June 1997 

What Kind of ’’Fruits" are These? 


A very important statement on Medjugorje was published by the Catholic 
Information Agency in Zagreb on 22 June 1997. It documents the extent to which 
the Franciscans in Herzegovina are now beyond the control of the legitimate 
Church authorities. I was informed in Rome in 1996, at a very high level, that no 
progress is being made on the matter of Medjugorje because the Franciscans, who 
control the alleged seers, refuse any co-operation. It is hard to imagine how any 
Catholic could believe that Our Lady is involved with the litany of disobedience 
related by Don Ante Laburic, chancellor of the diocese of Mostar, who has 
summed up the situation perfectly by stating: "Medjugorje has become a place of 
religious disorder, disobedience, and anti-ecclesial activity." The full text of his 
statement follows. 

On 14 May three bishops from Uganda came to visit Medjugorje and 
from there went to visit Bishop Ratko Peric of Mostar (their former classmate 
from Rome) in order to inquire on the local Church's position on the so-called 
events of Medjugorje. The undersigned was also present. The bishop gave his 
former classmates some documents, which clearly show that from 1981 to 1991, 
three qualified commissions in the service of the local bishop and the bishops' 

93 



conference have investigated the events. Ten years ago, in 1987, Bishop Pavao 
Zanic, formally and officially declared that, in the parish of Medjugorje, the 
Madonna had not appeared to anyone. In 1991, the bishops' conference did not 
only declare that the apparitions were not authentic, but also stressed that: "It is 
impossible to confirm that the events involve supernatural apparitions or 
revelations at all." From 1981 onward, "messages of peace" have been sent out 
to the world from Medjugorje. Yet in our local Church these messages include 
the following "fruits": 

— The administration of the Franciscan province of Herzegovina, which 
was punished in 1976, has, from 1982, been given the further penalty of being at 
the level of ad instar , due to its unwillingness to implement the decisions of the 
Holy See regarding pastoral services in some of the parishes of the diocese of 
Mostar-Duvno. 

— Many churches have been built by the Franciscans through the help of 
the faithful and the benefactors, which they blessed themselves, without even 
informing the local bishop, which goes against canon law and the charisma of St. 
Francis. A church in the parish, Ljuti Dolac, was blessed this way on 23 April of 
this year. In Medjugorje itself, many ecclesiastical buildings have been erected 
without any permission from the proper Church authorities. 

— More than ten Franciscan priests do not have canonical faculties to 
hear confessions in the diocese of Herzegovina. Some due to their own fault, 
while others, due to the fault of their religious community which is not fulfilling 
the papal decree. 

— More than 40 Franciscans have not received the necessary faculties to 
work pastorally in Herzegovina, yet they do not even bother with the decisions 
of the legal Church authorities. Some of them are currently in Medjugorje. 

— Many religious communities are living and working in the parish of 
Medjugorje without the permission of Church authorities, such as: "Beatitudes," 
"Kraljice mira, potpuno tvoji," "Cenacolo," "Oasi di pace," and "Franjevke 
pomocnice svecnika." Hence, Medjugorje has become a place of religious 
disorder, disobedience and anti-ecclesiastical activity. 

— Last year, some "Catholic faithful," with the knowledge of the 
Franciscans, built a brick wall over the entrance doors of the church in Capljina 
and the cathedral's affiliated church in Miljkovici. Two Franciscans who are 
without canonical faculties for the parish of Capijina, are currently working in 
the enclosed church. Everything they are doing is unlawful and the marriages 
performed there are invalid! 

— Some of the Franciscans in Mostar are ignoring the legally established 
cathedral church and the other four diocesan parishes in Mostar dedicated to the 
four evangelists, while they continue to organize religious services with the 
people on their own, against the specific decisions of the Holy See and the head 
of the Franciscan Order. 

— The Provincial ad-instar has, on many occasions, warned his brothers 
in writing, that serious measures of the Franciscans’ General Administration are 
being considered for the entire province due to their disobedience, 

— In Medjugorje, the periodical Glas mira and "Press Bulletin" are 
published without the necessary permission from Church authorities. These 


94 



same periodicals proclaim the "authenticity of the apparitions" and speak of the 
"shrine" — even though no responsible Church statement has ever claimed 
"authenticity" or proclaimed any "shrine." 

— The counter-Church organization "Mir j dobro" ( Pax et bonum ) was 
allowed to borrow the shield and motto of the Franciscans, who have not 
distanced themselves from their group's illegal activities, even when this was 
asked of them. 

— Hence, these are some of the "fruits" of those who are using 
Medjugorje to "sell shady peace" to the world, and who have hardened 
themselves in their disobedience towards the Holy See and the Franciscan 
charisma. 

— On May 15, there appeared a dispatch from Medjugorje in Sloboclnci 
Dalmacija, regarding the Ugandan Bishops, whereby the "seer," Ivan 
Dragicevic, transmitted the Madonna's message, who on that occasion, said that 
she is "very pleased that the bishops are in Medjugorje." Ivan had been in the 
seminary in Visoko during 1981-1982. The commission investigating the 
"apparitions" questioned him once in Visoko. On 9 May 1982, he wrote: "A sign 
shall occur in June." Nothing happened in June! 

— Later on, he was expelled from Visoko due to poor grades. He 
continued on in Dubrovnik from 1982-83. During his two-year stay in the 
seminary, he said that he was seeing the Madonna and that she told him that he 
would be a priest. Yet he was expelled from Dubrovnik for poor grades. In 
1994, he found the former Miss Massachusetts, Loreen Murphy, whom he 
married in Boston ( Sloboclnci Dalmacija, 9 November 1994). On the day of the 
wedding, the groom "had an apparition" in Massachusetts. The Madonna seems 
to be following him around the world as with some of the other "seers" of 
Medjugorje. Now he presents the Blessed Virgin Mary as being "very pleased 
that bishops are in Medjugorje." This type of "message" is not only a clear 
advertisement for Medjugorje, but a simple invention aimed at making the naive 
"avert their ears from the truth and turn to extravagant tales" (2 Tim 4:4). 

Don Ante Luburic, Chancellor 

Mostar, 16 May 1997. 


November 1997 
Medjugorje Incredibilities 

The article which follows entitled “MEDJUGORSKE 
NEVJERODOSTOJNOSTE’ (" MEDJUGORJE INCREDIBILITIES") was 
published in Crkva na Kamenu ( The Church on the Rock), the pastoral bulletin 
of the bishops of Herzegovina, Number 11, November 1997, page 3. 

We would like to present an example of how the so-called messages of the 
"Madonna" are being manipulated in the interests of the material aim of building 


95 



an hotel in Medjugorje. One can understand easily that new structures must be 
built in this post-war period, including hotels, but that the approval of the Blessed 
Virgin is required for the project just does not register in a Christian mind Our 
wish has always been to let the light shine in its splendour — Splendor veritatis. 
But if even the noblest aims are based upon falsehoods, they shall sooner or later 
be exposed and bring shame upon all involved. 

The information which we are about to present comes with the permission 
of those who have responsiblity in the community (from the Netherlands 
mentioned below), and who have provided us with the written material. The 

persons involved are Father Slavko Barbaric, OFM, Vicka Ivankovic, a "seer", 
a community from the Netherlands, and one of our local fami li es which we shall 
designate as NN. 

A pastoral centre or hotel? What does it involve? At the beginning of 
1995, a community from the Netherlands received a request for financial aid for a 
project involving the building of a pastoral centre in Medjugorje. A local family 
of ours, NN, which wanted to build the centre is associated with the head of the 
Dutch community. The daughter of this family wrote a three page letter dated 16 
March 1995 in which she describes this pastoral centre in Medjugorje. In the 
letter she mentions that the first time they asked the Madonna (through Vicka), 
"last year in April, I believe it was the end of April, the answer was: 'It is not yet 
the right time. When the right time comes I will tell you'." The daughter then 
continues: 


My father says that he asked (Vicka) once again, and that the answer was 
roughly the same. The third time, on 2 December 1994, Vicka came to see my 
father and said: "Last night, 1 December, I asked the Madonna for you, and this is 
written on a piece of paper." Vicka said exactly this: "I asked the Madonna last 
night for you and she said that you can slowly start building. Many greetings, 
and I am praying for you. Vicka." 

After investigations, it was discovered that a hotel with about 100 beds was 
being proposed, which would include a chapel and an inn for "pilgrims". 
The head of the above-mentioned Dutch community wanted to borrow a large sum 
of German marks in order to begin the construction. The reason was that the 
"Madonna" wanted this hotel built. 

In Mary's name. Since it appeared very strange and incredible that the 
Madonna is involved in hotel projects, the community sent a letter by fax to 
Father Slavko Barbaric, the spiritual director of the "seers", asking him in 
German: "Did Vicka, in Mary's name, tell the NN family: 'Now you can slowly 
start building'?" In the meantime, before Father Slavko could respond, the "seer" 


96 



Vicka, probably suspecting that the community was reluctant to provide the loan, 
wrote a letter on 19 March 1995, Here is the exact text of the letter, signed by 
Vicka in her own hand: 

Esteemed and honourable friend, 

I have already written to you through my friend NN and his family, and I 
now write to you again since perhaps you did not understand me correctly, and, 
moreover, I am somewhat surprised that you are seeking someone else's 
messages over and above the messages of the Madonna, the Mother of God. 

When the Madonna, the Mother of God, approves and insists upon the 
commencement of the building works, then I do not understand why you have 
doubts and ask for any other messages and approval from ordinary people. 

The Madonna, the Mother of God, has given her approval for the building 
works through me, and so if you believe in Medjugorje and the apparitions of the 
Madonna, the Mother of God, I do not understand why you have doubts. 

I wish you from my heart a happy commencement of the building and 
mutual collaboration. Many greetings to you, and I am praying for you. 

Vicka. 

This is how a "seer of the Madonna" claims confidently that the Madonna 
requires the construction of an hotel with 100 beds. 

Not in Mary's name.. Father Slavko responded to the previous letter of the 
community on 28 March 1995 (we now translate from German), that Vicka did 
not consult the Mother of God on this question, and therefore her response cannot 
be considered to be "in Mary's name": 

My opinion, which I state clearly, is that it is wrong to question the seers 
about such matters, because there exists the danger that the opinion of the seers 
can be placed in the mouth of the Mother of God, which can happen, as has 
happened, "in Mary's name". 

This means that Father Slavko, not knowing of Vicka's letter, contradicts 
Vicka's claims, and denies that the Madonna has said anything to her regarding 
the construction of an hotel. 

Why the falsehoods? The Dutch community then responded to Father 
Slavko the very next day, 29 March, with two questions. How is it that the seer 
Vicka states one thing to the Dutch community, and another to Father Slavko 
Barbaric? They ask Father Barbaric to explain these lies or inconsistencies of the 
"seer" Vicka to them. 


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One family's wish is represented by Vicka as the Madonna's. Father 
Slavko responded on 3 April 1995, and he explains how everything had 
developed. He had spoken to Vicka and he describes what took place as follows: 

My question was: why did she tell me that she did not ask her (the 
Madonna), why did she lie to me? I spoke to Vicka in front of her parents, and 
she was rather afraid to confirm her answer before her father because he was 
already angry due to the insistence of the NN family. She has now apologized to 
me in writing, and says that she had not thought that it was all that important. 

She wrote: "It has happened this time, but it will not happen again." In order that 
you may understand Vicka's situation better, I should add that regarding the letter 
you received from Vicka and faxed to me, when I read the letter I was certain that 
the text was not Vicka's, so I asked her, and this is how matters stood. She was 
getting ready to go to Rome and she did not have much time. Mr NN and his son 
wrote the text and asked Vicka to sign it. She signed in a hurry, but only the last 
sentence can be attributed to Vicka. Vicka then began to cry and to apologize 
repeatedly because she knows what the consequences of this case of "lies" can 
be, because you yourself have asked if Medjugorje was "authentic". 

Hence the "seer" Vicka signs what someone else has brought to her, and, 
while in a hurry before her journey to Rome, claims this to be a "message" of the 
Madonna. Would this same "seer", deliver truthful messages to the entire world, 
so that the world may believe in the lies of Medjugorje? 

Two questions which reveal the lies. The community from the 
Netherlands then wrote to Father Slavko on 28 April 1995, putting two questions 
to him. How is it that Vicka, who claims that the Blessed Virgin Mary has been 
"educating" her for fourteen years, is telling a lie for such an unimportant thing 
(fear of her father, but not of sin)? Should not the effect of the apparitions be a 
deeper prayer life (not necessarily mystical), which would restrain Vicka from 
this type of sin? Secondly, is it normal for the Madonna to respond to such 
questions? Does this not cast into doubt the authenticity of the apparitions? 

Father Slavko disregards the lies and asks for money. 

Father Slavko answered this letter almost a year later on 14 February 1996, 
in English. Note the manner in which he ignores the question of the lies and asks 
for money for the building of the hotel. He writes: 

Today the family NN, with whom you were in contact, came to the parish 
office. They were very concerned because you now hesitate to support this 
project. They told me that they have invested a large amount of money, and are 
now unable to continue construction because of this most recent action. 

When you asked me about Vicka's answer, I did not know that it was the 

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same family whom I have known for a long period of time. They are an honest 
and trustworthy family. I am sorry that this misunderstanding between myself, 

Vicka, the family and yourself has taken place. 

After discussing the situation with them at length, and seeing all that is 
happening now with more pilgrims returning to Medjugorje, and with many local 
people beginning to build once more, I dare myself to ask you if you could 
possibly re-examine the entire situation and perhaps find the means to assist this 
family? 

We do not know whether the community re-examined the entire situation, 
whether or not it accepted the Medjugorje manipulations along with the 
"Madonna's" approval of the project, or if it disregarded the confusion of Father 
Slavko and Vicka in order to hand over a large sum of deutschmarks simply 
because Vicka’s and Father Slavko’s "Madonna" said so. 

All that we have written shows that the "apparitions" of Medjugorje are 
unauthentic, and that what is attributed to the "Madonna" is nothing less than an 
offence against the holiness of God and the Madonna. 


11 November 1997 

The "Confirmation" in Capljina and the "Charisma" of Medjugorje 

The article which follows, “Capljinska ‘Krizma’ I Medugorska ‘ Karizma 
(“The ‘Confirmation ’ in Capljina and the ‘Charisma ’ of Medjugorje ”), by 
Monsignor Ratko Peric, Bishop of Mostar-Duvno, was published in Crkva na 
Kamenu (The Church on the Rock), the pastoral bulletin of the Bishops of 
Herzegovina, Number 11, November 1997, page 2. 

An anonymous "bishop". The newspaper Slobodna Dalmacija, 6 October 
1997, page 4, published an article written by three journalists revealing that on 
Sunday 5 October 1997, at the parish of Capljina, in the diocese of 
Mostar-Duvno, an anonymous so-called bishop, from an anonymous country, 
anonymous diocese, and of anonymous origin, conducted a "confirmation". It is 
said that he spoke German, and that a Franciscan who is acting unlawfully (as a 
parish priest) in Capljina translated for him into Croatian. The hosts felt it 
unnecessary to introduce the illicit "minister of confirmation" to the faithful, nor 
did the illicit guest consider that politeness required him to introduce himself, 
except for the following: "I come to you from a distant yet beautiful country. My 
homeland is more than a 1,000 miles from your lovely country and your beautiful 
town" (as reported by Slobodna Dalmacija ). 

The holy sacraments are licitly and validly conferred by the competent 
ministers who are united to the Church according to the precepts of canon law, 


99 



and who have a correct intention, with the foreknowledge of the participants and 
the permission of the local bishop. Where there is force and deceit, there is no 
sacrament. 0 We always invite the candidates for confirmation to be courageous 
witnesses for Christ, yet here the "minister of confirmation" himself has been 
hidden behind a veil of anonymity and secrecy! 

An hireling To such shepherds Jesus would say: "Truly, truly, I say to you, 
he who does not enter the sheepfold by the door but climbs in by another way, that 
man is a thief and a robber" (John, 10:1). The anonymous guest in Capljina did 
not enter the Church through the main doors, because for 15 months now, a brick 
wall has been built up in front of them blocking the entry of the legitimate pastors 
of the Church. This guest jumped in from the other side, rejecting every Christian 
tradition, all norms of courtesy, and ignoring the specific law of the Church. They 


o 


On 30 December 1 997 I faxed Monsignor Peric to ask him to clarify 
precisely what he meant by his statement that "Where there is force and 
deceit, there is no sacrament." I mentioned that providing that the 
anonymous bishop had used the correct matter and form with the intention 
of doing what the Church does the sacrament would certainly have been 
valid. Monsignor Peric replied to me on the same day: 

Where [there] is force and deceit, there is no sacrament." This derives from a 
fundamental axiom for the sacraments generally. Anyone who receives any 
sacrament through force or fraud receives no sacrament, whether it be holy 
orders or matrimony or confirmation or baptism. In the case of the 
"confirmations" [in Capljina] if a bishop did in truth officiate, and there was 
neither force nor fraud, the sacrament was valid in itself, but illicit. This was 
not the situation that I had in mind. My belief all along has been that the 
individual officiating was no bishop at all, but some deceiver (perhaps a 
priest, perhaps not) dressed up in a bishop's vestments, but with no respect 
for the sacrament of confirmation or for the floly Ghost. That the 
Franciscans will not give his name, and that no man alive knows who it was 
that administered the "confirmations" is surely less a rare than an unique case 
in the Church. I have sent certain questions to the floly See, and am waiting 
for an answer. In such a situation, before I have the Holy See's answer, were 
some boy to ask me for permission to enter a seminary or some girl for 
permission to enter a convent, I would in conscience feel bound to confirm 
such a one sub conditione As long ago as the summer of last year, the 
Franciscans publicly said that confirmation administered by a priest, even 
against the ordinary's express command, was nevertheless valid. I have given 
an answer to that. 


100 



say that he even carried the symbols of the bishop's office, a mitre and a crosier, 
which no authentic bishop of the Catholic Church would ever do in the territory of 
another diocese without the express permission of the local bishop. 

Irresponsible If the person involved is truly bishop of the Church, then 
surely he knows into what kind of illegal activity he has fallen with his illicit 
"good turn". Church law states that a bishop outside his diocese cannot 
administer the sacrament of confirmation "without the express or at least 
reasonably presumed consent of the local Ordinary" (Canon 390). In this case the 
Slobodna Dalmacija (3 October 1997, p. 15) reported specifically that the local 
ordinary did not grant permission for confirmation in the parish of Capljina to any 
bishop or priest. A confirmation for the candidates of Caplijina was held in June 
of last year. There was a confirmation this year as well, also in June, and another 
is scheduled during the school year. The anonymous guest knows this norm of 
the Church. He even mentions the local bishop and his motives. "Your bishop has 
his reasons for not doing this, and I do not wish to pass judgement on this." On 
the other hand, the guest says about himself: "I wish to emphasize that I too have 
my reasons for being here today in Capljina." It appears that he also spoke with 
Rome. "I also tried in Rome to contribute towards finding a happy solution to this 
situation, but as far as I know, my efforts have remained unsuccessful." The 
unlawful stranger does not mention with whom he spoke, what he suggested, and 
why his "efforts" have remained "unsuccessful". How can he then ignore the 
Holy See and do as he pleases in the areas of jurisdiction and the sacraments in 
another diocese and a different country? 

"Spiritually Unhappy" However, the anonymous guest reveals a secret 
about himself. He only mentions one place that he has come from: Medjugorje! 
From his words one understands that he is a regular visitor to Medjugorje: "I came 
to your homeland for the first time exactly ten years ago. The reason for my visit 
at that time was the apparition of Our Lady at Medjugorje. Now I must tell you 
that each time I arrived home after visiting Medjugorje I felt happier and more at 
peace. But last year I arrived home feeling quite sad and spiritually unhappy. The 
real reason for my uneasiness and great sadness were these walled-up doors of 
your church in Capljina. Even though this sign, written in five languages, speaks 
sufficiently for itself, I continued asking friends for more news on the situation" 
(Slobodna Dalmacija, 6 October 1997).° 


) 


101 



After this type of testimony and the actions of the "minister of 
confirmation", the Medjugorje fanatics should not be admonishing the local 
bishop of the importance of separating the problem of Medjugorje from the 
problem of Capljina, the case of Medjugorje from the case of Herzegovina. This 
anonymous, irresponsible hireling, this "unhappy spirit", wishes to solve the case 
of Capljina by coming from Medjugorje. He is coming to the aid of Franciscans 
who are unlawfully residing in Capljina, who are disobeying the Decrees of the 
Holy See, the decisions of the Franciscan Order, and the norms of the local 
Church, as mentioned in the declaration of the ad instar provincial, Dr. Father 
Tomislav Pervan, distancing himself from them. Now it is said that the 
anonymous "Monsignor" from Capljina is also mentioned in the Canon of the 
Mass, is inspired by the spirit of Medjugorje first of all with "peace and 
happiness", and then with "sadness and great unhappiness", upon seeing that 
things are not going the way that he and those who invited him would like them to 
go, is now working against unity, peace, and order, against the laws and canons of 
God's church, and he is also abusing the sacrament of the Holy Spirit. Medjugorje 
transmitted the first "messages" 15 years ago. When in January 1982, the 
so-called "Madonna", through one of the "seers", became involved in a question 
of the jurisdiction of the local Church by defending some disobedient Franciscan 
chaplains and rebuking the local bishop Pavao for making a "rash decision". (The 
"seer" used a much coarser expression in her description!) And now Medjugorje 
has "spiritually inspired" an unlawful "minister of confirmation" who goes to 
Capljina to destroy Church unity and to deceive hundreds of candidates for 
confirmation. 

Canonical and non-canonical On Sunday 5 October 1997 we were at Our 
Lady's National Shrine at Marija Bistrica. We took part in the ceremony for the 
appointment of a new military ordinary for the Republic of Croatia. Before this 
event nearly all the bishops participated in the solemn diocesan and episcopal 
celebrations in Pozega, Varazdin, and Zagreb Cathedral. Everyone was delighted 
to witness these events, conducted as they should be, with the Papal Decree being 
read aloud, the crosier handed over, and the Mass beginning with the new bishop 
presiding. Yet what would have happened if a certain priest, religious, or mayor 


"The wall will be pulled down when those who built the 
church (the Franciscans) return." The Franciscans have evidently 
returned as they now occupy the church, and so what they mean 
presumably is that their fail accompli should be recognized and the 
church which should be administered by diocesan priests must be 
officially surrendered to them. 


102 




of the city had jumped out of the crowd and grabbed the crosier from Archbishop 
Bozanic or Bishop Skvorcevic and said: "This is mine! This is my diocese!" 
Everyone would have remained breathless. The Police would probably have had 
to intervene and the sick person would have been sent to hospital. In Capljina, the 
sick person had a mitre on his head during Mass — even during the Canon, if we 
are to believe the witnesses. St. Paul once said to those whom he ordained: "I 
know that after my departure fierce wolves will come in among you, not sparing 
the flock; and from among your own selves will arise men speaking perverse 
things, to draw away the disciples after them. Therefore be alert..." (Acts 
20:29-3 1). "Wolves" from the outside and "heretics" from the inside. Hence, it is 
impossible not to react to such abuse, scandal and lawlessness ! I truly feel sorry 
for the Catholic faithful of Capljina, especially those who are refugees, and the 
candidates for confirmation whose parents have constantly inquired: "Will there 
be a confirmation? Will it be licit and valid?" We instructed the Christian 
consciences to follow the norms of the Church. A few listened and these deserve 
credit. We have no other choice than to wait until the Peter of our days, by his 
supreme authority, restores order among the disorderly, and to pray that the Holy 
Spirit enlightens the paths and hearts of all. 

Mostar, 7 October 1997. 

+Ratko Peric 

Bishop of Mostar-Duvno. 


The identity of the anonymous “bishop” from “a distant yet beautiful 
country” who performed the illicit and invalid confirmations at Caplinja was 
eventually discovered and the entire squalid story is documented by Monsignor 
Luka Pavlovic, vicar general of the diocese of Mostar-Duvno, under the date 28 
May 2001. The self-styled bishop was Srecko Franjo Novak, an apostate 
Croatian seminarian who joined the Old Catholic Church, was ordained to the 
diaconate, but not to the priesthood or episcopate. He claimed to have received 
Old Catholic ordination to both these orders but his Old Catholic superiors 
considered him unsuitable for these orders and refused to confer them. 
Monsignor Pavlovic explains: 

Such are the facts of the matter regarding Novak 
as a pseudo-professor, deceptive-doctor of theology, 
phoney-priest, bogus-bishop and spurious "successor of 
the apostles" - all this documented with his signature. 

From his signatures and the documents which others 


103 



have received from him, we are convinced that we are 
dealing with not only a dismissed Catholic seminarian, 
an expelled Old Catholic deacon, but also with a 
scientific and ecclesiastical falsifier, who the 
above-mentioned dismissed, and disobedient 
Franciscans of the province of Herzegovina have 
promoted to be their "bishop"! These sad events 
probably best describe how deep the disease of 
disobedience can go in the Church and concretely in the 
entire "Herzegovinian affair" ! 


26 December 1997 
The Grievous Fate of the Truth 


Under the title, "Bolna Subdina Istine” (“The Grievous Fate of the Truth”), a letter 
from Father Boze Rados, OFM, appeared in the journal Horizont on 26 December 1997. It 
concerns the question of the confirmations at Capljina, but in his abusive comments concerning 
Monsignor Peric and the papal nuncios it is evident that the real issue is the decree Romanis 
pontificibus of 6 June 1975 in which Pope Paul VI instructs the Franciscans to hand over half 
their parishes to the diocese. The abusive language used by Father Rados requires no 
comment. The Franciscans in Herzegovina have consistently used the cdleged apparitions at 
Medjugorje as a weapon in their conflict with the diocese and as a lucrative source of income 
for their schismatic activities. They are at present building a cathedral- sized church in Mostar 
without the authorization of Monsignor Peric. 

When nuncio Francesco Monterisi and nuncio Giulio Einaudi, Cardinal 
Vinko Puljic and Bishop Ratko Peric speak of the truth, the truth bleeds, for with 
their lies they are ever preparing a new Calvary for the truth. By dint of 
substituting lies for the truth again and again, they have succeeded in convincing 
themselves that their lies are the truth. Put bluntly, they have fallen into the trap 
of their own lie. In the words of the psalmist: "The snare that they set in secret has 
caught them by the legs." 

The facts, the very embodiment of the truth, demonstrate the following 
points. Nuncio Monterisi and Nuncio Einaudi bore witness to Christ's love to the 
Catholics of Croatia and of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a people to whom they 
were sent to be the Pope's representatives, by asking the Croatian Minister of 
Defence, Gojko Susak, to deploy the army against the faithful of the parish of 
Capljina, regardless how many might be wounded or even killed. Whether the 
gentleman in question [i.e. Gojko Susak] would send troops against his 
countrymen, I know not, but this much I know for certain, that such a thing has 


104 



nothing whatsoever to do with Christ's love 

Nuncio Monterisi may remember me from our meeting in Posusje. I told him 
on that occasion what it was that troubles my conscience, namely the lie in the 
first sentence of the decree Romanis pontificibus, on account of which my 
brethren uttered their non possumus to that very decree in 1975. They fortified 
their non possumus by setting their signatures to it. It is not therefore a case of 
"the most recent turn that the open and lasting disobedience of the Franciscan 
province of Herzegovina with regard to the Holy See's decree Romanis 
pontificibus of 6 June 1975 has taken" ( Glas Koncila, no. 49, page 2, 7 December, 
1997), as he would have it, but rather a case of heroic resistance to the evil 
incarnate in the decree as a lie. The nuncio, thinking himself very high and mighty 
because of his title, clearly cares not a jot for men's consciences, which he 
mercilessly tramples underfoot, having replaced the Father of truth with the father 
of lies. 

Bishop Ratko will remember, to the extent that this fact has not fallen victim 
to his distortions of the truth, that in conversation with him I expressed the view 
that the question of the parishes concerned me not at all, that I would leave that 
matter to him and to my provincial, and that I was troubled only by the unjustified 
attack on my priesthood. I have documentary proof that this is so. At the time I 
called upon God, asking Him to bear witness between us. Doubtless God will 
have the last word. 

What they have said about the confirmations in Capljina, they have said. The 
fact is that they were asked to be the ones through whom the Holy Ghost would 
come to Capljina. Why did they not come? The answer must be either that what 
they wrote and what they think are two different things, or that they made no 
effort to prevent something that they saw as being wrong. Taking all things into 
consideration, it seems to me that they are seeking to deceive the people, while 
pretending to tell the truth. 

Only a man who has puffed himself up with pride can maintain that the 
sacraments which Jesus confers through my hands are not valid. If they really 
believe and think so, why, they might spit upon the hosts consecrated at a Mass 
which I have celebrated without the least qualm. Well? 

In Posusje, in Tomislavgrad and now in Capljina, my only concern has been 
my pastoral work. 

Be that as it may, it should be said for the sake of the truth that some in the 
ranks of the clergy are better at business, others at diplomatic manoeuvres, and yet 
others at, well, if the need arises, I shall give concrete proofs of what the third 
class are good at.. .than at being what they ostensibly are [i.e. priests]. 

That may all be considered usual and appropriate for those who have not 
distanced themselves sufficiently from this world, but let not such men then stand 
in the way of those who have the kingdom of heaven before their eyes, and who 


105 



understand only the love of God. 


Father Boze Rados, Franciscan residing at Capljina. 


19 March 1998 

Laurentin Visits Monsignor Peric 

The following communique was published by the Catholic Information 
Agency - Mostar (KIUM), March 1998, pages 14-15. All the footnotes were 
compiled by Monsieur Christian Bhavsar. 

On 19 March 1998 Bishop Ratko Peric, with his secretary, received Father 
Rene Laurentin, who had asked for the audience, in the chancery in Mostar. 
Father Laurentin is a well known French Mariologist, yet in our country he is 
better known as a propagator of the Medjugorje "apparitions", "miracles", and 
other phenomena. Laurentin has written numerous books and brochures on the 
topic (something every year), in which he propagates the authenticity of the 
"apparitions" and "messages" of Medjugorje to such an extent that, as he himself 
admits, he has lost much of the academic prestige which he once enjoyed as a 
serious Mariologist. The bishop mentioned to Laurentin that he used to avail 
himself of his books on Mariology while he taught the subject at the Theological 
School of Sarajevo, yet now he has some serious criticisms concerning 
Laurentin's writings on the Medjugorje "apparitions". 

In a frank and open exchange of opinions, the bishop drew Laurentin's 
attention to many of his imprecise and incorrect conclusions concerning the 
events at Medjugorje. Here we present only a few of the subjects touched upon 
during the meeting. 

In defending the "seer" Ivan, after his expulsion from both the high school 
and the Franciscan minor seminary in Dubrovnik, as a result of academic failure 
(1983). Laurentin wrote in Glas Koncila, 7 May 1984, that Ivan had experienced a 
"shock" due to the severe admonitions of the bishop and by hostile questions and 
mockery from his colleagues. When the superiors and the bishop of Dubrovnik 
reacted by affirming that none of this was true, Laurentin, instead of publicly 
apologizing, resorted to the unusual justification that his French text had not been 
translated well, that he was not referring the bishop of Dubrovnik, but to the 
bishop of Mostar, and he even sent Bishop Pernek, the late bishop of Dubrovnik, 
an "original" text which was different from the one sent to Glas Koncila 2 This 
was a morally inadmissible action. 

2 Documents filed in the diocesan curia of Mostar. 


106 



It is also morally inadmissible that in one of his books of 1985, Laurentin 
wrote that one of the members of the diocesan commission for Medjugorje, 
Monsignor Nikola Bulat, STL, a priest of the Archdiocese of Split, now deceased, 
"is one of those who is fighting for the early resignation of Archbishop Franic so 
that bishop Zanic could replace him. In 1986 Father Bulat stated that this is 
"objectively libellous", "because I never sought this nor do I know anyone else 
who sought it. Twice I asked Laurentin to correct this, yet to my knowledge he 
still has not done so." 3 Laurentin now says that he heard this from someone. 
Bishop Peric told him that truth should be founded not on hearsay but on 
authentic sources. 

Laurentin appears naive in believing and writing in December 1984 that the 
"seer" Vicka, who had been asked earlier about the existence of a personal diary, 
told him: "There is no secret diary with anything written against the 
bishop. 4 Bishop Peric then showed Laurentin Vicka's "diary" which contains 
many passages hostile to Monsignor Zanich, such as, for example: "The Madonna 
answered that Bishop Zanic is the one most to blame for this entire disorder." 5 

A particularly superficial passage appears in one of Laurentin's books of 
1985, where one reads that a pilgrim to Medjugorje sent a message to him saying 
that the Madonna was very pleased with his writing on Medjugorje. The 
"Madonna" of Medjugorje stated precisely the following: "Let priests read 
Laurentin's book and propagate it. 6 These are no longer "messages" of the 
Madonna, but an abuse of her name for a commercial purpose, which certainly 


3 


5 


N Bulat, Neopouzdanost izvora o dogadajima u Medugorju. A document typed 
in 1985, page 24. Document filed in the diocesan curia of Mostar. 

4 Laurentin, op. cit., page 40. 


Vicka Ivankovic, Diary entry for 19 December 1981 to 29 September 1982: 
"Gospa je rekla, da je ove nerede najkrivlji biskup Zanic" (19 December 1981). See 
Appendix II. 


6 


R. Laurentin, Dt imillres Nouvelles de Medjugorje (March, 1985). Complement no. 3, 
OEIL, page 27. 


107 



does a disservice to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Despite all his polite distancing, 
Father Laurentin reveals his superficiality by mentioning this episode in his book. 
It is particularly sad and comical to see how Father Laurentin is involving himself 
in the disobedience of some local Franciscans to the Pope, and yet how ignorant 
he is of their disobedience to the papal decree of 1975 which ordered the 
Franciscans to hand over eight parishes to the bishop of the diocese. In his 
fervour for Medjugorje, and his naivety towards the Franciscans, he wrote in 
1985: "From Medjugorje, the Franciscans have gone as far as to write to their 
general and to Cardinal Ratzinger in order to ask how to proceed. I believe this to 
be a true miracle of Medjugorje. If, according to Laurentin, the "miracles" of 
Medjugorje amount to no more than this, then nobody is revealing the reality of 
Medjugorje more clearly than he is. 

Laurentin is aware of the fact that last year the Franciscan general curia in 
Rome forbade the Franciscan province of Herzegovina to accept more novices 
due to its unbelievable disobedience. And this comes 12 years after he proclaimed 
the fact that they had written to Rome to be "a true miracle of Medjugorje". 

Laurentin wrote, incorrectly, in 1997, that Bishop Peric told Father Jozo 
Zovko that he was "excommunicated". Father Jozo Zovko had, in fact, been 
deprived of his canonical faculties to hear confessions, but despite his suspension 
he continued to hear confessions and thus involved himself in an ipso facto 
suspension. 

Laurentin also wrote incorrectly in 1997 that the Holy Father in returning 
from Sarajevo in that year, authorized "a part of his retinue" to visit Medjugorje. 7 
Curious journalists and ambassadors do not form part of the Pope's retinue. Nor 
did the Pope authorize such a pilgrimage. 

During the two hour discussion, which, in a careful and documented manner, 
had the objective of bringing to light a number of falsehoods concerning 
Medjugorje, the bishop asked the 81 year old Laurentin to begin writing his 
retractions on Medjugorje so that the real truth on this controversial issue could 
be brought to light. By ceasing to write on the "phenomenon" of Medjugorje in 
his current fashion he would render the Church a great service. Father Laurentin, 
the controversial supporter of the "apparitions" of Medjugorje and the 
accompanying events, said that a new book would be published in June this year, 


7 


R. Laurentin, "Temp Ate sur Medjugorje" in Chretiens Magazine, no. 103, p. 34. "The 
Pope did not insist, but during his visit to Sarajevo, he authorized a part of his entourage to 
leave him during the journey in order to make a public pilgrimage to Medjugorje: eleven 
personalities including bishops, and ambassadors, together with Vatican journalists." 


108 



and that he would try to take note of the corrections. Next year he will consider 
putting an end to his writings on Medjugorje. 

At the conclusion of the meeting Bishop Peric and Father Laurentin 
exchanged some of their books. 

KIUM 

Mostar, 20 March 1998. 

Rev. Zeljko Majic. 


22 March 1998 

Laurentin Writes to Monsignor Peric 


Your Excellency, 

I thank you for having received me. I was happy to meet you and to be better 
informed of your point of view. 

I had considered this request for a meeting to be private and not to be the 
object of a public bulletin published by a press agency. 

It is a matter for regret that this communique was published. Besides which 
our conversation was in Italian (a language in which I am not fluent as you are in 
French), and the translation into other languages (Croatian and English) 
presented many problems. I do not recognize what I said in many of the nuances 
of your text. It would be regrettable to initiate a polemic when I am trying to 
proceed towards the silence which you hope for in the coming year. 

Please accept, your Excellency, the expression of my religious respect and of 
my best wishes for your and for your diocese where so many races and 
conversions flourish. 

Rene Laurentin 

La solitude, Grand Bourg 

rue du General San Martin 

B.P. 808 

91001 EVRY CEDEX 

France 


109 



23 March 1998 

The Franciscan Rebellion in Herzegovina — Rome Acts 


Congregation for the Religious 

Prot. No. 32343/97 

Holy Father, the procurator general of the OFM beseeches your Holiness to 
confirm the decree for the dismissal from the aforesaid order of Fra. Petar 
Barbaric, pronounced on 2 March 1998 by the general minister for the reasons 
mentioned previously. 

o 

The Congregation for the Religious, having carefully considered the 
matters set out above, 9 confirms the aforesaid decree for the dismissal from the 
aforesaid order of Fra. Boniface Petar Barbaric as requested, in conformity with 
the provisions of Canons 696/700 of the Code of Canon Law on the grounds of 
his unauthorized absence [that is to say, from the house of his order], all the 
consequences prescribed by canons 701 and 702 of the Code of Canon Law 
moreover ensuing. 

Contrariis quibuslibet non obstantibus, ili. 

Vatican City, 23 March 1998 

O.D. Di Odoardo CP, Jesus Torres CMF, 

Principal of the Section Undersecretary 

Copy conformed to the original, Fr. Antonio Riccio. 


Congregation for Religious 

Prot. No. 32344/97 

Holy Father, the procurator general of the OFM beseeches your Holiness to 
confirm the decree for the dismissal from the aforesaid order of Fra Bozo Rados 
pronounced on 2 March 1998 by the general minister for the reasons mentioned 
previously. 

The Congregation for Religious, having carefully considered the matters set 
out below, confirms the aforesaid decree for the dismissal from the aforesaid 
order of Fra Bozo Rados as requested, in conformity with the provisions of 
canons 696/700 of the Code of Canon Law on the grounds of his unauthorized 
absence [that is to say, from the house of his order], all the consequences 
prescribed by canons 701 and 702 of the Code of Canon Law moreover ensuing. 


8 Congregatio pro Institutis VitO ConsecratO et Societatibus VitO ApostolicQ.. 

9 Documentation previously supplied to the Pope. 

110 



Contrariis quibuslibet non obstcintibus, ili. 

Vatican City, 23 March 1998 

O.D. Di Odoardo CP, Jesus Torres CMF, 

Principal of the Section Undersecretary 

Copy conformed to the original, Fr. Antonio Riccio. 


24 March 1998 

A Letter from Monsignor Ratko Peric to the Abbe Rene 
Laurentin, dated 24 March 1998, 

Protocol Number: 265/98 

Abbe Rene Laurentin 

I acknowledge receipt of your letter of 22 March and respond to it as 
follows: 

1) One cannot speak privately on the "apparitions" of Medjugorje when 
they have become well known throughout the world these last 15 years through 
your hundreds of thousands copies of publications in various languages. It is 
therefore only right and just to publish as we have done, the communique of our 
conversation in Mostar on 19 March 1998, whilst dutifully notifying you 
beforehand. 

2) Nothing was done except that which you already placed in your writings, 
as we demonstrated to you previously. Hence, you should be able to recognise 
yourself in your text. This Chancery takes its responsibility for the Croatian and 
English texts. We now forward the communique with the exact references. We 
have not yet utilised your phrase which was written to the esteemed Benedictine 
Prior P. Touw, last August, that the Holy Father regrets my "action" regarding 
Medjugorje, which you denied writing when I asked you personally. Meanwhile 
your handwriting reveals the contrary. I would appreciate a response from you on 
this matter. 

3) With your controversial books on the Medjugorje "apparitions" you 
have sown, not only in this country but also in the Catholic world, plenty of 
discord, ambiguity and explicit untruths which will have to be eradicated with 


ill 



time. You are both competent and morally obliged to do this. We want to be at the 
service of the truth which can liberate us from many inauthenticities regarding 
Medjugorje, of which you have become a known herald. 

4) With your stories on the "apparitions" of Medjugorje, which are truly 
regrettable you have helped me come to the conviction and to the constat de non 
supernaturalitate of the so called "apparitions" of Medjugorje. What motives you 
may have in the entire affair are for you to resolve before God. 

5) From now on I cannot remain silent regarding any of your works 
containing the nonsenses of Medjugorje, which is destroying Catholic unity, 
ecclesial peace and the pastoral care of this local Church. 

6) Besides making these deplorable things public, I also regularly inform 
the competent Dicasteries of the Holy See, which as colunma et firmamentum 
veritatis must be informed on the matters. 

7) It would truly be regrettable if you were to wait till next year to cease 
writing on Medjugorje. On the other hand, it would be an honour to the Madonna 
if you were to stop immediately, except for writing the necessary retractationes if 
you wish to appear as a friend of the truth. 

With regards 


+ Ratko Peric, m. p. 


26 May 1998 

Beautiful Gift or Pathetic Delusion 

On 26 May 1998 a letter concerning Medjugorje was sent by the 
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to the bishop of a French diocese in 
the Indian Ocean. The letter was flashed around the world on the Medjugorje 
Internet and is being represented as a change of attitude on the part of the 
Congregation to the spurious "apparitions" in Herzegovina. The letter has been 
described in euphoric terms by spokesmen for the Medjugorje industry as a 
beautiful present to the Virgin from the Church on the 17th anniversary of her 
apparitions. The letter is, in fact, a clear reiteration of the totally negative 
attitude of the Congregation to the Herzegovinian fraud. 


112 



The background to the letter is as follows: in September 1997 Monsieur 
Thierry Boutet, secretary general of the association Famille Chretienne, wrote to 
Monsignor Ratko Peric, Bishop of Mostar, asking him to explain, for the readers 
of his journal Edifa, his position apropos the alleged "apparitions" The full text 
of the bishop's reply, dated 2 October 1997, reads as follows: 

Dear Monsieur Boutet, 

I am replying to your letter of 29 September received by fax at the 
Nunciature in Sarajevo. 

As regards the curia of this diocese concerning the alleged apparitions or 
revelations at Medjugorje, in particular the formula Non constat cle 
supernaturalitate or Constat cle non supernaturalitate. This is what I can say: 

1) The second diocesan commission, which worked from 1984 to 
1986, voted explicitly on 2 May 1986, by an overwhelming majority for the Non 
constat cle supernaturalitate (11 negative votes, 2 positive, 1 in nucleo, 1 
abstention). 

2) The declaration of the episcopal conference of 1991 stated: "On 
the basis of studies conducted so far it cannot be affirmed that supernatural 
apparitions and revelations are occurring." 

3) The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, citing in full the 
declaration of the bishops of the ex- Yugoslavia, in two identical letters sent to 
two French bishops, Monsignor Daloz, Archbishop of Besan§on (4 July 1995) 
and Monsignor Tardivet, Bishop of Langres (23 March 1996), stated: "From 
what has been said, it follows that official pilgrimages to Medjugorje, 
representing it as a place of authentic Marian apparitions, must not be organized 
either on a parish or diocesan level, because this would be a contradiction of 
what has been affirmed by the bishops of the ex- Yugoslavia in their previously 
cited declaration." 

4) On the basis of a serious study by 30 of our researchers (including 
three commissions), of my experience as the bishop after five years in the 
diocese, of the scandalous disobedience which surrounds the phenomenon, of the 
lies that have been placed on occasions in the mouth of the "Blessed Virgin", of 
the uncharacteristic repetition of messages for 16 years, of the strange manner in 
which the "spiritual directors" of the self-styled "seers" accompany them 
throughout the world to disseminate their propaganda, on the principle that the 
"Blessed Virgin" appears at the Fiat ("Let her appear") of the "seers": 

My conviction and my position is not only Non constat cle 
supernaturalitate, but also Constat cle non supernaturalitate as regards the 
apparitions or revelations of Medjugorje. 

5) Nevertheless, I am open to any study which the Holy See might 


113 



undertake, with its supreme authority over the Catholic Church, to render a 
supreme and definitive judgement on this case, and that as quickly as possible for 
the good of souls, for the honour of the Church and that of the Blessed Virgin. 

Monsignor Ratko Peric 
Bishop of Mostar. 


Damage Control 

Proprietors of the multi-million dollar Medjugorje industry were outraged 
at the publication of Monsignor Peric's letter which could have affected their 
lucrative cash receipts. What particularly angered them was that Monsignor Peric 
had not been content simply to reaffirm the 1991 Zadar statement by stating Non 
constat de supernaturalitate ("It cannot be affirmed that supernatural apparitions 
and revelations are occurring"), but that he expressed his personal conviction of 
Constat de non supernaturalitate ("It is confirmed that there is nothing 
supernatural"). Monsignor Peric makes it quite clear that this judgement is simply 
the expression of his personal opinion, and not the final definitive official 
judgement. He mentions the possibility of the Holy See making its own study of 
the question, but at present it is not doing so, and has given no indication that it 
intends to do so. An interview with Monsignor Peric, by Yves Chiron, published 
in the French journal Present, on 25 January 1997, made clear that the episcopal 
conference of Bosnia-Herzegovina (which is comprised of four bishops) has the 
authority to form a new commission of enquiry into the events at Medjugorje, but 
the four Bishops are preoccupied with the consequences of the four years' war 
(1992-1995), and of the reconstruction of the life of the Church, and do not see 
the need to form a new commission of enquiry and to make a new declaration 
concerning Medjugorje. There is, therefore, no enquiry being made into the 
events at Medjugorje at present, and so the current official verdict remains: Non 
constat de supernaturalitate. There can not be the least doubt that the personal 
conviction of Monsignor Peric, Constat de non supernaturalitate , will be 
endorsed by the other three bishops of Bosnia-Herzegovina should they 
eventually decide to establish a new commission of enquiry. 

In a damage-control exercise circulated to the multi-national outlets of the 
Medjugorje industry it was stated that Edifa is not VOsservatore Romano (no one 
had claimed that it was), that Cardinal Ratzinger had not ratified the Constat de 
non supernaturalitate of Monsignor Peric (no one had claimed that he had), and 
that with his Polish background, Pope John Paul II would be able to recognize 
that the tactics used by the bishop were those of the former Eastern block. This, it 
was explained, was said without any bitterness! The "Eastern block tactic" 
employed by Monsignor Peric in his letter was simply to state a series of facts, 

114 



which are indisputable, and to express his personal opinion. The damage-control 
response was written by one Father Daniel-Ange. As this priest is an uncritical 
disciple of Medjugorje he is, as a matter of course, described by proponents of the 
"apparitions" as an advocate of "the Light", and his response is "courageous". 

The courageous response of this advocate of light contained, inter alia, the 
following points: 

1) The position expressed by Monsignor Peric was not the official and 
definitive judgement of the Church. 

No one had claimed that it was. 

2) Edifa had no right to intervene in the question of Medjugorje or to 
carry out its own enquiry as the matter was very complex. 

Why should a Catholic journal not carry an article on Medjugorje? Dozens 
of Catholic journals have published favourable reports, to which Father 
Daniel-Ange has made no objection. What he is stating, therefore, is that 
Catholic journals are entitled to publish reports on Medjugorje only if they concur 
with his own opinion. Shades of the Eastern block! 

3) The Edifa enquiry was neither impartial, objective, or honest. 

This means that it contained facts that the Medjugorje industry did not want 
known. As regards impartiality, the dossier included an interview with Father 
Daniel-Ange three times longer than the letter of Monsignor Peric. 

4) The dossier did not include the declarations in favour of Medjugorje 
made, it is claimed, by numerous bishops. The only bishops with official 
authority to pronounce on the matter are the two bishops ruling the diocese during 
the course of the "apparitions", bishops Zanich and Peric, and members of the 
official episcopal commissions which had been established to examine the 
phenomenon. As no commission of enquiry into Medjugorje is established at 
present, Monsignor Peric is the only bishop with the authority to make official 
pronouncements. But, claims Father Daniel Ange, pro -Medjugorje bishops from 
other countries have moral authority, and that this moral authority is recognized. 
Recognized by Father Daniel-Ange, presumably? 

5) Only negative aspects concerning Medjugorje are included in the 
dossier. 

This is a somewhat strange claim as Father Daniel-Ange himself was given 


115 



three pages to explain what he considered to be the positive aspects of the 
phenomenon, and testimonies from other Medjugorje disciples were included on 
pages 89-90, including one from the fanatically pro -Medjugorje bishop of 
Saint-Denis-de-la-Reunion, Monsignor Gilbert Aubry. Bear in mind in reading 
the testimony of Monsignor Aubry, the claim of Father Daniel-Ange that no 
pro-Medjugorje bishop was permitted to exercise his "moral authority" and 
contribute to the Edifa dossier. Monsignor Aubry comments: 

In the midst of winter I went secretly to Medjugorje bearing the weight of 
my 20 years as a bishop. Pardon and thanks. While climbing Mount Krizevac I 
was sometimes on my knees with tears in my eyes. And in my breast was there 
not beating a sweet and humble heart that was not my own. Well then? My God! 

It is no longer I who live. ..At the age of 53, 1 left with the strength of a new heart 
and a new spirit for the mission that inflames me and carries me to the faith. Joy 
and hope. Justice and peace. Together with Mary I give my testimony this day. 

A Beautiful Present? 

In June 1998 an euphoric Father Daniel-Ange announced to the world 
through the Medjugorje internet that "the Church has offered a beautiful present 
to the Virgin" on the 17th anniversary of her apparitions. This "beautiful present" 
was a response from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to a bishop 
who had asked for clarification concerning Monsignor Peric's affirmation of 
Constat de non supernaturalitate. The bishop in question was, surprise, surprise, 
Monsignor Gilbert Aubry of Saint-Denis-de-la-Reunion! The full text of the 
Congregation's reply is as follows: 

Congregation Citta del Vaticano 

Pro Doctrina Fidei Palazzo del S. Uffizio 

26 May 1998 

Pr. No 154/81-05922 

To His Excellency, Monsignor Gilbert Aubry, Bishop of Saint-Denis-de- la 
-Reunion 


Your Excellency, 

In your letter of 1 January 1998, you submitted to this dicastery several 
questions about the position of the Holy See and of the bishop of Mostar in 
regard to the so-called apparitions of Medjugorje, private pilgrimages, and the 
pastoral care of the faithful who go there. 

In regard to this matter, I think that it is impossible to reply to each 


116 



question posed by Your Excellency. The main thing that I would like to point 
out is that the Holy See does not ordinarily take a position of its own regarding 
allegedly supernatural phenomena as a court of the first instance. As for the 
credibility of the "apparitions" in question, this dicastery holds to what was 
decided by the bishops of the former Yugoslavia in the Declaration of Zadar, 10 
April 1991: "On the basis of the investigations so far, it can not be affirmed that 
one is dealing with supernatural apparitions and revelations." Since the division 
of Yugoslavia into different independent nations it would now pertain to the 
members of the Episcopal Conference of Bosnia- Herzegovina to eventually 
reopen the examination of this case, and to make any new pronouncements that 
might be called for. 

What Bishop Peric said in his letter to the Secretary General of Famille 
Chretienne, declaring: "My conviction and my position is not only Non constat 
cle supernaturalitate , but likewise Constat cle non supernaturalitate of the 
“apparitions” or revelations in Medjugorje", should be considered the 
expression of the personal conviction of the bishop of Mostar which he has the 
right to express as ordinary of the place, but which is and remains his personal 
opinion. 

Finally, as regards pilgrimages to Medjugorje, which are conducted 
privately, this Congregation points out that they are permitted on condition that 
they are not regarded as an authentification of events still taking place and which 
still call for an examination by the Church. 

I hope that I have replied satisfactorily at least to the principal questions 
that you have presented to this dicastery, and I beg your Excellency to accept the 
expression of my devoted sentiments. 

Archbishop Tarcisio Bertone 
Secretary. 


Pathetic Delusion 

Father Daniel-Ange provided an euphoric commentary on Archbishop 
Bertone's letter, proclaiming in huge bold letters: 

We Cannot Thank God Enough for this Clarification Which Has Been 
Waited for So Long. 

Why unstinted thanks on behalf of the Medjugorje industry should be 
prompted by a letter which states nothing that was not already known is 
something which Father Daniel-Ange would find hard to explain, but he is 
fortunate in knowing that explanations are never required by the uncritical adepts 
of Medjugorje, provided that the statement in question coincides with their 
fantasies. Among the points made by Daniel-Ange are the following: 

117 



1) The declarations of the bishop of Mostar reflect only his 
personal opinion. Consequently they are not a definitive judgement of the 
Church. (Emphasis in original.) 

The first sentence contains a serious and manifest falsehood. Archbishop 
Bertone did not state that the declarations (plural) of Monsignor Peric reflected 
his personal opinion, only this particular statement which, the Archbishop adds, 
"He has the right to express as ordinary of the place." The second sentence is 
completely unnecessary as Monsignor Peric's statement was made in his personal 
capacity, and not as "a definitive judgement of the Church". As very few of those 
who read the Daniel-Ange commentary, which was transmitted on the Internet 
throughout the world, will have seen the text of Monsignor Peric's letter, most 
will conclude that he had tried dishonestly to claim that his statement did indeed 
represent the "definitive judgement of the Church". 

2) One is directed to the judgement of Zadar, which leaves the door 
open for future investigations. In the meantime pastoral pilgrimages with pastoral 
accompaniment for the faithful are permitted. 

Once again there is nothing new here. Daniel-Ange gives the impression that 
Monsignor Peric had claimed that the door was not open to future investigations, 
whereas in his letter, as Daniel-Ange was fully aware, he made specific mention 
of such a possibility. Daniel-Ange also gives the impression that Monsignor 
Peric had denied that private pilgrimages to Medjugorje were permitted. What 
Monsignor Peric had included in his letter was the official response of 
Archbishop Bertone to two French bishops stating that: "From what has been 
said, it follows that official pilgrimages to Medjugorje, representing it as a place 
of authentic Marian apparitions, must not be organized either on a parish or 
diocesan level, because this would be a contradiction of what has been affirmed 
by the bishops of the ex- Yugoslavia in their previously cited declaration." 

Archbishop Bertone makes precisely the same point in his letter to 
Monsignor Aubry, explaining to him that even private pilgrimages are not 
permitted if they are "regarded as an authentification of events still taking place 
and which still call for an examination by the Church." As every pilgrimage 
organized by the Medjugorje industry is promoted as a pilgrimage to a place of 
authentic apparitions, it follows that every one of these pilgrimages is organized 
in defiance of the clearly expressed ruling of the Congregation for the Doctrine of 
the Faith. Many of the so-called Medjugorje centres throughout the world are in 
reality travel agencies which make a great deal of money by inducing naive 
Catholics to go to Medjugorje because they have been deluded into believing that 
Our Fady appears there several times a day. 


118 



3) A new commission could eventually be named. 

This is not in dispute, and it is of great importance to note that Archbishop 
Bertone states that such a commission would be composed of the members of the 
Episcopal Conference of Bosnia-Herzegovina. This makes it clear, contrary to 
what some Medjugorje propagandists have been claiming, that the Holy See is not 
conducting its own investigation. 

4) In the meantime all Catholics may go as pilgrims to Medjugorje. 

They may go, but not as members of an official pilgrimage, and not if they do 
so in the belief that Medjugorje is a place of authentic Marian apparitions. 

To sum up, in describing Archbishop Bertone's letter to Monsignor Aubry as 
"a beautiful present", Daniel-Ange and his fellow propagandists are deluding 
themselves and their dupes in the most pathetic manner possible. Nothing 
whatsoever has been changed in the attitude of the Sacred Congregation to 
Medjugorje. It should be noted that the Sacred Congregation always employs 
inverted commas when referring to the so-called apparitions. In view of the 
distorted interpretation of Archbishop Bertone's letter given in the 
pro-Medjugorje media, Monsignor Peric felt it necessary to make a statement 
concerning this letter which will now be quoted in full. 


21 July 1998 

Private Visits to Unauthentic Apparitions 

A Statement by Monsignor Ratko Peric 

The local press has once again returned to the phenomenon of Medjugorje. 
The reason is the letter of Archbishop Bertone, Secretary of the Congregation for 
the Doctrine of the Faith, dated 26 May 1998 to Bishop Aubry of the French 
island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean. Motivated by the interpretation given to 
this letter in the media, we set out a brief chronology of expert opinion and the 
official position the Church, which to date remains unchanged, regarding the 
events of Medjugorje. 

Unrecognized apparitions The phenomenon of the "apparitions" in 
Medjugorje has been studied by three commissions. In the second commission, 
the local bishop of Mostar, Monsignor Zanic, called in specialists from Church 


119 



faculties and scientific institutions. On 2 May 1986, the members of the 
commission voted non constat de supernaturalitate, that is, it does not follow that 
the "events" in Medjugorje involve supernatural apparitions. Having informed 
the congregation with the accord of the bishop of Mostar, the former bishops' 
conference established a new commission in 1987 which brought the results of its 
investigations to the bishops in the autumn of 1990. On the basis of the studies 
the bishops' conference, gathered in Zadar on 10 April 1991, gave a negative 
declaration regarding Medjugorje: "On the basis of investigations made thus far, 
it is impossible to confirm that the events involve supernatural apparitions or 
revelations." These "apparitions" are to be considered "so-called" or "alleged". 
The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith also refers to them with quotation 
marks. 

In the current circumstances, the question of further studying the alleged 
apparitions at Medjugorje has not been raised at the level of the Bishops' 
Conference of Bosnia and Herzegovina. These so-called apparitions and their 
"messages" have been aimed against the local bishop from the very beginning 
(1981) and are also closely tied to the "case of Herzegovina" which the Holy See 
very much takes to heart and would like to resolve as soon as possible. This refers 
to the disobedience of the Herzegovinian Franciscan province in its execution of a 
papal decree regarding certain parishes in the diocese of Mostar-Duvno. 

"Private" Visits. Due to the lack of authenticity regarding "supernatural 
apparitions" in Medjugorje, the local bishop, Monsignor Zanic, was against the 
organizing of visits to the place of the so-called apparitions. The former bishops' 
Conference declared that "organized official pilgrimages to Medjugorje, as if 
already taken to be accepted by the Church, are not allowed." 

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith wrote to the Italian Bishops' 
Conference in 1985, in order to study the suitability of suggesting to the Italian 
bishops "that they publicly dissuade the organization of pilgrimages to the 
aforementioned alleged place of 'apparitions', as well as all other methods of 
publicity, especially regarding the press, which could prejudice a calm 
examination of the 'events' on the part of the special commission which had been 
canonically established for this purpose." 

The bishops' conference gathered in Zadar, in declaring that it is impossible 
to confirm the authenticity of the Medjugorje "apparitions" or "revelations", also 
mentioned that there exist "great gatherings of people from all parts of the world 
who come to Medjugorje for religious and other motives". 

"Private" visits of this nature have never been a matter of controversy, since 
going to Medjugorje would then be similar to visiting any other Catholic parish. 
Yet it has always been clearly stated that this cannot be done officially, using the 
church and pulpit, in order to preach the authenticity of the alleged apparitions 
and proclaiming the place a "sanctuary" of unrecognized apparitions. 


120 



The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith wrote to the French 
Archbishop Daloz of Besangon in 1995, and to Bishop Taverdet of Langres in 
1996, that "official pilgrimages to Medjugorje, perceived as a place of authentic 
Marian apparitions, cannot be organized at parish or diocesan levels, since they 
would contradict what the bishops of the former Yugoslavia stated earlier in their 
above mentioned declaration." 

Regarding "pilgrimages to Medjugorje of a private nature", the congregation 
maintains that they are allowed "under the condition that they are not considered 
an authentication of events still going on, which demand further investigation by 
the Church". Hence, nothing new here. Official or church pilgrimages are not 
allowed, nor are "private" visits allowed that have the intent of proving that the 
so-called apparitions and alleged "messages" are authentic. Therefore the official 
position of the local bishop is the same as the official position of the bishops' 
conference of 1991. And both priests and the faithful as Catholics should adhere 
to this position. 

Mostar, 21 July 1998. 

-i-Ratko Peric 

Bishop of Mostar 


15 September 1998 

An Unexpected Endorsement for Monsignor Peric 


A contradiction of the euphoric judgement of Father Daniel-Ange that 
Monsignor Bertone's letter constituted "a beautiful present" for devotees of 
Medjugorje came from a most unexpected source — Father Rene Laurentin, no 
less. His interpretation of the letter endorses the interpretation given to it by 
Monsignor Peric. Writing in the 15 September 1998 issue of Chretiens 
Magazine, Father Laurentin insisted that the significance of the letter was 
negative for Medjugorje. The key section of his article reads: 

This clarification is valuable and will reassure consciences that have been 
troubled artificially, but the devotees of Medjugorje can not reassure themselves 
too quickly on the basis of the letter from Monsignor Bertone. This letter states 
specifically that from now on the decision has been returned to the episcopal 
conference of Bosnia. Now this conference consists of only four bishops who 
are in total solidarity with the diocesan bishop, with a more of less predominant 
concern to leave in his hands the liberty of judging events in his diocese. 
Monsignor Peric therefore is in a position of total control to impose his personal 

121 



decision that the supernatural is excluded from Medjugorje. Our Lady is at his 
mercy, and he thinks that he has acquired the right to put an end to her pilgrimage 
to Medjugorje, after having published a book about her hostile to Medjugorje. 

Out of respect for the opinion of the Pope, which he does not ignore, he 
has stated prudently that he does not wish to precipitate hypothesis of a new 
investigation. He has even suggested that Rome might take the judgement into 
its own hands. But here [in the letter of monsignor Bertone] Rome has returned 
the ball into his court. The letter is, therefore, not the "good news", nor the 
"recognition" of Medjugorje that some have proclaimed. 


16 November 1998 
Implementing Romanis Pontificibus 


General Curia of the Friars Minor 
Via Santa Maria Mediatrice 25 
00165 Rome 
Italy 

16 November 1998 

To all Priests, Religious and Faithful 
in the Diocese of Mostar-Duvno 

On the eve of Advent, as we prepare to celebrate Christmas, wishing you 
abundant peace and prosperity, we announce the decision made in Rome on 10 
November 1998 at the Congregation for the Evangelization of the Peoples. 
Together with Cardinal Joseph Tomko, the prefect, and Archbishop Marcello 
Zago, the secretary of that congregation, we, the undersigned, the bishop of 
Mostar and Duvno and the general minister of the Order of Friars Minor were 
present, both charged with carrying into effect the decree Romanis Pontificibus, 
which was, as is well known, confirmed by Pope Paul VI in special form in 1975 
and confirmed by the reigning Sovereign Pontiff, John Paul U. Also present 
were two members of the diocesan clergy from Mostar and four Franciscans 
representing the general curia and the Herzegovinian province. It was 
unanimously agreed that at the beginning of next Lent, that is to say, Sunday, 21 
February 1999, the OFM would place at the disposal of the bishop of the diocese 
the parishes mentioned in the papal decree. 

We are conscious of the acknowledged historic contribution of the OFM to 
the life of the Church in Herzegovina. They have a part in the spiritual heritage 
of the diocese and its very Catholic identity. We therefore count on the 
Franciscans for the future too. More than a century ago, in the year 1881, Pope 
Feo XIII re-established the diocese of Mostar-Duvno, setting up a regular 
hierarchy. Since then vocations to the secular and religious clergy have enriched 
the local church ever more. Co-operation in a spirit of unity appears all the more 
important on that account, under the leadership of the ordinary (bishop) of the 


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diocese, sharing pastoral work, and assisting with their respective gifts. 

So with renewed strength we continue along the way of the Church, which 
we wish to be steeped in mutual respect and esteem, brotherly co-operation and 
unity between the religious and secular clergy. 

Making known to you this agreement, we call upon you all, lay faithful, 
monks and nuns, secular and religious clergy, who are all the children of the 
same heavenly Father, that they should foster ever more the spirit of common 
good in the unity of the local Church which exists in Herzegovina. We 
particularly stress to every parish community and to each individual believer who 
belongs to it, that each and every one should advance that necessary brotherly 
unity, avoiding damaging divisions. Just as in the whole Church, so in the 
diocese of Mostar-Duvno, each and every community of Catholic believers must 
work in unity with the bishop. 

Renewing our commitment for the good of the Church as a whole and 
locally, we have before our eyes and vigorously commend both the particular 
pastoral service of the secular clergy and the special gifts of the Franciscan 
religious. 

There is a case in which, after repeated admonitions of the men in question 
by their lawful superiors, Holy Church has confirmed the dismissal from the 
Franciscan Order of two religious who used to belong to the Herzegovinian 
province, but who, sadly, declined to keep their vow of obedience. We pray to 
the Holy Ghost to enlighten them, so that they can find the way back to full unity 
with the Church. 

Our heavenly Father to whom the coming year of preparation for the great 
jubilee of the year 2000 urges us to ever more perfect unity with Himself and one 
another in the Church, which is a sign and instrument of that unity throughout the 
world. May Saint Joseph, the head of the Holy Family, and protector of the 
diocese of Mostar-Duvno, together with Mary, the most holy Mother of God, 
unite us before the Saviour’s crib, which was particularly dear to Saint Francis, 
as it is to us all. 

Rome, 16 November 1998 

Fr. Giacomo Bini + Ratko Peric 

General Minister OFM Bishop of Mostar-Duvno. 


21 November 1998 

Dismissal of Three Franciscans from the Order of Friars Minor 


General Curia of the Friars Minor 

Via Santa Maria Mediatrice 25 

00165 Rome 

Italy 


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Procurator General 


Prot. No. 087753 

Your Excellency, 

It was agreed at the meeting held at the Congregation for the Evangelisation 
of the Peoples on 10 November that I was to inform you if decrees were made for 
the dismissal of Fra Boniface P. Barbaric and Fra Bozo Rados from the Order of 
Friars Minor. I now write to inform you how the matter has unfolded. 

The general minister, Fra Hermann Schaluck, and the bishop of 
Mostar-Duvno, Monsignor Peric, had decided that, in order to bring into effect 
the decree Romanis Pontificibus, the parish of Capljina, formerly entrusted to the 
Province of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, would from 12 May 
1996 be handed over for the Bishop to dispose of at his unfettered discretion. 
Accordingly, no Franciscan was authorized to reside within that parish and carry 
out pastoral duties within it. This was made known to all Franciscans in the 
province. 

Fra Boniface P. Barbaric and Fra Bozo Rados declined to be transferred, 
and remained in Capljina, despite repeated and authoritative requests and orders 
to the contrary. 

Since they have persisted in disobedience, the procedure for their dismissal 
from the order was set in train. On 28 February 1998 a general consistory of the 
Order voted unanimously in a secret ballot to expel Fra Boniface P. Barbaric and 
Fra Bozo Rados of the province of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 
Bosnia and Herzegovina from the Order of Friars Minor, in accordance with the 
provisions of section 1 of canon 699. 

The Congregation for the Religious confirmed the decrees for the dismissal 
of the above-mentioned Brothers on 23 March 1998. 

Since there is no record of their having lodged any appeal in the time fixed 
for so doing, the decrees take effect according to the canon, with the result that 
Fra Boniface P. Barbaric and Fra Bozo Rados no longer belong to the order of 
Friars Minor. 

Your respectful servant in the Ford, 

Father Antonio Riccio OFM, 

Procurator General 

Monsignor Ratko Peric, 

The Episcopal Residence, 

88000 Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina. 


14 December 1998 


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Further Implementation of the Decree Romanis Pontificibus 

Communique 


On 13 and 14 December, the general minister of the Order of Friars Minor, 
Fra Giacomo Bini, and Msgr Ratko Peric, Bishop of Mostar-Duvno, as the 
persons charged with carrying the decree Romanis Pontificibus into effect, met in 
Mostar in the presence of a representative of the Holy See, Archbishop Marcello 
Zago, Secretary of the Congregation for the Evangelization of the Peoples, and of 
the Provincial of the Franciscan Province of Herzegovina, Fra Tomislav Pervan. 

Joint meetings with a section of the diocesan clergy and of the Franciscans 
took place in a brotherly atmosphere of unity both at local level and with the 
whole Church. 

In the course of the above-mentioned meetings the question of the transfer of 
the parishes mentioned in the decree to the administration of the diocesan clergy 
was dealt with energetically. Both sides undertook their transfer in accordance 
with canon law, the decisions of the general minister and his council and the 
provincial. 

The Holy See and the order are well aware of the steps that are being taken. 
Disobedient Franciscans should know that they are liable to be punished 
according to canon law and the rules of their order. It is desired that the decree 
should at long last be implemented for the good of the Church, the diocese, the 
Franciscan province, and, above all, the faithful. 

We remind Christian believers that sacraments which they receive from the 
punished Franciscans are invalid. 10 

It is important that all, both clerics and the faithful, should see the local 
bishop, who is working with the secular and religious clergy, as the centre and 
point of reference of diocesan ecclesiastical life. 

A special appeal is made to all members of the (Franciscan) community in 
this diocese, which has always been faithful to the Catholic Church, to follow the 
precepts of the Holy Father, the Holy See and the authorities which they have 
appointed, in a spirit of brotherly unity with one another, for the sake of spiritual 
and temporal progress in this diocese which the Pope loves, and whose affairs he 
is closely following. 

Mostar, 14th December 1998 


10 This statement would not, of course, refer to Baptism and the Eucharist which 
would be valid if celebrated even by an excommunicated priest who intended to do what 
the Church does in these sacraments. 


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+ Marcello Zago OMI 
+Ratko Peric 
Fra. Giacomo Bini, OFM. 


January 1999 

With Truth Against Lies Concerning the Parish of Capljina 

The article which follows appeared in the January 1999 edition ofCrkva na 
Kamenu (The Church on the Rock), the pastoral bulletin of the dioceses of 
Herzegovina. 

At the end of November 1998, official documents appeared in the Croatian 
press regarding the dismissal from the Order of Friars Minor of Brothers Boniface 
Barbaric and Bozo Rados, who are illicitly officiating in the parish of Capljina. 
The reactions of the two former Franciscans appeared in various newspapers, 
such as Slobodna Bosna I Herzegovina, Vecernji List, Jutarnji List, Globus and 
Nacional, and on radio and television. Even certain Muslim and Serbian media 
carried the story. Out of regard for the truth about the Church and the faith, and 
for the sake of relationships within the Church, we have asked the bishop of 
Mostar-Duvno, Monsignor Ratko Peric, to deal with these articles as we read 
them. 

Crkva na Kamenu: Is it true that the dismissed Franciscans were not 
permitted to put forward any defence and that their order expelled them without 
affording them any opportunity to put forward a defence (as is suggested in 
Slobodna )? 

Monsignor Peric: They need not have been expelled, had they been willing 
to obey their order and the Holy See. Following the lawful decision [at first 
instance] they might have defended themselves within the permitted time limits, 
that is to say, they could have lodged an appeal to the Holy See (more particularly 
to the Congregation for Religious) questioning the decision of their order, had 
they wished to do so. So serious a step as dismissal from a religious order can not 
validly be taken according to canon law, unless the wrongdoer has been 
admonished at least once to desist from his stubborn disobedience, and has been 
allowed a reasonable time to come to his senses. Admonitions reached Capljina 
within the prescribed time limits from the lawful superiors and from the 
provincial and from the general curia of the Franciscan Order. It is quite another 


126 



question whether the expelled Franciscans were willing to accept the 
admonitions; if such letters and such emissaries are not received, the fault does 
not lie with the superiors. But if the expelled were perhaps under the impression 
that it was sufficient that they should be defended by an unauthorized assembly of 
the faithful, they unfortunately took yet another false step in the preparation of 
their defence. 

Crkva na Kamenu: The expelled Franciscans believe that the Pope “does 
not know the whole truth about them.” (Globus, Jutarnji List, Nacional) “What 
do you say to that?“ 

Monsignor Peric: They may believe that and say it till the cows come home, 
yet all persons in authority were and are fully appraised of these grave matters, 
beginning with the Vatican dicasteries and the Floly Father himself. This matter 
was not dealt with overnight, rather it proceeded strictly according to canon law, 
with due regard to all 1 1 canons concerning the dismissal of religious (canons 694 
to 704). Indeed, eight months passed from their dismissal from their Order until 
notice thereof appeared in the newspapers, from the 23 March to the 23 
November 1998. Accordingly, nothing was done contrary to canon law, or 
without the knowledge of the two former Franciscans. 

Crkva na Kamenu: They claim (see Globus and Nacional ) that three bishops 
of Mostar, namely Bishop Cule, Bishop Zanic and you yourself have deceived the 
Holy See and that the Pope does not know about the papal decree concerning the 
allocation of parishes. Is that possible? 

Monsignor Peric: That is neither possible nor the case. Pope Paul VI knew 
of the Holy See’s decree concerning the allocation of parishes dated 6 June 1975. 
He personally confirmed it on 5 June 1975 in forma specifica. Moreover, Pope 
Paul VI sent a letter on 25 June 1975 to all the members of the Franciscan 
province of Herzegovina, saying “Know for certain, beloved sons, that the decree 
prepared by the Sacred Congregation for the Evangelization of the Peoples, which 
we confirm and commend to you in every particular, was recently delivered to the 
bishops of Mostar and Duvno and the general minister of our beloved Order of 
Friars Minor.” Probably there were even then some who denied that the Pope 
knew of all this, so the Supreme Pontiff decided to write a letter to the whole 
province. 

Crkva na Kamenu: What was the principal reason for the dismissals from 
the order in this case? 


127 



Monsignor Peric: According to the published official documents the 
principal ground which the General of the Franciscan Order submitted to the 
congregation for Religious, and which the Congregation submitted to the Holy 
Father, was that the two Franciscans were absent without leave from the house of 
their order. Their superiors summoned them to come to the house, in, for 
example, Siroki Brijeg or Mostar or Duvno, but they refused to obey. They 
remained outside the house of their order, in this case in Capljina, for months, 
indeed for years. 

Crkva na Kamenu: One of those expelled says that “the Franciscans are the 
opposition to the Church establishment, as the religious orders ever were, but as 
time went by, they fell asleep”. 

Monsignor Peric: I have never heard that said before, nor do I believe it 
now. I have always believed that religious are called to bear witness to the 
Church’s second defining characteristic “one, holy...” Religious of both sexes are 
called by their lawful keeping of their vows and obedience to their superiors, and 
in the last analysis to the pope and the bishops, to follow Christ particularly 
closely. The structures of the episcopate and the religious orders are not the same. 
Christ willed and established the Apostles and their successors, the bishops, 
whereas the religious orders were established as the centuries went by. The 
Church by her distinguished members, the founders of the particular orders and 
congregations, desires and regulates their conduct within the Church. The 
bishops are the structure of the Church, whereas the religious are a structure 
within the Church. The bishops go back to the first century, whereas the 
Franciscans and the Dominicans go back to the thirteenth century, the Jesuits to 
the sixteenth, the Salesians to the nineteenth, and Mother Teresa’s Missionaries 
of Love to 1948. It is not right that either bishops or religious should sleep, but if 
there is unhealthy opposition, then they must be expelled, even though it were the 
case of an archbishop, such as Marcel Lefebvre, who was once excommunicated. 

Crkva na Kamenu: One of those expelled says that you said: “Even if I 
should drive all the faithful to take Islam and lose their Christian faith, I would do 
anything to make all the Franciscans fall at my feet.” (Nacional). 

Monsignor Peric: No sane man could say such things. The journalist must 
have known that it was fantasy, yet he repeated the allegation. 

Crkva na Kamenu: Might I ask you to comment upon a phrase which is 
heard often enough from certain Franciscans in Herzegovina, and which the 
expelled Franciscans formulate thus: “Even before he went to Rome to study, 

128 



Peric held spiritual exercises for nuns in Virovitica. Even then he coarsely said: ‘I 
will break the necks of the Herzegovinian Franciscans. I will break their backs’.” 

Monsignor Peric: Bishop Petar Cule sent me to study theology in Rome in 
1965, after two years studying philosophy in Zagreb. I was ordained in 1969, and 
finished my studies on taking my doctorate in 1971. It is quite impossible that 
nuns would have summoned a mere theology student to conduct spiritual 
exercises for them. While I have conducted spiritual exercises on ninety 
occasions in the course of 17 years as a priest, beginning in 1975, and six years as 
a bishop, I have never conducted spiritual exercises in Virovitica. I have never 
uttered such words, for it would be not only coarse, but senseless. Since I was 
consecrated a bishop, I have always asked the Franciscan Fathers who are 
entrusted with the cure of souls in my diocese to carry the Pope’s decree 
concerning the parishes into effect in accordance with canon law and in a spirit of 
obedience. Only their superiors admit them into their order, and expel them from 
it, the Congregation for the Religious has the final word in the Pope’s name. 

Crkva na Kamenu: One of those expelled says that “Bishop Peric ’s 
interference (or that of any other bishop) is an act of violence against his faith and 
conscience.” He appeals to the example of Blessed Cardinal Stepinac, who was “a 
victim of his conscience”. What do you say to that? 

Monsignor Peric: Religious of both sexes make three vows to God, 
exclusively through the instrumentality of the Church, which confirms and 
accepts their vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. Private vows of private 
persons made in private are quite another matter. They are not in issue in this 
case. Accordingly, whosoever confirmed the vows of members of religious 
orders and bound them in conscience, can release them from those vows and send 
the professed into the world, if they do not keep their vows. Every monk and nun 
knows that simple rule. The ordinary neither administers vows to Franciscans, 
nor releases them from their vows. Their superior does so, and our Holy Father 
the Pope. 

Secondly, it is quite incredible to draw a comparison between this case and 
that of Blessed Cardinal Stepinac, who never sought to set his conscience above 
the Church, but subordinated his conscience to the Holy Church, the Holy Father 
and the Holy See, and was “ready to die not only for the Church generally, but if 
God in his providence should so require it, for every paragraph of the Code of 
Canon Faw (letter of 12 April 1952).” 

He was a martyr precisely because he remained faithful to Christ’s Church, to 
the See of St. Peter and so to his own conscience. In this painful case, everything 
is the other way around. The canon law of the Church has been broken, and these 


129 



men were in truth expelled from their Order in accordance with the Church’s 
canons. A man may appeal to his own conscience in defiance of the Holy See, and 
his Franciscan Order, but then he separates himself from the Church, which was 
unfortunately the case (as I have mentioned) with Archbishop Lefebvre. 

Crkva na Kamenu: They say that they will not “separate themselves from the 
Vatican, and form a ‘Croatian Catholic Church’.”’ (Nacional) 

Monsignor Peric: The Holy Church relies on obedient and not disobedient 
sons. They will persuade us when they show by their deeds and by obedience that 
they are not separating themselves from the Holy See. 

Crkva na Kamenu: One of those expelled reproaches you with having 
forbidden a religious work that he has written, so that it can not be obtained in 
parish churches. When did you forbid it? 

Monsignor Peric: I did not do so at all, that is one of 1,001 lies. On the 
contrary, that expellee recently sent me a copy of his book The Sacred Heart of 
Fra Barika Dermic, and on the fly sheet he wrote a dedication “To the most 
enlightened bishop in the world, regardless of all the others, my bishop, Ratko 
Peric, Capljina, 21 November 1998, Fra Bozo Rados, defender of the truth and the 
very Truth.” 

By coincidence on the same day, 21 November, a faxed letter arrived from 
Rome, declaring that he had been expelled from his order. I neither recommended 
nor forbade his book, nor did I even know that he had published it, until I read the 
dedication. 

Crkva na Kamenu: Incidentally, the same journalist recounts how Fra 
Barika Dermic did not obey the then provincial of the Franciscans, Fra Rufina 
Sialic.. Yet was not Fra Barika Dermic a holy Franciscan? 

Monsignor Peric: How was he to obey him, when Fra Barika died in 1932, 
but Fra Rufina Sialic became provincial in 1967? In this fashion the journalist 
corrupts his readers with his lies. 

Crkva na Kamenu: Journalists maintain that the majority of the Franciscans 
see the fault for the present difficult situation in Herzegovina as lying at your 
door, in that you showed no understanding at all for the Church in Herzegovina, 
and failed to realize that the Franciscans would vigorously oppose you. A great 
number of Franciscans in Herzegovina (it is alleged) refuse to accept the bishop’s 
decisions, but no-one wants to confirm officially that it is so, and the bishop 

130 



himself is striving to conceal the widespread disobedience throughout the 
Franciscan province. How much truth is there in that? 

Monsignor Peric: That is quite untrue, so far as I am concerned, these are 
just tales that journalists dream up as part of their trade. When I was appointed 
bishop in 1992, 1 took the motto: “Through many tribulations we must enter the 
Kingdom of God” (Acts 14:21). One of them is this unhappy affair. I therefore at 
least had some inkling of what awaited me. Secondly, no sensible person can 
expect a bishop to show understanding for disobedience, and the Herzegovinian 
Franciscans are no fools, so could not have expected that of me. Thirdly, neither 
is it true that I concealed the disobedience with regard to the parishes. Whenever 
it was necessary to speak of it officially or in writing, it was said officially or put 
in writing, and when it was necessary to say so publicly in the pulpit or on 
television, it was said publicly without flinching, and all the evidence, in Mostar 
and in Duvno. I did not shrink from speaking of it even at the bishops’ synod 
concerning the Religious in the Vatican in the presence of the Holy Father and of 
250 cardinals and bishops, saying that in the past the Holy See had showered our 
religious with privileges, whereas to-day, it strikes them with sanctions. That was 
published in L ’Osservatore Romano. So much at least is public knowledge. 

Crkva na Kamenu: What do you say to the headline attributed to one of 

those expelled: “I would, if necessary, prefer to go to hell with my Croatian flock, 
than to the bishop’s heaven without my people!” 

Monsignor Peric: Matters do not stand thus, and there is no such dilemma, 
but rather they stand as the pope said in Sarajevo in 1997 and in Solin in 1998. 
When he was in Solin, the Holy Father quoted St. Ignatius of Antioch word for 
word: “Be with the bishop, so that God should be with you.” Father Barbaric 
knows that, and is bound to abide by those words, if he wishes to remain in God’s 
Church, assuming that his bishop is in communion with the Pope. 11 

Crkva na Kamenu: What is their present status? They are not Franciscans, 
yet they wear Franciscan habits, saying that they can do no other. 

Monsignor Peric: They are no longer Franciscan religious, but they remain 
secular clergy. If they wish to re-enter the Franciscan Order, they would have to 
go back as novices. 


ll As he is no longer a Franciscan he has no right to the title Frater (Fra.), i.e. “Fra”. 


131 



Crkva na Kamenu: If, therefore, they are secular priests, under whose 
authority do they come? 

Monsignor Peric: I am not aware that they are under any one’s authority, yet 
they are bound to belong to some canonically constituted structure within the 
church, that is to say, to a diocese. Canon 701 prescribes: “Vows, rights and 
obligations, derived from (a religious) profession cease ipso facto by legitimate 
dismissal. However, if the member is a cleric , he cannot exercise sacred orders 
until he finds a bishop who receives him after a suitable probationary period in 
the diocese according to canon 693 or at least allows him to exercise sacred 
orders.” 

Crkva na Kamenu: In the joint communique of 14th December 1998 it is 
said that sacraments received at the hands of the expelled Franciscans are not 
valid. 

Monsignor Peric: The Church’s law (canon 701) provides that a religious 
who has been ordained priest, and is expelled from his order, may not perform his 
priestly duties, until the question of his status has been resolved. The message of 
the communique is that the expelled Franciscans are illicitly present in the parish 
of Capljina and all that they do as priests under no-one’s authority is illicit and 
against the Church. Regarding the sacraments, and speaking as a theologian, a 
priest cannot bestow the sacrament of orders in any event. If he illicitly 
administers confirmation or confession, or officiates at a wedding, it is invalid. A 
priest in good standing regularly administers baptisms, says Mass, and 
administers extreme unction, but these men are illicitly in possession of the 
presbytery and the parish, and they are aware that they sin not only against the 
Church’s laws and the sacraments, but against conscience. The faithful are called 
upon to turn to their legitimate parish priest for the sacraments and other 
functions of the Church. 

Crkva na Kamenu: Might they contact that bishop who affirmed that he had 
been to Medjugorje on many occasions and, in October 1997, confirmed children 
in Capljina (Slobodan, 6th October 1997) so that they should be his priests? 

Monsignor Peric: Were they to do that we might then know a little more 
about that scandal too, and that illicit confirmation and that “far away land”. 

Crkva na Kamenu: Were they to contact you, would you receive them? 

Monsignor Peric: As yet they have not contacted me, but were they to do so, 

132 



I would invite them for discussions. 


Crkva na Kamenu: What is the status of the parish of Capljina; is it a 
Franciscan parish or a diocesan parish? 

Monsignor Peric: Since the Provincial has handed over the parish to the 
ordinary by a notarized deed, this parish in no longer in any sense a Franciscan 
parish, as the expression is. De jure it is a diocesan parish, but de facto it is 
occupied contrary to law. So far as the priests are concerned, they are no longer 
Franciscans, but Capljina is a diocesan parish with secular priests. One must be 
patient towards men, as gentle as a dove, and filled with the wisdom of the 
gospels, and all will fall into place with God’s help. 

Crkva na Kamenu: During the war [with the Bosnian Serbs], when parishes 
[i.e. staffed by secular priests] were set up in Mostar, it was commonly asked 
why the bishop felt the need to start a second war? 

Monsignor Peric: Well, now peace of a kind prevails, yet still there is no 
obedience, nor any valid excuses for disobedience, any more than in the time of 
war. God’s people know where the true Church is, and the false! 


20 February 1999 

The Franciscan Rebellion in Herzegovina — Rome Acts 


Congregation for the Religious 
Communique 

Following the joint letter which the general minister of the OFM, Fra 
Giacomo Bini, and the bishop of Mostar-Duvno, Monsignor Ratko Peric, both 
signed on 16th November 1998, and following the communique of 14th 
December 1998 issued by Archbishop Marcello Zago, Secretary of the 
Congregation for the Evangelization of the Peoples, and the above-mentioned 
general minister and diocesan bishop, the representative of the general minister, 
Fra Stephan Ottenbreit, the vicar general of the Order, and the diocesan bishop 
met in Mostar from 17 to 20 February 1999, so as to bring into effect at long last 
the Holy See’s decree Romanis Pontificibus . Monsignor Mario R. Cassari, ad 
interim charge d’affaires of the apostolic nunciature in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 


133 



was present in the name of the Holy See. 

The two persons charged with carrying the decree into effect 
decided the following: 

1. The general curia of the OFM, together with the 
Herzegovinian Franciscan province, in unity with the diocesan 
bishop announce that in complete accord and unity of intention it 
wishes to carry into effect the Holy See’s decree and the decision of 
the general chapter of the Franciscan Order. 

2. Alas, the date of 21 February 1999 previously agreed upon 
with a view to the transfer of the parishes mentioned in the decree 
from the administration of the Franciscans to the secular clergy 
could not be kept, despite the good will of those charged with 
carrying it into effect, for the following reasons. Physical resistance 
has been organized. Grave threats have been made both verbally and 
in writing, parish churches and presbyteries have been occupied, 
parish registers and seals have been seized. 

3. With effect from 22 February of this year the present parish 
priests and persons pastorally responsible for the parishes mentioned 
in the decree are relieved of their pastoral responsibilities. They are: 

Fra Petar Vlasic in Blagaj on the Buna; 

Fra Leonard Hrkac in Crnac. 

Fra Marko Dragicevic and Fra Miro Sego in Grude; 

Fra Alojzije Bosnjak in Jablanica; 

Fra Tihomir Kutle in Mostarski Gradac; 

Fra Oton Bilic in Nevesinje; and 

Fra Drago Skrobo in Ploce-Tepcici 

These Franciscans, to whom the provincial and his council have 
allocated houses in the province, will carry out pastoral duties in the 
diocese in accordance with the decisions which the provincial 
administration takes in agreement with the diocesan bishop. 

4. While expecting the situation to return to normal in very 
early course, that is to say, that the selected priests can take over the 
mentioned parishes in accordance with canon law, the diocesan 
bishop undertakes, as he is duty bound to do, to ensure pastoral care 


134 



for the faithful. 

Accordingly, the parishioners of Blagaj on the Buna and 
Nevesinje are asked to attend the parishes of St. John the Evangelist 
or the cathedral in Mostar; the parishioners of Crnac and Mostarski 
Gradac the parishes of Polog and Jare; the parishioners of Grude the 
parishes of Ledinac and Raskrizje; the parishioners of Jablanica the 
parishes of St. Matthew the Evangelist or the cathedral in Mostar. 

The bishop and the priests working in the diocesan curia are at 
the disposal of each and every one of the faithful for their pastoral 
needs. 

5. So far as the present situation in Capljina is concerned, the 
persons charged with carrying the decree into effect wish to make it 
particularly clear to the faithful that the priests Boniface Petar 
Barbaric and Bozo Rados were expelled from the OFM on 28 
February 1998, which expulsion the Holy See confirmed on 23 
March 1998. Accordingly they are no longer entitled to wear the 
Franciscan habit. They were suspended a divinis by the Holy See on 
17 December 1998, and are forbidden to celebrate any of the 
sacraments. Proceedings are pending for the expulsion from his 
order of the third disobedient priest resident in Capljina, Fra Mile 
Vlasic. 

The sacrament of penance which the three above-mentioned 
persons administer and the sacrament of Christian matrimony at 
which they assist are invalid. 

6. Similar sanctions under canon law will be taken against those 
Franciscans who do not abide by the directions of the Holy See and 
the general minister and his council. Canon law authorizes the local 
ordinary to forbid the use of unlawfully occupied churches as a last 
resort. 

7. The general administration of the order, together with the 
administration of the Franciscan province of Herzegovina, wishes 
publicly to restate that it distances itself from the “Association of 
Catholic faithful Peace and Good”. Since the Catholic Church has 
not recognized that association, it has no legitimacy in its eyes. 

8. In this moment of suffering, the Catholic believers of the 
diocese of Mostar and Duvno, true to their past, are urged to 
redouble their sense of unity and fidelity to the Apostolic See and the 


135 



Holy Father. 

9. The local ordinary with his clergy and faithful would like to 
express his deep gratitude to the OFM and the Franciscan province 
of Herzegovina for their uninterrupted work for the growth and unity 
of the Church in the region, and once again express their need for the 
order’s future witness and pastoral co-operation. 

By the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the 
Church, may this time of Lent, so apt for repentance, and the whole 
year consecrated to our heavenly Father bring us spiritual succour, 
so that we may go through the Cross to the Resurrection. 

Mostar, 20th February 1999 

Fra Stephan Ottenbreit, 

Vicar General of the Order of Friars Minor 

Msgr Ratko Peric, 

Bishop of Mostar-Duvno. 


11 January 2000 
Death of Monsignor Zanic 


Monsignor Pavao Zanic died on 11 January 2000 in a hospital in Split, 
Croatia at the age of 81. His requiem was celebrated on 13 January at Kastel 
Novi, his birthplace, where he had been living since his retirement in 1993. He 
was buried in the local cemetery. 


7 January 2000 

The Position of the French Episcopal Conference Regarding 

Medjugorje 

During the 2001 assembly of the bishops of France, a question put by a member of the 
conference was the subject of a written response by Monsignor H. Brincard, Bishop of 
Puy-en-Velay, responsible for overseeing the Association of Marian Organisations. This 
response was made at the request of the permanent council. Regarding some facts having a 
certain reverberation, Bishop Brincard wanted solely to bring an ecclesial light, which we may 


136 



hope will contribute to strengthening the unity of the People of God. Is not the Virgin Mary, 
Mother of the Church, in a very particular way, the serx’ant of this unity? The text is taken from 
the official bulletin of the French Episcopal Conference (SNOP), No. 1064, printed in La 
Documentation Catholique of 7 January 2000. Translated by Jim Gallagher for the May 2002 
issue of Christian Order. 


Regarding Medjugorje 

Question put: 

Is there an authorised and official position of the Church concerning the 
events which motivate pilgrimages to Medjugorje? 

We know that a true devotion towards the Virgin Mary is not based on 
alleged apparitions, nor on those which the Church recognises as authentic, nor 
on private revelations. We know also that these extraordinary interventions can 
be signs which we should not neglect once the Church, having operated the 
necessary discernments, has authenticated them. 

Today the events of Medjugorje, in Bosnia-Herzegovina, attract our 
attention, not only because of their reverberation, but also by reason of the 
pastoral solicitude necessitated by the numerous faithful of our dioceses who go 
on pilgrimage to this place. 

If we want to have an informed opinion on the subject of what has happened 
at Medjugorje and what is still unfolding there, it is essential to ask ourselves the 
question: 'Who has authority to speak about this in the name of the Church?’ 

The Competent Ecclesiastical Authorities 

The Local Ordinary 

The norms relative to the discernment of private revelations, published on 24 
February 1978 by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, signed by its 
Prefect, Cardinal Francis Seper, specify: “It belongs in the first and foremost to 
the local ordinary to investigate and to intervene.” 

There was in fact an investigation, from 1982 to 1986, overseen by 
Monsignor Pavao Zanic, bishop of Mostar. Let us recall briefly the stages of this 
investigation: 

— On 11 January 1982 a commission of investigation is constituted 
composed of four members (two Franciscan priests and two secular priests), 

— In January 1984 this investigating commission is enlarged by the 


137 



nomination of a dozen ecclesiastics "chosen from experts in theological matters 
from different theological faculties in Croatia and Slovenia" 12 , and medical 
doctors. 

The Yugoslav Episcopal Conference is informed of the work of this 
commission of investigation. In a declaration of 12 October 1984 this same 
conference makes it known that the bishops are asking "not to organise official 
pilgrimages to Medjugorje [...], not to prejudge the verdict." 

On 30 October 1984, with the prospect of an imminent completion of the 
works of the commission of investigation, Bishop Zanic publishes a report 
entitled, "Posizione attuale, non uffiziale, della Curia vescovile di Mostar nel 
confronti degli eventi di Medjugorje'" . ('Current non-official position of the 
episcopal curia of Mostar on the subject of events in Medjugorje'.) 

People reproached Bishop Zanic for publishing this document. Nevertheless 
it is normal that before the publication of an official judgement itself, the 
ordinaries of the places concerned by the said events publish notes of information 
in order to orient pastors and faithful and to thus prepare them to receive the 
judgement of the Church. 

The Episcopal Conference 

The norms previously cited, add: 

"But the regional or national episcopal conference can become involved: 

— if the local ordinary, after having fulfilled the obligations pertaining to 
him, has recourse to it to study the whole phenomenon; 

— if the phenomenon equally concerns the region or the nation, by way of 
the prior consent of the ordinary of the place." 

Bishop Zanic did not have recourse to the episcopal conference. However, 
on the suggestion of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, he accepted 
that the study of the dossier be confided to the Yugoslav Episcopal Conference, as 
the reverberation of the “event” extended well beyond the limits of his diocese. 

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 

"The Apostolic See may intervene, either at the request of the ordinary 
himself, or at the request of a qualified group of faithful, this by reason of the 
immediate right of universal jurisdiction of the Sovereign Pontiff." (Norms of 
1978) 


12 Posizione of Bishop Zanic, 30th October 1984 


138 



The sole Roman dicastery capacitated to intervene in the name of the Pope is 
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The Holy Father never intervenes 
directly in affairs of this kind. 

The norms of 1978 specify: 

"The intervention of the sacred congregation may be sought either by the 
ordinary, after he has fulfilled the obligations incumbent upon him, or by a 
qualified group of faithful. In the latter case, vigilance will be exercised that the 
recourse to the sacred congregation not be motivated by suspect reasons (for 
example, wanting to lead, by one faction or another, the ordinary to modify his 
legitimate decisions, or to have the sectarian position of a group ratified, etc). 

"It belongs to the sacred congregation to intervene of its own accord in 
serious cases, notably when the phenomenon affects a large part of the Church; 
but the ordinary will always be consulted, as well as the episcopal conference, if 
the situation requires it." 

Bishop Zanic did not solicit the intervention of the Congregation for the 
Doctrine of the Faith. However, he well fulfilled the obligations incumbent on 
him, as this same congregation affirmed that it "appreciated the work 
accomplished by the diocesan commission, under the responsibility of Bishop 
Zanic." 

Moreover, let us recall that on 2 June 1982, Bishop Zanic submits a first 
report to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and, on 26 April 1986, he 
delivers to Cardinal Ratzinger, prefect of the congregation, a plan of negative 
judgement, as the conclusions of the commission of investigation appear to be 
going in this sense. The cardinal therefore asks him to hold back the publication 
of a definitive judgement 

On 2 May 1986, the commission of investigation votes, in a secret ballot, by 
1 1 votes to 4, against the recognition of the supernatural character of the events: 
non constat de supernaturalitate At the same time, having concluded its work, it 
accepts its own dissolution, the affair being from then on in the hands of Rome. 13 
On 15 May 1986, Bishop Zanic transmits to the congregation the negative finding 
of the commission. It is therefore not correct to state that Bishop Zanic was 
relieved of the dossier. Furthermore, while the phenomenon "affects a large 


13 


Homily of Bishop Zanic of 25th July 1987, in I. SIVRIC, “La face cachee du 
Medjugorje” 


139 



portion of the Church", the congregation did not intervene of its own accord. 

It is Bishop Franic, Archbishop of Split, who, on 17 April 1985, during the 
plenary assembly of the Yugoslav episcopate, addresses to the bishop of Mostar 
the following request: "I ask His Excellency the bishop of Mostar to ascertain the 
facts about Medjugorje, while also accepting the help of the Holy See and of 
competent persons abroad so as to act in conformity with the maxim 'cum Petro et 
sub Petro’." 

The congregation thus applies that which is foreseen by the Norms of 1978: "It 
belongs to the sacred congregation to discern and to approve the action of the 
ordinary or, if such proves necessary, to proceed to a new examination of the 
events distinct from that which the ordinary has effected; this new examination of 
the events will be accomplished either by the sacred congregation itself, or by a 
commission especially established to this end." 

The Roman dicastery charges the Episcopal Conference of Yugoslavia to 
take up the dossier, with the help of a new commission established to this end 14 . 
The work of this commission results in the Zadar Declaration of 10 April 1991. 

The Judgment of the Competent Ecclesiastical Authorities 

Up to this day, only the bishops of Mostar — Bishop Zanic, then Bishop 
Peric — and the Yugoslav Episcopal Conference (dissolved cle facto by the 
partition of the country after the war) have expressed a judgement on the events of 
Medjugorje. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, on the other hand, 
has never issued an official judgement. It has only given directives of a pastoral 
order. 

The Personal Judgements of the Successive Bishops of Mostar-Duvno 

The judgements of the bishops of Mostar are 'personal' judgements rendered 
public within the limits of their diocese. They are negative judgements. They are 
exposed in the Posizione of Bishop Zanic (30 October 1984), then in a 
notification in 28 points dated March 1990. Bishop Peric adopted the negative 
judgment of his predecessor in a work entitled 'Seat of Wisdom' (1995). A chapter 
of that work is devoted to the question of Medjugorje. Here is the conclusion: 

"It is therefore forbidden to claim or to declare in churches and religious 


14 


Declaration of Cardinal Kuharic and Bishop Zanic 9th January 1987, published in 
I'Osservatore Romano of 14th February 1987 


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communities that Our Lady has appeared or will yet appear in Medjugorje." 

These episcopal interventions occurred after long and laborious official 
investigations, several elements of which are not known to us. It is to be noted 
that the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith never expressed the least 
reservation regarding these judgements when they were published. Bearing in 
mind the authority which this congregation recognises pertaining “first and 
foremost” to the local ordinary, in matters of discernment and of intervention, it 
would not be wise to take lightly that which the successive bishops of the diocese 
of Mostar-Duvno have said. 

The Zadar Declaration (1991) 

The judgement of the Yugoslav Episcopal Conference, in the declaration 
known as the 'Zadar Declaration', dated 10 April 1991, was a provisional reserved 
judgement, formulated thus: "Based on the investigations carried out thus far, it 
has not been possible to establish that it involves apparitions or supernatural 
revelations." 

That is what is called a “non constat de supernaturalitate , \ The 
disappearance of the Yugoslav Episcopal Conference has not permitted this same 
to pursue its investigations. But the fact that in 1991, ten years after the beginning 
of the events, not one single decisive element in favour of a possible supernatural 
origin of the apparitions could be put forward, underlines not only the complexity 
of the dossier, but leads also to suppose that there were also at the time important 
questions left unanswered. 

Since February 1999, the Episcopal Conference of Bosnia-Herzegovina has 
received from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith the task of 
pronouncing definitively, after a new and final investigation. At the present 
moment, that conference has not pronounced. 

The history of the Church teaches us that Rome always remits in fine to the 
authority and the competence of the local ordinary. That is true for the apparition 
of La Salette — where the bishop of Grenoble, Bishop de Bruillard, was able to 
pronounce, despite the opposition of his metropolitan, Cardinal de Bonald, 
Archbishop of Lyon. It goes also for the events of Beauraing (1932-33) and of 
Banneux (1933) in Belgium. The bishops of Namur and of Liege, dispossessed 
for a time of the power to pronounce — in favour of Van Roey, Archbishop of 
Malines and Primate of Belgium, to whom was confided the totality of the dossier 
on the “Belgian apparitions” of 1932-34 — in the end obtained the faculty to bring 
a positive judgement on the events arising in their dioceses, despite the remaining 
very negative opinion of Cardinal Van Roey and of the commission which he 
established. It is once again confirmed in Japan for the events of Akita 
(1974-1981) where Bishop Ito, bishop of Niigata and local ordinary, was able, on 


141 



22 April 1984, to pronounce favourably in their regard despite the opposition of 
the Japanese Episcopal Conference. 

Intervention of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith — the 
question of pilgrimages 

Regarding Medjugorje, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has 
only intervened on the pastoral level. In this matter official acts are very rare: 

— On 23 May 1985, a warning. Monsignor Bovone, Secretary of the 
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, wrote to Monsignor Caporello, 
Secretary of the Italian Episcopal Conference. 

Here is the content of his letter: 

From several sides — and particularly the competent Ordinary (the bishop of 
Mostar) — we note and deplore a real propaganda for the “events” linked to the 
alleged apparitions of Medjugorje. A special organisation for pilgrimages has 
been set up and other initiatives have been taken which contribute to sowing 
confusion among the faithful and to hindering the work of delicate examination 
which the special commission for the study of the “events” in question is 
currently carrying out. In order to avoid the spread of the above-mentioned 
propaganda and the speculation which it provokes in Italy, despite the advice and 
recommendations of the Yugoslav Episcopal Conference, may the presidency (of 
the Italian episcopal conference) consider well the opportunity of advising the 
Italian Episcopate to discourage publicly the organisation of pilgrimages to the 
above-mentioned centre of “apparitions”, as well as every other form of 
publicity, particularly editorial, judged prejudicial to a serene study of the 'events' 
in question by the special canonically-constituted commission to this end. 

— On 23 March 1996, then in June 1996, Monsignor Bertone, Secretary of 
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, replies to questions which have 
been addressed to the congregation by Bishop Taverdet, bishop of Fangres, and 
by Bishop Daloz, archbishop of Besancon. Referring to the Zadar Declaration, 
Monsignor Bertone reminds them above all that the cult is not authorised. 

— On 26 May 1998, Monsignor Bertone replies, this time to Bishop Aubry, 
bishop of Saint-Denis-de-Fa-Reunion. After having recalled the Zadar 
Declaration, he adds: 

"I point out first of all that it is not the habit of the Holy See to assume, in the 
first instance, its own position vis-a-vis supposed supernatural phenomena." 

Addressing the question of pilgrimages, the secretary of the congregation 
points out: 

"Finally, concerning pilgrimages to Medjugorje which take place in a private 
manner, this congregation holds that they are permitted on condition that they are 
not considered as an authentication of events in course which still necessitate an 


142 



examination by the Church." 

Let us recognise that it is not easy to apply faithfully this recommendation. 
How, in fact, to organise a private pilgrimage without it being motivated by the 
conviction that the events of Medjugorje are of a supernatural origin? Since this 
conviction is at the origin of the pilgrimage, does not this latter not become de 
facto "an authentication of events in course which still necessitate an examination 
by the Church"? 

It is just this difficulty which Cardinal Kuharic and Bishop Zanic foresaw in 
their joint declaration of 9 January 1987. 

The Criterion of Fruits 

On this subject, let us make an introductory remark. It emerges from the 
document published in 1978 by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 
that one must "in the first place" judge the event according to positive and 
negative criteria and "then, if this examination results favourably, allow certain 
public manifestations of cult and devotion, all the while pursuing into the events 
an investigation of an extreme prudence (which amounts to the saying; for the 
moment, there is nothing against it)." 

The examination of the events must, consequently, precede the examination 
of the fruits. When this order is not respected errors of judgment can arise. 15 

If we examine the events of Medjugorje in the light of the fruits, what do we 
observe? It is first of all undeniable that at Medjugorje there are returns to God 
and “spiritual” healings. It is no less evident that the sacramental life there is 
regular and the prayer fervent. One could not deny these good fruits in situ. We 
should even rejoice in them. But can we say that they continue in our parishes? 
Difficult question, for we must note unfortunately that the susceptibility, even 
aggressiveness, of some partisans of Medjugorje towards those who do not share 
their enthusiasm is such that in some places it provokes serious tensions which 
attack the unity of the People of God. 

From where do these good fruits, observed in an indisputable manner at 
Medjugorje, come? A declaration of Bishop Peric, our confrFlre of Mostar, may 
on this point usefully enrich our meditations: "The fruits, so often mentioned, do 
not prove that they flow from apparitions or supernatural revelations of Our Lady. 
But in the measure that they are authentically Christian, they may be interpreted 


15 


The story of the Mariavites in Poland at the beginning of the century provides sad 
confirmation. 


143 



as a product of the normal work of divine grace, by faith in God, by the 
intercession of the Virgin Mary, Mother of Christ, and by the sacraments of the 
Catholic Church. And this to say nothing of the negative fruits." 

Finally, it is opportune to ask ourselves if the events of Medjugorje have 
produced good fruits in the visionaries who, at least during the duration of the 
"apparitions", must by their lives be the first witnesses of the grace from which 
they say they benefit. From there it follows that we ask ourselves the following 
questions: "Have they obeyed the bishop of Mostar? Have they respected him?..." 
Such questions and still others yet, are habitually part of a serious investigation 
into an event of apparitions. In order for the investigation to arrive at a solid 
conclusion, it is necessary that these fundamental questions receive a clear and 
objective response. 

We would like to say nothing about the doubtful or even bad fruits. But the 
truth obliges us to say that they exist. Let us quote, as examples, the calling into 
question, even to the point of defamation, of the local ordinary as well as the 
disobedience with regard to his legitimate authority; the exacerbation of the 
Herzegovina “question” following the words attributed to "the Go spa" , words in 
favour of the Franciscans and against the bishop. In conclusion, allow me to make 
the following reflection: 

I have no authority to pronounce any ecclesial judgement whatsoever on the 
events of Medjugorje. I am therefore the first to have to give an example of 
obedience, notably in respecting the pastoral decisions of my confrFlre of Mostar 
and in complying with joy to his wishes. "I do not see how I can go to Medjugorje 
without giving my support, by the very fact of my arriving there, to the events 
whose discernment and assessment rests henceforth with the Episcopal 
Conference of Bosnia-Herzegovina. Such support would fly in the face of a 
traditional teaching of the Church, recalled in Lumen Gentium and applicable to 
all the successors of the Apostles: ‘Individual bishops, in so far as they are set 
over particular Churches, exercise their pastoral office over the portion of the 
People of God assigned to them, not over other Churches nor the Church 
universal’.” 

My wish, which I share with you, is to be able to further in my diocese a real 
renewal of Marian piety, in having frequent recourse to the habitual means which 
the Church puts at our disposal and which the Holy Father does not cease to 
recommend to us. 

+Henri BRINCARD 

Bishop of Puy-en-Velay 

Accompanying Bishop of the Association of Marian Organisations. 


144 



24 January 2000 

Newsweek Report “Visions of the Virgin” 

Thousands of believers throng to hear the Mother of Jesus speak 
through a man who lives in Boston 

By Kevin Peraino 

Newsweek International , January 24, 2000 

Ivan Dragicevic is getting mobbed. At the Sacred Heart Roman Catholic 
church in a suburb of Boston, people are lunging, straining to get their hands on 
him. "I'm a friend of Ivan's," claims a white-haired man jockeying to get closer; 
Dragicevic doesn't know him. Another man railroads his way through the 
congregation and pleads for a picture; Dragicevic demurs. Dragicevic’s wife, a 
former Miss Massachusetts, is poised nearby as flashbulbs flicker. Ivan looks 
overwhelmed. An aide whisks him away from the crowd and out the back door. 
"They expect me to be a saint," he says after catching his breath. "I'm a man like 
everyone else. I'm fighting to be humble." Navigating crowds is part of life when 
you're one of the Medjugorje visionaries — the six Croatian children who reported 
in 1981 that they began receiving daily visits from the Virgin Mary in what was 
then Yugoslavia. Since they were first reported, the visions have sparked a 
worldwide phenomenon, drawing more than 20 million tourists to Medjugorje. 
And at the busy intersection of sanctity and celebrity in America, Dragicevic is a 
man in demand. Never mind that the apparitions have never been authenticated by 
the Catholic Church. These days Dragicevic draws crowds of thousands at stops 
around the United States — 4,000 in Dallas in November, 3,000 a few days later in 
San Antonio. Other stops are planned for later this month, and in February he'll be 
the keynote speaker at a weekend conference near Oakland, Calif. Devotees come 
to watch him commune with Mary, then translate her messages to the crowd. Now 
34 and living in Boston, he jets from Hong Kong to Honolulu, shepherded by an 
entourage. Dragicevic isn't getting rich from it — he lives modestly off rental 
income from a bed-and-breakfast-style house in Medjugorje, plus occasional 
stipends from appearances. So why does he do it? "I have a duty," he says. 
"People are hungry for God." In the United States there are more than 150 Marian 
groups — well-organized Catholics, many of whom have made the pilgrimage to 
Apparition Hill, site of the original visions at Medjugorje. The visions have 
spawned a cottage industry in the United States of pilgrimage guides and 
merchandisers. There is, of course, a web site, and Medjugorje magazine accepts 
advertising from for-profit book retailers and travel agencies. Boasts the 


145 



magazine's ad-rate card: "Readers of Medjugorje magazine are active buyers and 
stimulated by advertising." But many rank-and-file Catholics remain 
unconvinced. In 1987 the bishops of Yugoslavia declared that "one cannot affirm 
that supernatural apparitions are involved." Even the Vatican says only that the 
Holy See continues to investigate the matter. But the Madonna remains a popular 
figure. "She’s a role model in a microwave age," says Rosemarie Marando, a 
Medjugorje pilgrim from New York. And the messages rarely conflict with 
Catholic teachings. A recent example: "Only through prayer will you become my 
apostles of peace in this world without peace." Dragicevic says his first encounter 
with the Virgin Mary occurred on a hot day 18 years ago when he was out for a 
walk with a friend during half time of a Croatian basketball game. Some girls he 
knew called him over, and that's when he says he saw her for the first time, 
floating on a cloud. He says she appears to him largely the same as on that day: 
black hair, blue eyes, rosy cheeks, a white veil and a crown of stars. It usually 
happens at 6:40 p.m. What makes him so sure it’s really the Virgin Mary? Says 
Dragicevic: "Hey, I'm certain because I see her as I see you." After his talk at 
Sacred Heart, Dragicevic opens the floor to questions. "How old does she look?" 
asks a child with black hair and glasses. Around 26, Dragicevic says. Someone 
asks whether Dragicevic has seen heaven, and what it looks like. "Yes," he says. 
"Hang on, you'll see" The hands show no sign of stopping. Finally he says, "If you 
pray more, you'll have no more questions to ask me." Dragicevic is tired, his 
ulcers are acting up and he's ready to get out of here. And anyway, he has to get up 
early tomorrow. He has a plane to catch. 


7 February 2000 

A Letter From Monsignor Peric Concerning Father Zovko 

Mostar, 7 February 2000 
Prot.: 131/2000 

Dear Father Franken, 

I answer to your letter of 6 February 2000. Thank you for 
your book Een Reis naar Medjugorje , Van Spijk Venlo - 
Antwerpen, 1999. 1 hope to have an English version soon. 

Regarding Father Fra Jozo Zovko, OFM, member of the 
Franciscan province of Herzegovina (several times mentioned in 
your book, especially p. 102), I am obliged to inform you that he 
was revoked of "every faculty and canonical mission in the 
diocese of Mostar-Duvno and Trebinje-Mrkan" by my 


146 



predecessor Monsignor Pavao Zanic, who died on the last 11 
January, in a letter of his Diocesan Chancery Office, Nr. 622/89, 
of 23 August 1989. 

As the present diocesan bishop of these two dioceses of 
Herzegovina, I uphold this decision, and action. Furthermore, 
since he has heard confessions without the necessary faculty, he 
has also fallen into the penalties prescribed in canon 1378 § 2, 1 °. 
I notified him of this in my letter, Nr. 423/94, of 14 June 1994. 

The Congregation for the Evangelization of the Peoples 
requested in 1990 that he went away from Medjugorje, into a 
"convento lontano", but he is still very involved in the 
Medjugorje affair, residing in Siroki Brijeg and visiting 
Medjugorje. Fr Jozo Zovko is a disobedient Franciscan. 

Father Zovko is constructing a Convent of great proportions 
in Siroki Brijeg in this Diocese without the permission of the 
ecclesiastical authority. According to the project, of 1997, it costs 
about 8 millions DEM. From where, I do not know it. 

Availing myself of this opportunity, I wish to express to you 
my regards and greetings, 

Monsignor Ratko Peric 
Bishop of Mostar-Duvno and 
Administrator of Trebinje-Mrkan 

Reverend Father Rudo Franken 
Markt 7, 6088 BP Roggel 
The Netherlands. 


1 July 2000 

Confirmation Homily by Bishop Peric 


THE IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY - Medjugorje, 1 July 2000 

Dear candidates for Confirmation and God-loving faithful: 

Yesterday we celebrated the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in 
various places in our two dioceses. Today the Church celebrates the liturgical 
memory of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. This celebration used to fall on the 22 
of August (I recall with gratitude to God, that I chose to celebrate my first Mass 
on that day in 1969). For many years now this memory is celebrated the day after 
the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart, one after the other, and rightfully so. Today's 


147 



memory moves us to say a few words on the Blessed Virgin Mary, who was filled 
with the Holy Spirit and to especially refer to her motherly heart. 

Holy Scripture twice mentions Mary's motherly heart: 

After the events regarding Jesus' birth, Saint Luke writes: "Mary kept all 
these things, pondering them in her heart" (Lk 2:19). 

After the encounter in the temple, when Jesus was 12 years old, Saint Luke 
writes once again: "his mother kept all these things in her heart" (Lk 2:51). 

This is truly a simple, motherly and humane reaction! She kept all these 
events with gratitude inside her and reflected upon them with love in her motherly 
heart. In both, the first and second, occasions, not only words are mentioned 
which Mary heard, since the Greek original rhemata means words, news, 
teaching, events, memories. The Madonna pondered upon these events in her 
heart, just as one ponders upon the glorious mysteries of the rosary, keeps them as 
a great treasure, thanks God and prays to Him that she may thoughtfully unite 
them in her mind and heart. Mary surely spoke of these events to Jesus when He 
grew up. She also could have heard directly from Him and experienced during His 
and her lifetime, the full meaning of these memories and events. 

The gospels contain a few moments where Mary speaks up, asks questions 
and says a prayer. For instance, the gospels of St. Matthew and St. Mark do not 
contain any of Mary's direct words. In the gospels of St. Luke and St. John, there 
are a few, five or six of her direct interventions. 

In Nazareth she asked the archangel Gabriel: "How can this be, since I have 
no husband?" (Lk 1:34). And when the angel explained in his own way how this 
will come about, then she accepted and said: "Let it be to me according to your 
word" (Lk 1:38). This word of the Madonna, we Catholics say at least once if not 
three times a day, when we pray the Angelus. 

The Magnificat is her prayer of praise and thanksgiving, which follows the 
Old Testament way of the Samuel's mother Anne, arranged in ten lines: "My soul 
magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour ... and his mercy is 
on those who fear him from generation to generation ..." (Lk 1 :46-56). This prayer 
of praise we priests, religious and sisters pray or sing each evening during the 
liturgy of the hours. 

Then come two words which Mary puts to Jesus: 

When h 

He was 12 years old, while at the temple, when they found Him, she said: 
"Son, why have you treated us so? Behold, your father and I have been looking for 
you anxiously" (Lk 2:48), which we heard in today's gospel reading, and at the 
beginning of Jesus' public ministry, at Cana of Galilee, during a wedding banquet: 
"They have no wine" (Jn 2:3). Right after this she said to the servants: "Do 
whatever He tells you" (Jn 2:5). There could be other similar occasions in the 
future. 


148 



Regarding these few lines where Mary directly asks, speaks or prays 
something, and other moments when she listens to others and in which she is 
described as Virgin and Mother, countless theological books have been written, 
numerous Marian conferences have been held and many masters' and doctoral 
theses on Mariology have been defended. These biblical words are the foundation 
of our faith and relationship to Mary as Mother of Jesus and exemplary believer in 
God. She is an example and guide in this faith. We especially appreciate Mary's 
words that God's mercy is on those who fear Him, on those who have a sense of 
fear of God and His commandments. Dear candidates for Confirmation, 
remember to pray today and always for the gift of fear of God which comes from 
the Holy Spirit! 

When one keeps this in mind, and arrives at a biblical knowledge of Mary as 
the humble and silent virgin, as a worried and prudent mother, who ponders upon 
all these events in her heart and speaks very little of it, then a true believer can 
only remain amazed at the talk that here in Medjugorje, for almost 20 years now, 
day by day, Mary has been presumably "appearing" for five, ten or fifteen minutes 
to so-called "seers"; that she is presumably handing something over: in the form 
of so-called "messages", or "ten secrets", it's not sure if there are exactly ten, if 
each person has received the same number, or if there are six times more, meaning 
that each person received a different amount. 

Does this mean that this "apparition" up until this time has appeared 6,940 
times (19 years multiplied by 365/6 days)? And that constantly, every day, she is 
speaking, and that only once in a month she leaves a "message", and thanks the 
so-called "seers" for responding to her call? And this has been going on for almost 
20 years now, and could keep on going another ten, twenty or even more years? 

The official statements of the Church, starting from the local bishop up to the 
bishops’ conference has not in this case recognized a single "apparition" as 
authentic. The Church has clearly declared that it is impossible to affirm that these 
events involve supernatural apparitions. For this reason I wrote decisively and 
clearly on 14 February 1998 to the local pastor: "Therefore, let no official Church 
premises belonging to the parish be used for these so-called, presumed and 
imagined apparitions which have never been recognized nor accepted by the 
Catholic Church". The parish priest willingly obeyed. Therefore I hereby declare 
with no doubt in my mind, as the local Ordinary and Bishop, that not a single 
so-called "apparition" or so-called "message" convinces me that these events 
involve supernatural appearances. Messages on peace and grace, regarding 
fasting and prayer, on love and the need for penance are already known at the 
most official levels of the Bible teachings and those of the Church. 

And what are we to do with the acclaimed "spiritual fruits"? Dear believers, 
in whichever church you enter in order to pray to God with faith, sincerely 
confess and repent for your sins, and piously receive Holy Communion, you may 


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receive spiritual fruits. Candidates for Confirmation receive the sevenfold gift of 
the Holy Spirit, not because they are in Medjugorje, or Mostar or Rome, but 
because it is conferred upon them by an authorized minister of the Church. No 
one in their right mind who believes in God would ever say that in those parishes 
around the world where the sacraments are celebrated and received legitimately, 
there will be no spiritual fruits. Wherever the Holy Spirit is found there will be 
spiritual fruits as well ! 

The Catholic Church in her mission of teaching and upholding the truth of 
salvation, is not influenced by large or small numbers of peoples or nations 
present. She holds instead, to that which God has revealed about himself, on 
mankind, and on Mary of whom we believe and hold 

— that she was immaculately conceived, 

— that she is the Mother of God; according to the Father's plan in time, by 
conceiving through the Holy Spirit, she gave birth to our Saviour Jesus Christ, the 
Son of God, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, 

— that she remained a virgin always, 

— that she was taken up body and soul into the glory of heaven. 

The Church upholds and believes that the Blessed Virgin Mary can appear, 
and that she has appeared at different times in history and also that up to this day 
there is no proof nor convincing arguments that she ever appeared in a 
supernatural way in Medjugorje. 

All of us, you candidates for Confirmation and the rest of us, should pray to 
the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of Jesus and our spiritual mother, that 
through the love of her Immaculate Heart she intercede for us before the Father, 
that through her motherly care, she watch over us, over this parish, our diocese 
and the entire world. 


+ Ratko Peric, diocesan bishop. 


3 December 2000 
A Medjugorje Canonisation 


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The 3 December 2000 issue of the Catholic Times reported the death of 
Father Slavko Barbaric, and the astonishing news that the seers claimed that Our 
Lady had appeared to them and assured them that their mentor had been “borne 
into heaven” and was “interceding for them” — in other words, he had been 
canonised. “Amanda Toon, a national leader of Youth 2000, the spiritual 
initiative which holds retreats for young people in Britain and Ireland, told the 
Catholic Times : “Our Lady has never ever specified anything about anyone 
before. Father Slavko is a saint in heaven without a shadow of a doubt.” 

In February 2000 Monsignor Peric had withdrawn the faculties to hear 
confession from Father Barbaric who was living and ministering on Medjugorje 
contrary to the express prohibition of the bishop. Father Barbaric had appealed 
to Rome, but no decision had been reached before his death. Monsignor Peric 
came in person to celebrate the requiem of the priest who had caused him so many 
difficulties, a gesture that is typical of the charity of the bishop who, like his 
predecessor, is a true shepherd. 


2000 

Unexpected Support for the False Apparitions 
from the Catholic Truth Society of England and Wales. 


One of the most astonishing and depressing episodes in the entire squalid 
history of the Medjugore phenomenon occurred in England in 2002. The Catholic 
Truth Society (CTS) of England took it upon itself to publish a booklet calculated to 
induce Catholics to ignore the clearly expressed will of the Bishop of Mostar-Duvno 
and take part in pilgrimages to Medjugorje which is within his diocese. 

The CTS informs us that it works to develop and disseminate as widely as 
possible completely reliable publications about the faith, teaching, and life of the 
Catholic Church. It does so thanks to the generosity of Catholics throughout the 
world. Before examining the reliability of the booklet with the snappy title Medjugorje 
one must examine it within the entire context of CTS publications since the 
foundation of the Society in 1868. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 
(CDF) warns that there has appeared a veritable explosion of all kinds of 
“apparitions” which are being reported not only to the local bishop but to the Holy 
See. In just the last 90 years (1905-1995) out of 295 reported “apparitions” the 
Church has given its approval to 1 1 only, and said “No” to 284. In many cases false 
seers have been unmasked and pecuniary transactions have been discovered, and 
whenever they “announced” a sign from heaven it turned out be human trickery. 
The preceding sentence is a precise description of what is taking place at Medjugorje. 


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Since its foundation the CTS has maintained an inflexible policy of giving no 
publicity to any alleged apparition until it has received Church approval. Mr. Fergal 
Martin, the General Secretary of the CTS who is quite taken (or better still, taken in) 
by Medjugorje decided to change this policy on the basis of his prediction for the 
Herzegovinian phenomenon. One might have hoped that Mr. Martin would have 
considered it his duty to serve the best interests of the Society rather than use the 
Society to promote his personal predilections. 

Mr. Martin’s booklet claims “to provide a popular, accurate and balanced 
account ... of what is happening in Medjugorje, using authentic sources.” Just how 
accurate and balanced the account is can be demonstrated by its many examples of 
suppressio veri The technique it uses is not that of stating outright falsehoods but of 
suppressing the truth. It does, however, contain some serious falsehoods which 
were probably included due to ignorance rather than dishonesty. On page 66, for 
example, it is claimed that the Pope sent Father Jozo Zovko his Apostolic Blessing 
with the words: “I grant from the heart a particular Apostolic Blessing to Father Jozo 
Zovko o.f.m. and I invoke a new outpouring of graces and heavenly favours, and the 
continuous protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary.” Pictures of the blessing 
appeared on Medjugorje websites throughout the world, and it could immediately be 
recognized as the certificate that is sold in Rome in the shops and on the stalls in the 
area of St. Peter’s Basilica. The certificates include a picture of the Pope and the 
wording just cited. They come in various qualities from cheap cardboard to 
parchment, but the text is always identical. I purchased an identical blessing for 
Father Jozo to prove how meaningless they are. Unfortunately most readers of Mr. 
Martin’s booklet will imagine that the Holy Father really did send his blessing to 
Father Jozo, and that this proves his support for the “apparitions” Any publisher of 
integrity would withdraw the publication from sale to prevent its readers being 
deceived in this way. 

The booklet is correct in stating that Monsignor Zanic, the Bishop of 
Mostar-Duvno was open to the veracity of the “apparitions” in the beginning, but 
changed his mind in response to “reported messages via the 'visionaries' from Our 
Lady disagreeing with the bishop's stance, and lending strong support to the 
Franciscans.” 

Just how accurate and balanced this account is can be made clear by 
explaining the precise content of the messages allegedly from Our Lady 
transmitted to Monsignor Zanic by the self-styled seers. He changed his 
mind when it became apparent that the seers were lying when they told him on 
thirteen occasions that Our Lady had supported two disobedient Franciscan priests 
in their opposition to him. One of these priests, Father Ivica Vego, was dispensed 
from his vows and expelled from the Franciscan Order after seducing a nun, Sister 
Leopolda, and when she became pregnant they both left the religious life and began 
to live together near Medjugorje where their child was born. They now have two 
children. But prior to this, Father Vego refused to accept his expulsion and 


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continued to celebrate Mass, administer the sacraments, and pass the time with his 
mistress. Why mention such a distasteful affair event? The reason is that the seers 
claimed that Our Lady appeared to them on 13 occasions stating that Father Vego 
was innocent, that he was as entitled to celebrate Mass as any other priest, and that 
the bishop was harsh! Any reader with a true sense of being a Catholic, a sensus 
catholicus , will need to read no further to realise the full extent of the mendacity of the 
seers, a mendacity which cannot be excused simply on the grounds that they have 
been manipulated by their Franciscan mentors. What credibility can be given to those 
who claim that the Mother of God told them repeatedly that an immoral priest, 
expelled from his order is innocent, and that the bishop, who had taken the only 
course open to him, was the guilty party! 

The answer is that Mr. Martin is bound to give credibility to the lies of Vicka 
otherwise he could not in good conscience use the CTS to promote Medjugorje. But 
how can he explain the fact that Mr. Vego is now married to the nun he seduced? Any 
answer he could give would be very interesting. 

One must also presume that he finds the bloody handkerchief story convincing 
(May 30, Part 6). 

Many more examples of blatant deceit by the self-styled seers are 
included in this book. Some of them appear to be pathological bars. Two 
more examples will suffice. Vicka has a friend whose father wished to 
build an hotel. Vicka was asked to tell a group of Medjugorje adepts in 
Holland that Our Lady had asked for the construction of a 100 bedroom 
hotel for which they were requested to supply a large some of 
deutschmarks. Some members of the Dutch groups became suspicious 
and asked for more details and Vicka eventually admitted that she had been 
lying, but did not think it important. So lying is “not all that important,” even 
when the lies are put into the mouth of the Blessed Virgin. It is a point of view, not 
a very Catholic point of view, but one must presume that it is one with which Mr. 
Martin agrees otherwise he would not be distributing a book in which Vicka is 
described as an “extrovert, quick witted, and forthright”. Quick witted perhaps, but 
forthright? (See November 1997, Medjugotje Incredibilities). 

Monsignor Zanic makes clear (May 1990, Part 15), that Marija Pavlovic has 
proved beyond any possibility of doubt that no confidence whatsoever can be placed 
in her veracity — “Marija has consciously spoken falsehoods.” In 1987, Father 
Tomislav Vlasic, the principal manipulator of the alleged seers, established a bizarre 
community in Parma, Italy, with an enigmatic German lady named Agnes Heupel 
who claimed to have been cured of an illness at Medjugorje. In this community, 
guided by Vlasic and Heupel, young men and women lived together, which, 
Monsignor Zanic comments, is something unheard of in the history of the 
Church.The founding of the Vlasic/Heupel community caused such scandal that 
Vlasic decided to silence his critics by establishing that the community had been 


153 



established in obedience to a command from Our Lady. Marija Pavlovic was a 
member of the community, and in response to a request by Vlasic duly "revealed" 
that the community had been established at Our Lady’s express command. In July 
1988 great consternation was caused among the Medjugorists when Pavlovic swore 
before the Blessed Sacrament that her previous statement had been false and that the 
Vlasic/Heupel community was in no way endorsed by Our Lady. I suspect that even 
Mr. Martin would find it hard to cover up the fact the Pavlovic must have been lying 
on at least one occasion (see 1 1 July 1988: Marija Pavlovic Contradicts Herself). 

Approval by the diocesan bishop is the first step in the acceptance of an 
apparition as authentic, and no apparition has been recognised by the Church 
without such approval. The two bishops of Mostar-Duvno during the period of 
alleged apparitions are both absolutely adamant that Our Lady has not appeared at 
Medjugorje on a single occasion. In a letter to Father Hugh Thwaites, SJ, dated 17 
August 1987, Monsignor Zanic wrote: 

I am sure that Our Lady does not appear. No miracles. The “Messages” 
cannot be of our Virgin. They are the fruit of a fabrication, fraud and disobedience 
to the Church. It is about big money and personal interest too. 

This judgement is shared by the successor of Monsignor Zanic, Monsignor 
Ratko Peric, who warns that: 

In some of the statements made by the so-called seers of Medjugorje 
published in the last 14 years, there are such contradictions, falsehoods and 
banalities, which cannot be attributed at all to our heavenly Mother Sedes 
Sapientiae — Seat of Wisdom, since there does not exist even a minimal guarantee of 
credibility. On the basis of such statements and the events tied to the statements: it 
cannot be affirmed that these matters concern "supernatural apparitions or 
revelations", of the Madonna or others. The talk of a "great sign", of "ten secrets", 
which Our Lady conveyed to the children, resembles the scare tactics which are 
typical of non-Catholic communities and not the sound teachings of the Catholic 
Church. 

The squalid reality of what is taking place in Medjugorje is not so much as hinted 
at in Mr. Martin’s “accurate and balanced account ... of what is happening in 
Medjugorje, using audientic sources.” The source of the CTS propaganda tracts is 
one David Baldwin whose uncritical effusions make clear that he has been 
completely duped by the duplicitous “seers”. 

Mr. Martin’s booklet is not only contrary to the entire tradition of the CTS by 
promoting unapproved apparitions, and what is more, apparitions that have been 
condemned as false by legitimate authority. His booklet also constitutes gross and 
calculated interference in the diocese of exemplary Catholic bishops in communion 
with the Holy See. Monsignor Zanic expressed the situation perfecdy when he 
wrote: 


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By divine law I am the pastor in this diocese, the teacher of the faith, and the 
judge in questions concerning the faith. Since the events in Medjugorje have caused 
strife and division in the Church — some people believing, others not 
believing — because there are those who have refused to submit themselves to the 
authority of the Church. Because the recommendations and decisions of the above 
mentioned authorities, commissions, congregations of the bishops' conference had 
no effect, I, the bishop of Mostar, answerable before God for the discipline in this 
diocese repeat and confirm earlier decisions of ecclesiastical bodies, and I forbid 
pilgrimages to come here and attribute a supernatural character to these events 
before the Commission of the Bishops' Conference completes its work. 

Mr. Martin would, I hope accept that this is true, but it in no way dissuaded him 
from using the CTS to interfere in the internal affairs of Mostar-Duvno and incite 
English Catholics to go there on Pilgrimage. Let us make the position of legitimate 
Church authority concerning pilgrimages to Medjugorje absolutely clear. The 
Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith twice (in 1996 and 1997) 
cited the episcopal pronouncement of 1991 and concluded: — 

From what has very rightly been said about the matter, it follows that official 
pilgrimages to Medjugorje, taken to be a place of authentic Marian apparitions, may 
not be organised whether at parish or diocesan level, for to do so would be in 
conflict with the solemn pronouncement of the bishops of the former Yugoslavia in 
their previously mentioned communique. 

Monsignor Peric comments: 

On 26 June 1998 the selfsame Secretary of the congregation expressed an 
opinion to the like effect, saying that “unofficial pilgrimages” to Medjugorje are 
permitted only on condition that they are not to be deemed to amount to 
recognition of the authenticity of the “apparitions,” from which it follows that even 
“unofficial pilgrimages” are not permitted if they involve the recognition of the 
authenticity of the “apparitions”. 

Mr. Martin’s booklet accepts that this is the position of legitimate authority (pp. 
70-71) but that: 

There is therefore no bar whatsoever to the laity organising themselves as 
individuals or into pilgrim groups to make the journey to Medjugorje, accompanied 
by their parish. Or any other priest, to tend to their pastoral needs. 

Such pilgrimages are permitted only on the basis that those taking part do not 
accept the authenticity of the alleged apparitions. But what possible reason for 
anyone to go there who does not accept their authenticity? Monsignor Peric 
summed up the situation perfectly when he wrote: 


155 



Accordingly, those who come to Medjugorje with the intention of recognizing 
the so-called apparitions and “messages” are not working in harmony with the 
Church’s position. There is no apparent need for the faithful to come to 
Medjugorje from the four corners of the earth to say the rosary, make their 
confessions or receive communion, when they may do all these things religiously in 
their own parishes, where Our Lord Jesus Christ is present in the sacrament of the 
altar, and Our Lady is always ready to offer a mother’s care. 

For any group to make a pilgrimage to Medjugorje and claim that it is not 
motivated by a belief that it is the site of supernatural visions constitutes sheer 
hypocrisy. On 17 January 2001 a considered judgement on behalf of the French 
hierarchy was published by Monsignor Henri Brincard, Bishop of Bishop of 
Puy-en-Velay. With all the respect due to Mr. Martin I consider the considered 
judgement of the French hierarchy to be somewhat more authoritative than his 
personal opinion. Monsignor Brincard writes: 

It is opportune to ask ourselves if the events of Medjugorje have produced 
good fruits in the visionaries who, at least during the duration of the "apparitions", 
must by their lives be the first witnesses of the grace from which they say they 
benefit. From there it follows that we ask ourselves the following questions: "Have 
they obeyed the bishop of Mostar? Have they respected him?..." Such questions and 
still others yet, are habitually part of a serious investigation into an event of 
apparitions. In order for the investigation to arrive at a solid conclusion, it is 
necessary that these fundamental questions receive a clear and objective response. 

We would like to say nothing about the doubtful or even bad fruits. But the 
tmth obliges us to say that they exist. Let us quote, as examples, the calling into 
question, even to the point of defamation, of the local ordinary as well as the 
disobedience with regard to his legitimate authority; the exacerbation of the 
Herzegovina “question” following the words attributed to "the Gospa ", words in 
favour of the Franciscans and against the bishop. In conclusion, allow me to make 
the following reflection: 

I have no authority to pronounce any ecclesial judgement whatsoever on the 
events of Medjugorje. I am therefore the first to have to give an example of 
obedience, notably in respecting the pastoral decisions of my confrHre of Mostar 
and in complying with joy to his wishes. "I do not see how I can go to Medjugorje 
without giving my support, by the very fact of my arriving there, to the events whose 
discernment and assessment rests henceforth with the Episcopal Conference of 
Bosnia-Herzegovina. Such support would fly in the face of a traditional teaching of 
the Church, recalled in Gumen Gentium and applicable to all the successors of the 
Apostles: ‘Individual bishops, in so far as they are set over particular Churches, 
exercise their pastoral office over the portion of the People of God assigned to 
them, not over other Churches nor the Church universal’.” 


In conclusion one must state that by endorsing alleged apparitions that are not 
only not approved but have been declared by legitimate authority as lacking any basis 
in fact, and by undermining the authority of the legitimate bishops of the diocese, Mr. 


156 



Fergal Martin has brought disgrace upon the CTS. He insisted in a letter to me dated 
25 March 2004 that he considers “the book to be a sufficiently balanced and 
informative presentation of the matter and the issues surrounding it.” Of the 100 
diocesan priests in the dioceses of Herzegovina, not one believes in the apparitions. 
Of the 42 bishops of Yugoslavia (ordinaries, auxiliaries and retired), only one has 
been outspoken in declaring his belief and has defended the events. Of the 15 
members of the first commission, which was formed by the bishop of Mostar with 
the help of the bishops and provincials from Yugoslavia, 1 1 of the members said that 
there is nothing supernatural in the events of Medjugorje, two (Franciscans) claimed 
that the apparitions are authentic, one member said that there was something in 
nucleo(\n the beginning) and one abstained. The fact that these clergy of every rank 
either live in Herzegovina or elsewhere in the former Yugoslavia., and are ideally 
placed to make an informed and balanced judgement does not trouble Mr. Martin at 
all. He is convinced that in his office at 40-46 Harleyford Road, London, SE1 1 5AY 
he is far better placed to make a balanced judgement. 

A somewhat contrasting view from the stand-point of legitimate authority in the 
Church was published by Monsignor Peric on 1 7 February 2004: 

The Church, from the local to supreme level, from the beginning to this very 
day, has clearly and constantly repeated: Non constat de supematuralitate\ No to 
pilgrimages that would ascribe a supernatural nature to the apparitions, no shrine of 
the Madonna, no authentic messages nor revelations, no tme visions! This is the 
state of things today. How will things be tomorrow? We'll leave them in God's 
hands and under Our Lady's protection! 


28 May 2001. 

Communique from Monsignor Luka Pavlovic, Vicar General 


A communique regarding an imposter bishop and the illicit confirmations 

From the chancery office of the diocese of Mostar-Duvno 


This chancery office has already issued communiques on May 16, 19 and 21 
of this year that "Bishop Srecko Franjo Novak" upon the invitation of the 
Franciscan priests who have occupied the parish of Grude: S. Pavlovic, A. Soljic, 
B. Marie and A. Saravanja - 13 May; then upon the invitation of the dismissed 
Franciscans who have usurped the parish of Capljina: Boniface Barbaric, B. 
Rados and M. Vlasic - 20 May and finally upon the invitation of Fra Martin 
Planinic, who has seized the parish of Tepcici 27 May 2001, conducted the rite of 
"confirmation". 


157 



According to his Certificate of Baptism, Novak is the son of parents who 
were not married in the Church and only legitimate p.f.c. (= proforo civili). Yet 
he was baptised in the Catholic Church (enclosure N. 1 - photocopy of the 
Certificate of Baptism of 1968 and 2001). 

Having been expelled from the Catholic seminary, he joined the Old 
Catholics. The Sacrament of Holy Order has three levels: diaconate, presbyterate 
and episcopate. To this day, Novak has not provided any documented proof of his 
ordination to the priesthood or episcopacy. He has stated: "I possess all the 
documents regarding my high school diploma, my scientific title and proof of 
completion of theological studies as well as my episcopal ordination in 
Switzerland in 1989" ( Slobodna Dalmacija, 23 May 2001, p. 9). He is hence 
obliged to prove: who ordained him a priest and bishop? When and where? Who 
can testify to these events? Where are the originals or the diploma of ordination 
( testimonium ordinis )? Where can this be verified? The people have a right to 
know the origins of public figures. 

The position of the chancery office of the diocese of Mostar regarding the 
documents received of Srecko Franjo Novak are the following: 

1) A deacon who was denied priestly ordination and never consecrated 
bishop! Novak was ordained a deacon of the Old Catholic Church. He was denied 
ordination to the priesthood and never became a bishop in that community. This is 
what the Old Catholic bishop Hans Gerny from Switzerland wrote on 23 May 
2001: "Novak studied theology at the Old Catholic theological faculty in Bern. 
He was ordained deacon by Bishop Leon Gauthier. Ordination to the priesthood 
was denied to him. From that time onward, he has had nothing to do with the 
Christian-Catholic Church nor with any other Old Catholic Church of the Union 
of Utrecht. He never received episcopal consecration according to the rite of the 
Old Catholic Church" (enclosure N. 2: photocopy of Gemy's letter; enclosure N. 
3: photocopy of the Old Catholic Dr. Ivo Hrsak's letter from Zagreb, 23 May 
2001 ). 

2) Self-proclaimed bishop and even archbishop! We have managed to obtain 
a copy of the "List of succession" which Novak refers to in speaking to journalists 
0 Slobodna Dalmacija, 23 May 2001, p. 9). In fact, it is the "List of successors of 
the International Christian Community" ( Christ engemeinde International-die 
Successorenliste). This "List of succession" has not been presented to the public 
by Novak because being a false document it does not give him honour. This 
document begins by listing the names of ten successors of the Canadian 
community, the current bishop being: "Serge Theriault, from Hull, Canada". 

A new title then follows: A list of succession of the International Christian 
Community, and one can see the first name as Leon, 2 May 1983 and then a 


158 



double cross (indicating an archbishop) with the signature: + Leon Felix (Srecko) 
Novak. Under his name there are listed six more German and Croatian names of 
"archbishops" and "bishops" with their signatures, which Leon Felix Srecko 
Franjo Novak, the self-proclaimed "archbishop", "ordained" himself or together 
with those he "ordained" earlier (enclosure N. 4: copy of the "List of succession" 
of "arch/bishop" Novak). 

This "List" only proves Novak's religious megalomania. During his seminary 
days he was known to dress up in a priest's cassock and march through the streets 
of Zagreb! Many of his superiors and colleagues who are priests today can testify 
to this. 

3) Questions to Theriault and his responses. Having obtained the "List of 
succession", for the love of Truth and with all ecumenical respect, we sent forth 
10 questions via e-mail on 24 May to Serge Theriault regarding S. F. Novak. 
Amongst the inquiries: Was Novak ever regularly ordained by someone with 
"apostolic succession"? Who ordained him as bishop? Someone has said that you 
personally ordained him bishop? If this is true, when and where did this take 
place? (enclosure N. 5: copy of e-mail with Croatian translation). 

Serge Theriault wrote back the same day he received the letter on 24 May 
2001 and responded: "I did not ordain him a deacon, priest or bishop ..." 
(enclosure N. 6: copy of Theriault's letter with a Croatian translation of Questions 
and Answers). From the response one can understand that up until May of 1983 
Novak was not even a deacon, yet on the "List of succession" 2 May 1983 his 
signature appears as "archbishop" Leon! 

4) Theriault's solemn declaration. The next day, 25 May 2001, we sent Serge 
Theriault a copy of the "List of succession", according to which he "ordained" 
Novak a "bishop". Theriault was so upset that he immediately called a meeting of 
the Synod Council and the same day 25 May issued a resolute "Statement 
regarding Srecko Novak. . 

As the "4th Bishop Ordinary of the Christian Catholic Rite of Community 
Churches" he declares "that Srecko Novak, Harald Scheffler, Franz Budweiser 
and others are not, and never have been, canonical clergymen in our jurisdiction, 
and that receieved no ordination to the diaconate, the priesthood or the episcopate 
in the historical apostolic succession has been conferred on them by me or by my 
predecessor, Monsignor O'Neill M. Cote, 1939-1986 ... and in consequence, it is 
false that an episcopal lineage in Apostolic Succession is claimed from and 
through us, as stated in the attached document titled “Die Successorenliste of the 
Christengemeinde International" (enclosure N. 7: copy of the declaration in 
English with a Croatian translation). 


159 



5) "Professor and doctor of Theology"? Srecko Novak, together with Dragan 
Hazier, from the "Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Diaspora" in Basel, 
issued an honoris causa doctorate diploma with his signature as secretarius with a 
little cross (indicating that he is a bishop) with the following: "Prof. Dr. th. + 
Srecko Novak", thus suggesting that he is a doctor of theology. This is how he 
signed the diploma given to Hans Joachim Dombrowsky on 7 March 1994 
(enclosure N. 8: photocopy of the diploma). 

If it is true that he is a "professor and doctor of theology" as his signature 
indicates, then he should at least provide his diploma or any other authentic 
document of a theological faculty indicating: where, when and from whom did he 
receive his doctorate in theology. If this is not true, then one knows what this is 
called in academic circles. What is known though is that he was expelled from the 
seminary of Zagreb as well as from the Old Catholic theological school before he 
completed the first level of studies towards a diploma in theology. 

Such are the facts of the matter regarding Novak as a pseudo-professor, 
deceptive-doctor of theology, phoney-priest, bogus-bishop and spurious 
"successor of the apostles" — all this documented with his signature. From his 
signatures and the documents which others have received from him, we are 
convinced that we are dealing with not only a dismissed Catholic seminarian, an 
expelled Old Catholic deacon, but also with a scientific and ecclesiastical 
falsifier, who the above-mentioned dismissed, and disobedient Franciscans of the 
province of Herzegovina have promoted to be their "bishop"! These sad events 
probably best describe how deep the disease of disobedience can go in the Church 
and concretely in the entire "Herzegovinian affair" ! 

According to the documents which we have obtained and Novak's 
statements, we hereby declare that all Novak's Masses are invalid and sacrilegious 
since he has no proof that he was validly ordained a priest, and that all his 
confirmations are also invalid and sacrilegious since he has no proof that he was 
validly ordained a bishop ! 

Conclusion. All of this can be summarised in a single word: TRAGEDY! 
This is a religious, moral, liturgical, sacramental, dogmatic, Catholic, 
"ecumenical" and especially a Franciscan tragedy! We appreciate the 
Communique given by the provincialate of the Franciscan province of 
Herzegovina of 23 May, in which the province firmly distances itself: "from the 
actions of certain Franciscans who are already under sanctions by the generalate 
of the Franciscan Order and by the local ordinary. Neither the Franciscans of 
Herzegovina nor the Franciscan Province of Herzegovina, which is truly 
Catholic, stand by these actions ...." (enclosure N. 9: copy of the Statement). 

It is scandalous how some disobedient Franciscans have strayed from the 
principles, hierarchy and order of the Catholic Church deceiving hundreds of 
candidates for confirmation, thousands of sponsors and parents and giving way to 


160 



offence and sacrilege against the Holy Spirit. It is evident here that the use of 
reason has failed and moral idiocy has taken over. "If Gypsies can have their own 
bishop ... then why can't a Franciscan be consecrated bishop?" Fra Bernard Marie 
asks (Jutarnji list, 19 May 2001, p. 3). Is this the way to resolve the 
"Herzegovinian affair"? Is this, then, an attempt to separate from the Catholic 
Church through a validly ordained bishop who would not recognise the Holy See? 
Would such a disobedient or dismissed Franciscan be ordained a "bishop" by the 
dismissed Old Catholic deacon Srecko Novak, so that "the last fraud will be 
worse than the first" (Mt 27:64)? 

We humbly pray that the Holy Trinity may keep us, guide us and consecrate 
us in our holy faith and our faithfulness to the Catholic Church. 

Mostar, 28 May 2001. 

Monsignor Luka Pavlovic, Vicar General. 


29 May 2001 

Communique of the Bishop’s Conference of 
Bosnia-Herzegovina 


We the bishops of Bosnia-Herzegovina, motivated by our responsibility to 
maintain unity in the Church and by our pastoral care for the good of souls, 
having gathered together for a special session in Mostar, wish to communicate to 
the Catholic faithful and the general public the following: 

The appearance of a member of a non-Catholic community who recently held 
the rite of confirmation in three parishes of the Diocese of Mostar -Duvno, is an 
overt attempt to disintegrate the unity of the Roman Catholic Church in this 
country and to break its centuries-old bond of communion with the Apostolic See 
of St. Peter. 

The priests dismissed from the Franciscan Order, as well as those who in 
disobedience to their religious and Church superiors, who invited a non-Catholic 
to preside at a Catholic rite, are directly acting against the holiness of the 
sacraments and the unity of the Church. 

Those candidates who for whatever reason agreed to participate in these 
scandalous acts, through which Catholic Church unity is not strengthened but 
destroyed, did not receive the sacrament of Confirmation of the Catholic Church. 


161 



It seems that the aim and the method in which the above-mentioned rite was 
conducted serve only to increase the difficulties which the Croatian people and 
the Catholic Church in Bosnia and Herzegovina have been exposed to recently. 

Therefore we wholeheartedly implore the Catholics of B-H, the priests, 
religious and all the faithful, especially those in the diocese of Mostar-Duvno, to 
not allow anyone to deceive or confuse them in the solid faith of their fathers, in 
their faithfulness to the Holy Father and the Holy See, as well as their unity with 
the local bishops. We invite everyone to pray to our heavenly Father and to Christ 
the Good Shepherd, so that all the faithful of the holy Church may receive the gift 
of the Holy Spirit who is the only guarantee of the Church's unity of faith and her 
communion of love and peace. 

Through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church, 
we pray that all may receive an abundance of blessings and peace of the Holy 
Trinity! 

Mostar, 29 May 2001. 


Vinko Cardinal Puljic, Archbishop of Vrhbosna (Sarajevo) 

Franjo Komarica, Bishop of Banja Luka 

Ratko Peric, Bishop of Mostar-Duvno 

Pero Sudar, Auxiliary Bishop of Vrhbosna (Sarajevo). 


14 June 2001 

Homily by Bishop Peric, Given in Medjugorje, in Which He 
Speaks of the Disobedience of the Local Franciscans Involving 
Invalid Confirmations and Attempted Invalid Priestly 

Consecrations 


Christ, be our joy! Holy Spirit, give us Your wisdom! 

Medjugorje, Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ, 14 June 2001 

Today the Church celebrates the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ. 
We sing in a Croatian Eucharistic song to Jesus: Christ, be our joy! Christ, be our 
happiness! Christ, be our life! Amongst these three great words: joy, happiness 
and life, we shall reflect on only one: happiness and its opposite. 

Happiness. Christ, be our happiness! We don't ask Christ to be our lucky 


162 



break, our chance opportunity, something totally unexpected. In Latin there are 
two meanings for happiness: felicitas — this is happiness which is earned, merited, 
for which one has worked towards and prayed hard for, and fortune - this is sheer 
luck, winning a lottery, finding a thousand deutschmarks on the street. Someone 
might be crying over that loss while you are rejoicing over your newly discovered 
fortune, which you should instead report to the police. 

In our faith we are not talking about the fortune of chance events. Instead we 
refer to the happiness which comes from an encounter (in Croatian sreca - 
felicitas comes from sresti - encounter) with a person, parents, brothers, sisters, 
with people you respect, love and to whom you owe a debt of gratitude. A true 
encounter is happiness. An encounter with God is the ultimate happiness and God 
has prepared that encounter for us. We owe Him our encounters and our 
happiness. 

We also pray to Christ that He be our happiness and that we may encounter 
Him. Today we celebrate Him in his Sacred Body as our encounter and our 
happiness. We encounter Him every day in the Eucharist, in prayer and adoration. 
Let us pray for vocations in our local Church, so that He may choose new 
labourers according to the Father's plan. The harvest is great, yet the labourers are 
far too few (Lk 10:2). 

In the Church there has always existed the practical rule that: "If you wish to 
be happy and if you want to make others happy, then don't personally ask for 
anything and don't refuse anything". Don't push your own candidacy forward and 
don't bury your talents! Others know about you. 

Don't seek to become the Father Provincial! But if you are legitimately 
elected, then don't run away, but try your best to lead the province to happiness, 
not to adversity. Don’t seek to become a bishop! Yet if you are legitimately 
nominated, stay faithful to the end in truth and justice and govern the diocese in 
unity of faith and love with the Holy Father the Pope. 

If anyone is cheerful, let him sing praise (James 5:13). If anyone is happy, 
may be make others happy as well. 

Misfortune. Maybe happiness can be better understood when one mentions 
misfortune: misfortunes at work, during travels, in marriage, in the sky, during the 
night, misfortunes as tragedies, an automobile accident or train crash, injury, loss, 
failure, death. There are various types of misfortunes, willed and accidental, all 
the way up to great Church misfortunes. 

Many local and foreign journalists have asked me by phone or fax these last 
days: "What do you think of the so-called apparitions, which haven't stopped 
being a mass-media craze these last 20 years?" My response is that I think what I 
have always thought, and as the local ordinary of this diocese still hold to what I 
said from this holy place last year. I think and state that which the Catholic 
Church on the basis of competent and responsible investigations officially claims: 


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taking into account all the events of the last twenty years, there hasn't been 
recognized any authentic and accepted supernatural apparition, nor has any 
supernatural message been recognised, nor has any supernatural revelation been 
acknowledged. 

This is what I believe and what I publicly and clearly proclaim, so that there 
may be absolutely no doubt regarding the so-called apparitions. At the same time, 
I express my deep faith in the Blessed Virgin Mary, the humble and obedient 
servant of the Lord and her role in Christ's work of salvation according to the 
teachings of the Church. 

Yet amongst all these curious questions, very few enquire about the local 
Church situation which is making many faithful unhappy in this diocese. The 
situation I'm speaking of is the inhuman, unchristian, irreligious and unpriestly 
disobedience that continues against the decisions of the highest Church 
authorities. 

Had they asked me, I would have responded with a sorrowful heart that 
according to revealed facts which have not been repudiated by anyone so far with 
sound arguments, the disobedience that has been nurtured for years against the 
Holy See, the Franciscan OFM order and the local Church, has recently produced 
the bitter fruits of invalid and sacrilegious confessions, invalid confirmations and 
sacrilegious Masses. 

Those Franciscan priests who in previous years took it upon themselves to 
invalidly confirm or invited others to celebrate "confirmation", have descended 
this year into such a depth of misfortune that they avoided the local ordinary and 
invited someone who not only is not a bishop nor priest, but who isn't even a 
Catholic to "confirm". This person stated: "Our aim is to make the Pope revoke 
the Romanis Pontificibus decree through these confirmations ... the Franciscans 
and I believe in Mary's apparitions in Medjugorje". 

Regarding celibacy he said: "when it is abolished, priests will be able to 
marry. This is what we want". Being a non-Catholic he also said: "the 
impeccability of the Pope cannot regard dogmas" (statement: 23 May 2001). He 
was probably referring to the Pope's infallibility in faith and morals. These are the 
beliefs of the person that was invited to three parishes of this diocese: Grude, 
Capljina and Tepcici, to illegitimately "confirm" 779 candidates. What is at hand 
here are not only invalid confirmations and a sacrilege against the Holy Spirit but 
invalid Masses also, which this non-priest acted out before the faithful who were 
led astray by a hireling, like sheep without a pastor (Jn 10). 

I would have responded with a sorrowful heart to questions on the local 
situation with first-hand testimony that last year some Franciscans approached an 
Old Catholic bishop in Switzerland and asked him to ordain a "secret bishop" 
(Geheimbischof) so that through the sacrament of holy orders they could ordain 
new priests and celebrate the sacrament of confirmation. The Old Catholic bishop 


164 



obviously refused their request and ended the discussion (our question: 25 May 
and his response 28 May 2001). I have no reason not to believe the Old Catholic 
bishop from Switzerland, who acted in the current ecumenical spirit of 
non-proselytising. I have also informed the responsible authorities of the Church 
on this matter. 

I would have responded with a sorrowful heart, that I was recently officially 
informed that the Franciscan Order has dismissed another three members of the 
province of Herzegovina from the order due to their continuous disobedience and 
three others were suspended of their priestly faculties. I would have also 
mentioned that 40 members of the province refused to sign the statement 
regarding obedience, which was agreed upon by the general of the Franciscan 
Order, the local bishop and authorised by the Holy See. 

Yet with gratitude I also mention that two-thirds of the Franciscan Fathers 
signed the statement and thereby expressed their desire to maintain a true spirit of 
ecclesiastical obedience. I will be counting on them and their participation in the 
pastoral work within the diocese. I further stress that the Franciscans currently 
assigned to this parish of Medjugorje have been presented by the provincialate 
and legitimately nominated by the chancery office of Mostar. 

The latter pleases us greatly whereas the former, the attempt to break catholic 
unity on the part of some in the areas of faith, cult and discipline, hurts to the 
bottom of the heart. I'm bringing this out in the context of this celebration of the 
sacrament of confirmation with my appeal to all in the diocese, in the country and 
the world, accompanied by a heartfelt prayer that the Holy Trinity save us from 
similar misfortunes and unfortunate Church tragedies. 

Therefore I pray for you today, dear candidates for confirmation, and I invite 
you after having validly received the sacrament of confirmation to be true 
witnesses of Catholic unity and faith, authentic witnesses of the Holy Spirit and 
His seven gifts, from wisdom to holy fear of God, witnesses for Jesus Christ who 
has revealed the Father to us. 

Christ, be our joy! Holy Spirit, send forth your gifts: "love, joy, peace, 
patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control" (Gal 
5:22-23). 


+ Ratko Peric 

Bishop of Mostar-Duvno. 


10 October 2000 

Catholic World News Service, 10 October 2001, 


165 



Reference 16570 


Bosnici-Herzegovinci Cardinal Critical of Medjugorje Franciscans 


In an extremely important development the highest ranking Church official 
in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Cardinal Vinko Puljic (Archbishop of Vrhbosna, 
Sarajevo) , has commented on aspects of the Medjugorje phenomenon in the 
presence of the Holy Father, at the current Synod of Bishops in Rome. This is 
what he said: 

As pertains to the Church in Bosnia-Herzegovina, its shepherds commit 
themselves, together with their priests, consecrated persons and faithful laity, to 
make their witness become the leaven of society and to make it possible to 
transmit the light of the Gospel into the economic, social and political realities of 
their nation. 

While most of the consecrated persons operating on the territory of the local 
ecclesial districts remain faithful to the charism of their institutes and commit 
themselves without reservation to the promotion of apostolic works, for the good 
of the Church and civic society; unfortunately, certain members of the Order of 
Franciscan Friars Minor and those expelled try to impose their own points of 
view in the individual dioceses, substituting the authentic charisms of their 
institute with pseudo-charisms, a serious threat for the Church and for her 
organizational and doctrinal unity. 

Suffice it to recall the sad events last summer when the protagonists of the 
aforementioned order and a self-declared bishop: an old-style Catholic deacon 
expelled from his community, or a systematic disobedience to the same religious 
persons who for years have been in the diocese of Mostar-Duvno 


Mostar, 2001 

Final Chapter of the Book Ogledalo Pravde (“Mirror of 
Justice”) by Monsignor Peric (Mostar, 2001), Pp. 313-314. 


Conclusion 

The Church’s Position 


According to an official communique dated lOh April 1991, composed on 
the basis of the thorough and comprehensive work of the commissions of experts, 
the bishops 16 did not find a single indication or sign which might have led them to 


16 Sc. of the former Yugoslavia 


166 



say that the phenomena in Medjugorje are of supernatural origin. 

Nor has anything of significance since happened with regard to the 
“apparitions” and “messages” so as to lead to a reconsideration. It follows that 
those who preach in our churches from the very altars about these phenomena, as 
if they were recognized and authentic apparitions and messages, are not acting in 
accordance with the Church’s position. 

An interpretation of the “pilgrimage” 

The Secretary of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith 
twice (in 1996 and 1997) cited the episcopal pronouncement of 1991 and 
concluded: — 

From what has very rightly been said about the matter, it follows 
that official pilgrimages to Medjugorje, taken to be a place of 
authentic Marian apparitions, may not be organised whether at 
parish or diocesan level, for to do so would be in conflict with the 
solemn pronouncement of the bishops of the former Yugoslavia in 
their previously mentioned communique. 

On 26 June 1998 the selfsame Secretary of the congregation expressed an 
opinion to the like effect, saying that “unofficial pilgrimages” to Medjugorje are 
permitted only on condition that they are not to be deemed to amount to 
recognition of the authenticity of the “apparitions,” from which it follows that 
even “unofficial pilgrimages” are not permitted if they involve the recognition of 
the authenticity of the “apparitions”. 

Accordingly, those who come to Medjugorje with the intention of 
recognizing the so-called apparitions and “messages” are not working in harmony 
with the Church’s position. There is no apparent need for the faithful to come to 
Medjugorje from the four corners of the earth to say the rosary, make their 
confessions or receive communion, when they may do all these things religiously 
in their own parishes, where Our Lord Jesus Christ is present in the sacrament of 
the altar, and Our Lady is always ready to offer a mother’s care. 

From disobedience to schism 

For many years the diocese of Mostar and Duvno has been afflicted by the 
incomprehensible disobedience of a small number of members of the Franciscan 
province of Herzegovina with regard to handing over a number of parishes “to the 
free disposition of the [diocesan] bishop”, in accordance with a papal decree of 
1975. 


167 



In 1997 the general administration of the OFM took the most serious 
measures as a result of such disobedience, including the expulsion of disobedient 
members from the order. Eight members have been expelled from the Franciscan 
Order in this way. The Holy See has confirmed their expulsions. Some of them 
have occupied a number of parishes, in which, even though they have been 
punished by suspension a divinis, they illicitly and sacrilegiously act as clerics, 
hearing invalid confessions, officiating at invalid weddings, and administering 
invalid confirmations. 

Bishops and priests who come to Medjugorje from all over the world and at 
the request of parishioners or other moving spirits make pronouncements about 
the “apparitions” and “messages” of Medjugorje as though they were authentic, 
do not help order, peace and the necessary unity of this diocese and the Church by 
their presence or by their pronouncements. 

A serious sin against the unity of the Church was committed on 5 October 
1997, when some purported bishop, telling neither his name nor whence he came, 
but passing through Medjugorje at the request of the disobedient Franciscans, 
confirmed more than 400 children in the neighbouring parish of Capljina, against 
the express provisions of canon law. According to information received later, the 
officiating cleric was a Herzegovinian Franciscan who had blasphemously 
represented himself to be a bishop. In 2001 he was expelled from the Franciscan 
Order. 

An even worse scandal occurred last year in June 2001, when some 
disobedient elements invited an Old Catholic deacon, who falsely represented 
himself to be a bishop, announcing that he accepted the “apparitions” of 
Medjugorje, and who officiated at the invalid confirmations of hundreds of 
candidates for confirmation in three parishes. 

Commendation 

We humbly commend the ecclesiastical unity of this diocese to the 
Immaculate Virgin who conceived by the power of the Holy Ghost and gave birth 
to the Light of the World, Jesus Christ, the Lord of Righteousness (1 John 2, 1). 
We accordingly turn to her calling upon her as we do in her litany: “Mirror of 
truth, pray for us!” 

Ratko Peric, Bishop. 


5 July 2002 

Catholic Herald Report 


168 



This report by Simon Caldwell is of considerable significance as it is the first article 
critical of the Medjugorje phenomenon to appear in a mainstream Catholic weekly newspaper 
in Britain. It has been slightly abbreviated. 


On Tuesday last week, the Madonna of Medjugorje came of age. The 21st 
anniversary of the first reported apparition on a hillside in Herzegovina was 
marked in this country by a statement to the Catholic press from the Medjugorje 
Apostolate of England and Wales (formerly the Medjugorje Network). In the 
statement, the organisation boasted that world-wide interest in the “apparitions” 
has been mounting every year and that now "millions of people from all five 
continents make their private pilgrimages to this shrine, including many 
cardinals, bishops, priests and nuns". 

Indeed, it is true that many positive spiritual "fruits" have been linked to the 
claims of apparitions; almost every Catholic knows someone who claims their 
lives have been changed by a visit to the shrine. Some pilgrims come back with 
stories about spinning suns, and rosaries turning to gold, others undergo 
conversions that are sincere and lasting, and some become vigorous promoters of 
Our Lady Queen of Peace, known to devotees as the " Gospa ", and her mission to 
bring about world peace through reconciliation and prayer. So it is ironic that 
Medjugorje has become one of the biggest threats to the unity of the Catholic 
Church today. 

What many devout pilgrims to Medjugorje may not realise is that the Church 
does not want them to go there at all. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the 
Faith (CDF) has forbidden all public pilgrimages to the shrine since 1995. Bishop 
Ratko Peric of Mostar, who, as local ordinary, is the only man alive to whom the 
Church has given authority to determine the veracity of the “apparitions”, is 
convinced they are fraudulent: so was his predecessor, the late Bishop Pavao 
Zanic, so is the ex- Yugoslavian bishops’ conference, so are the members of three 
official commissions, each of which ruled negatively, and so are all the Mostar 
diocesan clergy and most of the Franciscans there. 

There will be one final investigation, conducted by Rome, and it will 
conclude only when either the reports of the “apparitions” end or the last of the 
seers dies, since Church norms warn that errors might arise if the study of the 
"fruits" are not preceded by the study of the "events". 17 But a definitive ruling is 
unlikely to come in the near future because three of the original six visionaries are 


This is not correct as the entire question of Medjugorje in in the hands of the four 
bishops of Herzegovina, not one of whom accepts the authenticy of the alleged 
apparitions. Rome is not involved in the matter in any way. 



saying the Gospa promised them apparitions for life, and a second generation of 
seers has also emerged. 

This is convenient for the visionaries since they derive income from their 
status as seers. They have courted and won celebrity status and some have since 
toured the world with the Gospa, whom they can summon on demand anywhere. 
She has an apparent flexibility which has surprised even some of her most ardent 
devotees. On one trip to England, the seer Ivan Dragicevic was said to have 
postponed a scheduled apparition so he could watch a soccer match instead, 
promising that Our Lady would appear after the final whistle. Ivan, who is 
married to former Miss Massachusetts beauty queen Loreen Murphy, was once 
touted by US tour operator Peter Miller as able to offer a personal introduction to 
the Madonna for just $500. 

He owns a BMW and a Mercedes as well as a German-style mansion on the 
local millionaires' row. It stands opposite that which belongs to fellow seer 
Mirjana Dragicevic, who has converted part of her home into a guesthouse for 
pilgrims, including “apparitions'” as part of the deal. All of the seers are married 
and all but one of them own hotels in Medjugorje, in stark contrast to, say, Lucia 
Dos Santos and Saint Bernadette Soubirous, who went on to lead less worldly 
lives after they received apparitions at Latima and Lourdes. 

It was the belief of the late Bishop Zanic that the whole thing began as a joke, 
and at first that’s how it appears. The children would laugh hysterically during the 
Gospa’ s early appearances, not least when Jakov Colo asked if his football team, 
Dynamo Zagreb, would win the championship. After an initial week of visions, 
the children said the Gospa would appear for "just three more days", that the 
visions would end by 4 July 1981. But since then she has spoken on an additional 
30,000 occasions, has given the seers 10 secrets each, promised great signs from 
heaven that never materialised and, contrary to the teachings of the Church over 
two millennia, has declared "all religions are equal before God". She became the 
number one apologist for a group of disobedient Herzegovinian Lranciscans only 
when Lather Jozo Zovko, the parish priest at St James Church, Medjugorje, where 
the “apparitions” were said to be appearing, established himself as the children’s 
"spiritual adviser". But even then she would continue to drop the occasional 
gaffe, describing, for instance, The Poem of the Man God, a book by Maria 
Valltorta, as "good reading" (Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the Prefect of the CDL, 
had said it was a "heap of pseudo-religiosity"). 

What really swayed the local bishops against the Gospa, however, was her 
partisan approach to "the Herzegovina question". This is the Vatican’s term for a 
de facto schism involving a large minority of Herzegovinian Lranciscan friars 
who not only refuse to obey their bishop but also defy the Lather General of their 
Order and Rome itself. 

In the 1980s two such friars, Lather Ivica Vego and Ivan Prusina, were 


170 



expelled from their order for disobedience by a Vatican tribunal, acting on the 
advice of Bishop Zanic and the Franciscan Father General in Rome, but they 
continued to celebrate the sacraments. Thirteen times the Gospa told the seer, 
Vicka Ivankovic, that the bishop was wrong and her "saints" were innocent, even 
threatening him with God’s "justice" unless he reversed their expulsion (Father 
Vego, for the record, soon showed just how saintly he was by impregnating a 
Franciscan nun). 

When Bishop Zanic later investigated the “apparitions”, he should have had 
the co-operation of the Franciscans. Instead, they publicly slandered him, calling 
him a "wolf", "Satan" and a "hypocrite". It was hardly a surprise, then, that Bishop 
Zanic soon concluded that the six children were lying, and publicly accused 
Father Zovko and his collaborator, Father Tomislav Vlasic, of putting words into 
the mouth of Our Lady. Indeed, he was not only concerned about the spiritual 
well-being of his people but also about their corporal welfare. In 1985 he wrote to 
Father Rene Laurentin, a chief promoter of the visions, complaining that "a fierce 
frenzy has taken hold of many of the faithful who were good until now; they have 
become excessive and peculiar penitents . . . one can look forward to a religious 
war here..." 

Pope Pius XII first moved against the friars by appointing a secular rather 
than a local Franciscan bishop to the See of Mostar in 1942. The rebellion that 
ensued came to a head in 1975 when Pope Paul VI issued the decree, Romanus 
Pontificibus, which gave the friars a deadline of a year to hand over contested 
parishes. Predictably, they refused. 

Promoters of Medjugorje insist that the Herzegovina question and the 
“apparitions” are not connected. The diocese of Mostar insists they are intimately 
linked. Bishop Zanic said the Gospa was used to justify the disobedience of the 
friars, while Don Ante Luburic, chancellor of the diocese, in 1997 went as far as 
to describe Medjugorje as a place of "religious disorder, disobedience and 
anti-ecclesiastical activity". 

Sadly, this situation has been exacerbated by the trusting support for the 
friars of "millions of people from all five continents", for the Church has made 
little progress on the Herzegovina question since 1941. During the Bosnian 
War.. .an estimated £10 million was raised in the West for war orphans under the 
banner of the Queen of Peace. But all there has ever been to show for the money is 
a 40-place crllche in Medjugorje for the children of working mothers. Few, not 
least the bishop of Mostar, have a clue where the rest of the money went, but some 
sources suggest that about 70 per cent ended up in the hands of warlords and 
organised criminals. This is not fanciful: in the mid-1990s, the Charity 
Commission Froze the assets of Britain’s Medjugorje Appeal when it was found 
to be buying handcuffs for the HVO Croatian militia. 

The Yugoslavian bishops, unanimous in their rejection of the Gospa, raised 


171 



the Herzegovina question in the presence of the Pope at last year's Synod of 
Bishops in Rome when Cardinal Vinko Puljic of Sarajevo warned of the serious 
threat posed to the unity of the entire Catholic Church as a result of the 
disobedient monks "serving in Medjugorje who impose their own points of view 
with the aid of pseudo-charisms". 

The Pope, for his part, has been silent on Medjugorje, leaving the matter to 
the discretion of the local bishops. Indeed, with some 300 reported cases of 
private revelations going on in the world at any one time, he would have little 
time to do anything else if he was to investigate and rule on each one personally. 

Nevertheless, Medjugorje promoters continuously insist the Pope has 
privately signalled his approval of the “apparitions” and list a number of 
comments he has supposedly made in their favour, perhaps most famously, "Let 
the people go to Medjugorje if they convert, pray, confess, do penance". An 
American Catholic once asked Archbishop Pio Laghi, then papal nuncio to the 
United States, if there was any truth in the remarks, and he received a reply which 
read: "Although there have been made observations about Medjugorje attributed 
to the Holy Fr or other officials of the Holy See, none of these have been 
acknowledged as authentic." 

Perhaps the most telling indication of all was the Pope’s visit to Bosnia in 
April 1997, when he not only declined to visit Medjugorje (he visited the Muslim 
community of Mostar just 15 miles away) but also failed to mention the disputed 
shrine even once. 

In short, all the arguments are stacked against the possibility that the 
Medjugorje “apparitions” could be authentic. The most compelling argument in 
their favour remains the so-called "Fruits" — the converted lives, the increase in 
piety and devotion, the recovery of lost faith, and so on. 

On this subject, Bishop Peric, not surprisingly, has an opinion. "The Fruits, 
so often mentioned, do not prove that they flow from apparitions or supernatural 
revelations of Our Lady," he said. "But in the measure that they are authentically 
Christian, they may be interpreted as a product of the normal work of divine 
grace, by faith in God, by the intercession of the Virgin Mary, Mother of Christ, 
and by the Sacraments of the Catholic Church. And this is to say nothing of the 
negative Fruits." 

According to Church teaching, Fruits of authentic supernatural interventions 
are first born in those who receive them, yet the two men closest to the children 
From the outset do not appear to have been converted in the proper sense. 

Fr Vlasic, who fathered a child by a nun in a mixed-sex convent in Zagreb in 
the 1970s, now lives in Italy, where, funnily enough, he’s trying for the second 
time to set up a mixed religious community. Fr Zovko, on the other hand, is one of 
16 Herzegovinian Friars either suspended by Bishop Peric, or expelled From the 
Franciscan Order by the Father General, Giacomo Bini, a man who for the last 


172 



eight years has also threatened to suspend the entire Herzegovina province. Like 
his rebellious conFreres, Zovko ignores the penalties of the bishop, not only 
continuing to celebrate Mass and hear confessions, though he has no faculties to 
do so, but building, without the bishop’s permission, a huge convent in Siroki 
Brijeg, near Mostar, the source of funding of which remains a mystery. Last year, 
Bishop Peric wrote to each of the 120 Friars to ask for their obedience, and about 
a third refused to give it. Earlier in the year, the rebels used a bogus archbishop, 
Srecko Franjo Novak, an expelled seminarian, to confirm 700 children in three 
churches. The confirmations, of course, were invalid and caused a great deal of 
anxiety to loyal clergy and to the bishop. 

To many, Medjugorje is not so much about apparitions of the Blessed Virgin 
Mary, but of disobedience to the legitimate authority of the Church: about Friars 
who defy their superiors, and Catholics From overseas who ignore the directions 
of Church not to go on pilgrimage there. Most seriously of all, it is a manifestation 
of the disobedience of the cardinals and bishops who go there too: by wilfully 
ignoring the wishes of the local ordinary these men are offending against the 
principle of collegiality, as defined in section 23 of Lumen Gentium. 

They are also helping to perpetuate what could be one of the most subversive 
hoaxes in the history of the Catholic Church. 


12 July 2002 

Catholic Herald A Defence of Medjugorje 

The article by Simon Caldwell in a journal that is sold in most Catholic 
parishes in England and Wales provoked outrage among devotees of Medjugorje. 
The letter which follows was written by Monsignor George Tutto, a longstanding 
believer in the authenticity of the alleged apparitions. 

Sir, 

The devotees of Our Lady of Medjugorje are used to the rather unchristian 
attacks by a vociferous group of antagonists of Medjugorje, but the feature article 
by Simon Caldwell (July 5) surpasses them all, unworthy of your well respected 
paper. 

The article is full of untruths and distortions and I cannot go into all. I 
mention only two facts which are enough to render the article a malicious attempt 
to hurt and confuse many believers. The first untruth in the article is this: "What 
many devout pilgrims to Medjugorje may not realise is that the Church does not 


173 



want them to go there at all. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has 
forbidden all public pilgrimages to the shrine since 1995." 

Against this nonsense I quote a few passages From the letter of the 
Secretary of the above Congregation (CDF), Archbishop Tarcisio Bertone to 
Bishop Gilbert Aubry of Saint Denis de la Reunion on 26th May, 1998: 

".. .The main thing I would like to point out is that the Holy See does not 
ordinarily take a position on its own regarding supposed supernatural 
phenomena as a court of first instance. As for the credibility of the “apparitions” 
in question, this dicastery respects what was decided by the bishops of the former 
Yugoslavia, in the Declaration of Zadar, 10 April 1991: 

"On this basis of the investigations so far, it cannot be affirmed that one is 
dealing with supernatural apparitions and revelations. Since the division of 
Yugoslavia into different independent nations it would now pertain to the 
members of the Episcopal Conference of Bosnia- Herzegovina to eventually 
reopen the examination of this case, and to make any new pronouncements that 
might be called for. 

“What Bishop Peric said in his letter to the Secretary General of Famille 
Chretienne, declaring: ‘My conviction and my position is not only I, but 
likewise, constat de non-supernaturalitate of the apparitions or revelations in 
Medjugorje' , should be considered as the expression of the personal conviction 
of the Bishop of Mostar which he has right to express as ordinary of the place, 
but which is and remains his personal opinion. 

“Finally, as regards pilgrimages to Medjugorje, which are conducted 
privately, this congregation points out that they are permitted on condition that 
they are not regarded as an authentification of events still taking place and which 
still call for an examination by the Church.” 

The second untruth concerns the two suspended Friars by Bishop Zanic: "In 
the 1980s two such Friars, Fathers Ivica Vego and Ivan Prusina, were expelled 
From their order for disobedience by a Vatican tribunal, acting on the advice of 
Bishop Zanic..." Just the opposite is the truth. 

Bishop Zanic demanded on the 17 January 1983 that the Friars should be 
reduced to laity status. Father Vego, I gather, got married later on, but the case of 
Father Prusina was taken up by the supreme tribunal of the Holy See, the 
Signatura Apostolica. After many years of investigation, the tribunal arrived at 
its decision on 27 March, 1993. In document 17907/86 CA, it is stated that Father 
Ivan Prusina's expulsion from the order and Bishop Zanic's demand to declare 
Prusina ad statem laicalem was both wrong and illegal. The Catholic Press failed 
to take note of this. But I blame partly also the Roman authorities. When I wrote 
a letter to the Secretary of the tribunal, Bishop Zenon Grocholewski on 1 June 
1995, asking for a copy of the tribunal's sentence, the Bishop expressed his regret 
for being unable to accede my request, but I was forbidden to publish the 
contents of his letter. I received information regarding Father Prusina from other 
sources. 18 


18 


As explained under the date 30 May 1990 the expulsion was overturned on a 
technicality. The facts that prompted it have not been disputed. In the case of Vego the 

174 



In view of the above facts, it is beyond my comprehension that Mr 
Caldwell could write such critical words against cardinals and bishops who went 
to Medjugorje to pray there. 

"...Most seriously of all, it is a manifestation of the disobedience of the 
cardinals and bishops who go to Medjugorje too: by wilfully ignoring the wishes 
of the local ordinary these men are offending against the principle of collegiality, 
as defined in section 23 of Lumen Gentium". 

I hope and pray that the readers of your paper will ignore this article with 
contempt. 

Yours faithfully, 

GEORGE TUTTO 

Hungarian Roman Catholic Chaplaincy of Our Lady, 

London, W.3. 


A scandalous allegation. 


A letter From Mr. Bernard Ellis published in the same issue of the Catholic Herald 
contained the following scandalous allegation. 

Sir, 

Simon Caldwell's article about Medjugorje is full of inaccuracies but does 
contain one crucial truth, namely that "almost every Catholic knows someone 
who claims their lives have been changed by a visit to the shrine" and "others 
undergo conversions that are sincere and lasting". As Bishop Peric told Fr John 
Chisholm, a theologian well respected by the Vatican, that he personally did not 
believe in the apparitions at Lourdes and Fatima, it is hardly surprising that he 
refuses to attribute these Fruits to a supernatural visitation in Medjugorje. 

I contacted Monsignor Peric immediately and he assured me that the 
allegation is false. The claim that Father Chisholm is “a theologian well 
respected by the Vatican” is simply a gratuitous claim by Mr. Ellis. I obtained the 
address of this priest, a private home and not an ecclesiastical establishment, and 
wrote to him on 15 July 2002 to ask whether he had made the statement that Mr. 
Ellis had attributed to him. My letter included the following: 

You may be aware of the fact that you were quoted in the Catholic Herald 
of 12 July as stating that Monsignor Peric had told you that he does not believe 


annulment is irrelevant as he has married his mistress and is hence no longer a 
Franciscan.. (See Monsignor Ratko Peric, I, p. 64.) Prusina now lives in Germany and 
is not permitted to exercise his priesthood in Herzegovina. 

175 




in the apparitions at Lourdes and Fatima. I immediately telephoned Monsignor 
Peric, with whom I am in regular contact, and he denied emphatically that he had 
ever made any such statement to anyone. He confirmed this by fax and tells me 
that although you spent some time with his secretary he does not recollect 
granting you an interview. 

Father Chisholm did not reply. 


19 July 2002 

Catholic Herald — My Reply to Monsignor Tutto 


Sir, 

Having read the excellent article on Medjugorje by Simon Caldwell, I was 
not surprised at the negative and emotional response that it evoked among some 
of your readers. Medjugorje is a topic upon which I can write with some 
authority as since 1987, with the help of my Croatian wife, I have worked 
closely with the two bishops of Mostar who have occupied that see since the 
alleged apparitions began in 1981. My wife has translated many of the episcopal 
statements and other official documents which I have published in a book which 
has been through five updated editions, and will appear in a considerably 
updated sixth edition in the spring of 2003. 19 In a letter concerning my book the 
present bishop of Mostar, Monsignor Peric, was kind enough to remark: "You 
write with Catholic conviction and Christian frankness... In your book you base 
yourself upon the official documents and teaching of the Church. There are far 
too many inaccurate versions of events spread throughout the world, above all 
through the efforts and the agency of those in the service of the so-called 
apparitions at Medjugorje." 

The reaction of Monsignor George Tutto is typical of those who have been 
deluded into accepting what may be the greatest confidence trick since World 
War II. Those who point out the facts are always unchristian, vociferous, 
malicious, guilty of untruths and distortions. In stating that public pilgrimages to 
Medjugorje are forbidden Mr. Caldwell is not lying, and he is not guilty of "a 
malicious attempt to hurt and confuse many believers", nor is he talking 
"nonsense" when he states that "The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 
has forbidden all public pilgrimages to the shrine since 1995." On 23 May 1985, 
Monsignor Bovone, then Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the 


19 


I was, alas, unable to have the new edition ready for publication until the summer 
of 2004. 


176 



Faith, wrote to Monsignor Caporello, Secretary of the Italian Episcopal 
Conference stating that it should "discourage publicly the organisation of 
pilgrimages to Medjugorje". On 23 March 1996, and then in June 1996, 
Monsignor Bertone, Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 
informed two French bishops that the cult of Medjugorje "is not authorised". 
Monsignor Tutto is correct in stating that Monsignor Bertone informed Bishop 
Aubry, Bishop of Saint-Denis-de-Fa-Reunion that private pilgrimages are 
permitted on condition that they are not considered as an authentication of 
events in course which still necessitate an examination by the Church." Could 
Monsignor Tutto deny that the pilgrimages tolMedjugorje advertised in the 
Catholic press are organised on the presumption that the events that have taken 
place there "are of a supernatural origin", and are therefore forbidden? 

In a statement made on behalf of the entire French episcopal conference, a 
somewhat more authoritative source than the opinion of Monsignor Tutto, 
printed in La Documentation Catholique of 7 January 2000, Monsignor Henri 
Brincard concludes by stating: "I do not see how I can go to Medjugorje without 
giving my support, by the very fact of having come there, to the events the 
discernment and assessment of which rests henceforth with the Episcopal 
Conference of Bosnia-Herzegovina. Such support would fly in the face of the 
traditional teaching of the Church, recalled in Lumen Gentium, and applicable to 
all the successors of the Apostles." 

This is a complete justification of the position taken by Simon Caldwell. 

As regards the alleged "second untruth" by Mr. Caldwell, the fact that 
Father Prusina’s expulsion From the Franciscan Order had been revoked, does 
not alter the fact that the expulsion of Father Ivica Vego, who made a nun 
pregnant, was not. The self-styled seers informed Monsignor Zanic on 13 
occasions that the Blessed Virgin had told them that Father Vego was innocent. 
Fet me quote from the diary of Vicka, a diary which on Frequent occasions she 
insisted did not exist, but of which I have a photocopy: 

Saturday 3 January 1982. "All we seers together asked the Madonna 
about Father Ivica Vego. The Madonna replied: ‘Ivica is not to blame. If he is 
expelled from the Franciscan Order, let him remain steadfast. Every day I say: 
‘Peace, peace’, but there is ever more strife. Fet him remain, Ivica is not at fault.” 
She (i.e. the Madonna) repeated this three times. We all heard it, and we told him 
(Father Vego). ‘The bishop is not maintaining order and that is why he is to 
blame. He will not be bishop for ever. I will show justice in the (heavenly) 
kingdom.”" 

I urge readers of the Catholic Herald to take careful note of this. Our Fady 
is alleged to have stated thirteen times, that this scandalously immoral Franciscan 
was in no way to blame, and that the guilty part was Monsignor Zanic. who 
remarked correctly that this fact alone should convince anyone "well instructed in 
the faith to come to the conclusion that the ‘apparitions’ are not of the 
supernatural." 

What explanation would Monsignor Tutto give for the rejection of the 
authenticity of the alleged apparitions at Medjugorje not simply by Monsignor 
Zanic and Monsignor Peric but by every current member of the hierarchy of the 
former Yugoslavia? Are they inspired by malice? Is this a conspiracy? Are they 
possessed by Satan? 


177 



If Monsignor Tutto wishes to challenges me I would have no problem in 
providing him with more examples of blatant untruths utteredby the self-styled 
seers. I cannot recollect a single instance of lying on the part of St. Bernadette or 
the children of Fatima. 

I was so shocked at the claim by Mr. Bernard Ellis that Monsignor Peric had 
stated "that he personally did not believe in the apparitions at Lourdes and 
Fatima" that I telephoned him at once, and he denied with indignation that he had 
ever made such a statement. He confirmed this in a fax dated 12 July in which he 
stated "Never in my life did I say to anybody that I do not believe in Lourdes or 
Fatima." It appears that there are no lengths to which devotees of 
Medjugorje will not go to denigrate this erudite and profoundly Marian successor of 
the Apostles. In his fax, Monsignor Peric stressed the fact that: "The three canonical 
commissions which were engaged in examining the Medjugorje phenomena came to 
the conclusion that there has been no sign, no message, and no miracle, by which it 
could be concluded that this was a case of supernatural apparitions and messages. 
That is why pilgrimages to Medjugorje are not permitted if they attribute a 
supernatural character to the events that have taken place there This remains tme to 
this day." 

Perhaps Monsignor Tutto and Mr. Ellis could explain why we should accept 
their personal opinions rather than the carefully evaluated statements of the three 
commissions. The investigation into the authenticity of the alleged apparitions 
has been placed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in the hands of 
the bishops of Herzegovina who all agree with Monsignor Zanic and Monsignor 
Peric that nothing supernatural has occurred or is occurring at Medjugorje. To the 
best of my knowledge, no alleged apparition has ever been deemed worthy of 
credence by the Church without first obtaining the approval of the diocesan 
bishop. No such approval will ever be forthcoming in the case of Medjugorje. 
What is taking place there is a calculated and cynical financial Fraud. 

Yours faithfully, 

Michael Davies. 


26 July 2002 

Catholic Herald Editorial — The Mixed Fruits of Medjugorje 

The following editorial is of even greater significance than the report by Simon Ccddwell 
as it commits this newspaper to the position that there is no supernatural basis to the events in 
Medjugorje. 


It was never going to be easy for this newspaper to come to an editorial 
conclusion on the subject of Medjugorje. We have received an almost 
unprecedented response both to Simon Caldwell's original article (which 
concluded that the Medjugorje phenomenon is Fraudulent and encourages 
disobedience to legitimate ecclesial authority) and to Paul Burnell's wholehearted 


178 



defence of the shrine and its effect on the lives of many who have gone there on 
pilgrimage. 

It is these "Fruits" of the Medjugorje experience which to its defenders are 
the ultimate sign of its authenticity; this has emerged From letter after letter, often 
in very moving personal testimonies. We have no doubt that the journey to 
Medjugorje, often in the company of good holy priests, in search of Our Lady, has 
often been the occasion of a deepening of the spiritual life of those involved. That 
is absolutely clear, and has to be respected. 

The question is whether or not these "Fruits" constitute evidence for the 
truthfulness of the visionaries of Medjugorje. For, it has to be said, firstly, that 
good Fruits often occur even in the midst of evil, for God is never closer to those 
who love Him than where there is spiritual danger. We have to ask, too, the 
painful question of whether there are bad Fruits as well as good. The French 
bishops concluded that this is indeed the case: “The truth", they declared in 
January 2000, "obliges us to say that [evil Fruits] exist.. ..the calling into question, 
even to the point of defamation, of the local ordinary as well as the disobedience 
with regard to his legitimate authority; the exacerbation of the ‘Herzegovina 
question’ following the words attributed to the Gospa, words in favour of the 
Franciscans and against the bishop". 20 

The French bishops' statement was a response to the question "Is there an 
authorised and official position of the Church concerning the events in 
Medjugorje?". They quote the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the 
norms relative to the discernment of private revelations: "it belongs in the first 
place (pre-eminently) to the local ordinary to investigate and to intervene". 

In the case of Medjugorje the only official ruling to date has been that of 
successive bishops of Mostar and it reads as follows: "It is. . . forbidden to claim 
or to declare in churches and religious communities that Our Lady appeared or 
will yet appear in Medjugorje." The late Bishop Pavao Zanic had studied the 
"events" and had concluded that the visionaries were lying and that they were 
being manipulated by Franciscan Friars who were disobedient to legitimate 
authority. The ex- Yugoslavian Bishops' Conference in 1990 made a provisional 
reserved judgement in support of him, and the CDF expressed solidarity through 
pastoral directives which forbade even private pilgrimages to the shrine if they 
were motivated by a conviction that the events there were of supernatural origin 
(Though one might ask why one would go there if one were not so convinced.) 

Bishop Zanic himself said that "if all the ugly things could be made public, 
then surely the answer would be clearly negative to everyone". There is the case of 
Father Ivica Vego, a Friar suspended by Rome but who, according to the bishop 


20 Bishop Zanic, Posizione, pp 3, 4, 9, 10 etc 


179 



"continued to celebrate Mass, distribute the sacraments and pass time with his 
mistress", a nun who later became pregnant. There are the Gospa’s theologically 
untenable statements, such as "all religions are equal before God", reported by 
Mirjana Dragicevic on 1 October 1981 in a tape-recorded interview with Bishop 
Zanic. 

The authenticity of this particular statement is beyond question. 
Nevertheless, defenders of Medjugorje consistently deny that it was ever uttered, 
or give significantly different more defensible versions of it. One apologist 
indicated to the Catholic Herald last week that the words Mirjana actually 
attributed to Our Lady were "all religions are not equal before God but all men 
are". But that is not what Mirjana said to Bishop Zanic. 

Such rewriting or adjustments of the record are by no means unique. In most 
cases, perhaps, they are the result of innocent wishful thinking rather than 
conscious dishonesty. But the record, nevertheless, is habitually misrepresented. 
One writer last week said that “Cardinal Vinko Puljic [Archbishop of Sarajevo] 
made no mention of Medjugorje at the Synod of Bishops in Rome 2001", the 
implication being that he was silent on the issue. But he was not. This is what he 
said: "Certain members of the Order of Franciscan Friars Minor and those 
expelled try to impose their own points of view in the individual dioceses by 
substituting the authentic charisms of their institute with pseudo-charisms which 
pose a serious threat for the Church and for her organisational and doctrinal 
unity." Cardinal Puljic was alluding to the Herzegovina question and to the 
Gospa, which the local bishops see as having become inseparably linked. An 
attempt in a letter published (to our regret) in our previous week's issue, which 
claimed that the current Bishop of Mostar does not even believe that Our Lady 
appeared in either Lourdes or Fatima, was indignantly scotched by the bishop 
himself. Many other denials or assertions have been made — often these are claims 
of the support of prominent Churchmen — which tend to evaporate in the light of 
day; the most obvious example is the Frequently made claim that the Pope himself 
is a secret supporter: but according to Cardinal Pio Laghi, no such claim has been 
authenticated. 

What we do know about the Pope is that he believes that "within the Church 
community the multiplication of supposed apparitions or visions is sowing 
confusion....": and it is this precisely, this confusion which is one of the most 
dangerous Fruits of Medjugorje. In an age in which the disobedience of Catholics 
to the authority of the Church in matters of faith and morals is proving so 
demonically destructive, the example of the visionaries themselves is purely 
disastrous. As the French bishops put it, "it is opportune to ask ourselves if the 
events of Medjugorje have produced good fruits if the visionaries who, at least 
during the duration of the “apparitions” must by their lives be the first witnesses 
of the grace from which they say they benefit. From there it follows that we ask 
ourselves the following questions: "Have they obeyed the bishop of Mostar? Have 

180 



they respected him?" 

We, too, must ask questions which flow from these. Is not obedience the first 
mark which distinguishes — has always distinguished — the lives of those who 
have been touched by the Mother of God? And is it conceivable that Our Lady 
would appear in order to encourage disobedience among the faithful to their 
bishop? Has she ever done sol They are surely questions to which defenders of 
the visionaries of Medjugorje need to give grave and prayerful attention. 


8 November 2002 
Crkva Na Kameny , Prosinac 2002 
A Pronouncement bythe Congregation for the Doctrine of the 
Faith on the Current Spate of Apparitions. 


The following article appeared in the November 2002 issue of Crkva na Kamenu ("The 
Church on the Rock"), the newspaper of the diocese of Mostar-Duvno. 


In the year book AttivitB della Santa Sede for 2001, which came out a few 
days ago, we read on page 707 the following text From the Congregation for the 

Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). 

It has been noticed during the course of this year that the 
CDF has received an increased number of reports of 
extraordinary events : of so-called Marian apparitions, messages, 
stigmata, and weeping statues of Our Lady or of Our Lord, and all 
sorts of Eucharistic “miracles”, and so on. 

The Holy See is receiving news From various parts of the 
Catholic world of strong pressure being put by groups of the 
faithful upon the local diocesan bishop to force him to recognise 
the veracity of Marian apparitions, sometimes even those which 
took place a good time ago. Sometimes there is long and worrying 
tension between the faithful who believe in the “apparitions” and 
the local bishop who is unwilling to give official recognition to 
them. This enduring tension is a danger to the unity of the local 
Church. The CDF is aware that in this sensitive matter it must 
give an exemplary pastoral response to these continuous 
demands which are arriving From all over the Catholic world, as 
well as to give God’s people and His pastors further and more 
up-to-date criteria for guidance in the hope of clarifying the 
meaning of apparitions, messages, and extraordinary events in 
general, in keeping with the teaching of the faith, and the 
consequent practical criteria which could bring about a 
resolution.” 


181 



The CDF makes the following points: 


1 . There has appeared a veritable explosion of all kinds of “apparitions'” 
which are being reported not only to the local bishop but to the Holy See. In just 
the last 90 years (1905-1995) out of 295 reported “apparitions” the Church has 
given its approval to 1 1 only, and said “No” to 284. In many cases false seers 
have been unmasked and pecuniary transactions have been discovered, and 
whenever they “announced” a sign from heaven it turned out be human trickery. 

Within the diocese of Mostar-Duvno, in the parish of St. James in 
Medjugorje, “apparitions” which have been lasting From 1981 have reached a 
total that is beyond calculation. These are not remarkable for anything new in 
their content, but only for their huge number. It is being maintained that a female 
“seer” even had up to ten “apparitions”a day! The bishops’ conference declared 
on 10 April 1991: "On the basis of investigations to date, it is impossible to 
confirm that we are dealing with apparitions and supernatural revelations." 

2. Those who promote “apparitions”, be they “seers” or their mentors or 
followers, are putting enormous pressure on the bishops and on the Holy See to 
recognise as true these extraordinary events, and so there exist lasting tensions 
between the faithful who believe in the “apparitions” and the bishops who do not 
recognise them. 

In the parish of Medjugorje in the eighties some “seers” put pressure upon 
Bishop Zanic, both verbally and in writing, to recognise the “apparitions” 
threatening him with heavenly judgement. If he failed to recognize them Our 
Lady’s judgement and that of her Son would be waiting for him. The more often 
he received these false threats from the “seers” the more convinced the bishop 
became that it was a question of false apparitions. (See the book by Monsignor 
Peric Ogledalo Pravde, Mostar, 2001, pp. 88-91). 

3. The CDF points out that such pressure can become a real threat to the unity 
of the local Church. 

Threats to the unity of the local Church are particularly pronounced in Medjugorje 
where the “apparitions” have from the very beginning been bound up with the 
solution to the “case of Herzegovina” which is characterised by disobedience to 
the Pope and the decisions of the Holy See. In 1994 the local bishop speaking at 
the Synod of Bishops in Rome, at which the Pope himself was present, stressed 
that the so-called apparitions at Medjugorje “are creating no small measure of 
trouble and division, and not only in the local Church. We accordingly expect that 
the Holy See will use its own methods to create complete and unshakable unity in 
this particular Church.” ( I’Osservatore Romano, 13 Oct 1994 p. 7). 

Since numerous requests that the “apparitions” should be recognised as 
authentic arrive in Rome From all over the Catholic world, the CDF has decided 


182 



to lay down guidelines for the entire Church explaining the meaning of such 
events and laying down practical criteria for distinguishing true from false 
apparitions. 

Such directions from the Holy See can only help us to avoid exposing our 
faith and the faith of others to danger, and to build up the unity of our Church on 
the firm foundation which is Christ the Lord, Head of the Church, which is His 
Body, Ephesians 1: 22-23. 

Mostar 8 November 2002 


Monsignor Luka Pavlovic, Vicar-General 


24 August 2002 
A Bogus Papal Blessing 


The lengths to which proponents of Medjugorje will go to deceive faithful 
Catholics into believing that Pope John Paul II believes in the authenticity was 
made clear on 24 August 2002 in a report in the Zagreb daily newspaper, 
Vercernji List. It was reproduced in the Medjugorje propaganda journal Glas 
Mira Medjugorje — The Medjugorje Voice of Peace, a copy of which Monsignor 

Peric sent to me. The report was immediately circulated throughout the world via Medjugorje 
websites. A typical example is that of Denis and Cathy Nolan of the Children of Medjugorje, 
Southbend, Indiana . 21 Their report was as follows: 

SOUTH BEND, IN — An unexpected event for Father Jozo Zovko broke 
out in the Croatian media! We want to share with you what was reported last 
Saturday evening, 24 August 2002 in the Zagreb daily newspaper, The Vercernji 
List. (Note the attached scan of the newspaper article). The headline states, "A 

surprising gesture From the Vatican. The Pope thanks Father Jozo for 
Medjugorje!" 

Father Jozo Zovko is a member of the Hercegovinian Franciscan 
Province. As a witness to the Medjugorje apparitions, he has become one of the 
best known priests in the world. Many tribes have made him their chief and he is 
connected with many miraculous healings. According to a poll conducted by 
"The Daily Catholic", Father Jozo has been elected among the 29 Catholics of 
the century." (J.P) 

The original text in Italian of the Pope's letter (a scan of the original is also 
attached) reads: 

"Imparto di cuore una particolare Benedizione Apostolica a Padre Jozo 


21 P.O. Box 1110, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (USA). Email: 

dnolan @ childrenofmedjugorje .com 


183 



Zovko, o.f.m. ed invoco nuova effusione di grazie e favori celesti e la continua 
protezione della Beata Vergine Maria" Joannes Paulus II 


English translation: 

"I grant From the heart a particular blessing to Father Jozo Zovko, o.f.m. 
and I invoke a new outpouring of graces and heavenly favors, and the continuous 
protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary". 

Then, his handwritten signature: Joannes Paulus II. 

End of the Children of Medjugorje Report.. 

While the Nolans no doubt published this report in good faith the 
information on which it is based can best be described as mendacious nonsense. 
What other word but nonsense can be used to describe the claim that Father Jozo 
Zovko, who is unknown outside the Medjugorje movement, “is one of the best 
known priests in the world.” And as for his being made the chief of many tribes 
(how many tribes and where are they located?), and being connected with “many 
miraculous healings” (how many, who was cured, and cured of what?), and being 
“elected among the 29 Catholics of the century" (elected when, and elected by 
whom?), the only possible reply must be that given by the Duke of Wellington to 
the man who greeted him with the words: “Mr Smith I believe”. “If you believe 
that,” replied the duke, “you’ll believe anything.” The fact is that anyone who is 
prepared to believe that Our Lady has appeared on even one occasion at 
Medjugorje is certainly prepared to believe anything. Devotees of Medjugorje 
will, in fact, believe anything: believe that the Gospa has appeared more than 
31,000 times, standing on a cloud; believe that she writes secrets in an unknown 
language on parchment made from an unknown material; believe that rosaries 
turn to gold, and that credence can be given to calculating liars who have grown 
rich on the income they derive from naive from what could well be described as 
the greatest fraud in the history of the Church. Monsignor Peric, the 
representative of Our Lord in the diocese of Mostar-Duvno, has rightly 
denounced “the contradictions, falsehoods and bana, which cbe attributed at all to 
our heavenly Mother Sedes Sapientiae — Seat of Wisdom.” 22 

What credibility can be given to the claim that Pope John Paul II personally 
sent “a letter” conveying his blessing to Father Zovko. In order to make this clear 
it is first necessary to provide some background information for those who are not 
fully informed concerning this “world renowned Franciscan.” Where the dupes 
of Medjugorje are concerned, he is beyond criticisms. Father Richard Beyer 
writes: 


22 See Appendix I. 


184 



Father Jozo Zovko was the pastor at Medjugorje when the apparitions 
began. Because of his defence of the visionaries and courageous preaching, he 
was imprisoned by the communist government for a year and one-half on a 
charge of “fostering sedition” He now resides in a parish about 25 minutes From 
Medjugorje, but continues to minister to the many pilgrims who come From all 
over the world. His spiritual gifts and holiness are now legendary, and he has 
been gifted with visions of the Madonna, although he rarely discusses the fact. 


A report in The Catholic Herald of 29 November 2002 reported that Father 
Zovko had been forbidden to celebrate Mass in the national shrine of the 
Immaculate Conception in Washington after the Rector, Monsignor Michael J. 
Bransfield had written to Monsignor Peric asking him to clarify the Franciscan’s 
juridical status. In his reply, dated 18 November the bishop explained that Father 
Zovko is a disobedient Franciscan whose faculties and canonical mission in the 
dioceses of Mostar-Duvno and Trebinje-Mrkan were revoked by Monsignor 
Pavao Zanic on 23 August 1989. Monsignor Peric upholds the decision of his 
predecessor, and adds that, as Father Zovko has heard confessions without the 
necessary faculties, he has incurred the penalties prescribed in canon 1378 of the 
Code of Canon Law, i.e. an automatic (latae sententiae ) suspension. In 1990 the 
Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples required him to leave 
Medjugorje and take up residence in a distant convent ( convento lontano ), but he 
has refused to do so and is still actively involved in Medjugorje. 

As regards the cover photograph showing the Pope allegedly welcoming 
Father Jozo in 1992, it depicts not a private audience to welcome the Franciscan, 
but a general audience for a large number of people. The Holy Father is simply 
moving along the Front row and does not appear to be looking at Father Zovko. 
A photographer is always present at these audiences and takes numerous 
photographs which can be seen and ordered From the Vatican Press Office the 
next day The Pope would not have known who Father Zovko was, and it is no 
more than a gratuitous assertion to claim that he said: "I am with you, protect 
Medjugorje! Protect Our Lady's messages!" 

As regards the so-called “thank you note... personally signed by the shaky 
hand of.. .John Paul II.” It is simply the standard blessing that can be purchased at 
any bookstall or souvenir shop in Vatican City. One simply selects a card or more 
expensive parchment blessing, gives the name of the person for whom the 
blessing is equired, pays the price, and a week or so later it will arrive at the 
designated address. The one purchased for Father Zovko is of the cheaper variety 
and is not even dated. In order to prove how easy it is to obtain these blessings I 


23 Op. Cit., Beyer. 


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asked a priest resident in Rome to obtain another one for Father Zovko. He went 
for a “top of the range” parchment blessing with identical wording to the one 
received by Father Zovko, but written out in beautiful calligraphy with floral 
decorations and dated 14 November 2002. It cost me 35 euros. I sent it to 
Monsignor Peric. 

Father Zovko commented on his papal blessing as follows: 

“So far I have received hundreds of gifts and thank you notes but none can 
compare with this one. I am most pleasantly surprised,” a visibly shaken Father 
Jozo said for our paper.” 

If Father Zovko was indeed “visibly shaken” when presented with the 
pre-printed standard blessing (not a thank-you note), and made the effusive 
remarks attributed to him, it denotes rank dishonesty as he must certainly be 
aware that these “particular apostolic blessings” are on sale in Rome for anyone 
willing to pay the fee. Photocopies of the blessing are now on sale in Medjugorje 
as proof that the Pope believes in the authenticity of the alleged apparitions, and 
of course, those naive enough to spend their money to make the trip, will certainly 
not question its authenticity. 


29 December 2002 
The Sunday Times 

The following report from a secular newspaper indicates the extent to which the 
Medjugorje phenomenon can best be described as an industry. 

Village grows rich on Virgin visions 

Tom Walker, Medjugorje, Bosnia 


They call it Apparition Hill. Past the pizzerias, boarding houses, shops and 
gift stalls, high on a slope of broken rock and scrub, stands a statue of the Virgin 
Mary. 

On a bitingly cold winter's day last week snow shrouded the peaks in the 
distance, but a handful of devout worshippers stared intently at the statue. One 
woman wept openly; others nervously fingered their rosary beads. 

This is the Bosnian village of Medjugorje, where in 1981 six local children 


186 



aged between 10 and 16 swore they had seen an apparition. Since then, their 
powers have supposedly allowed them to remain in touch with the Virgin Mary 
on a regular basis. What was once a hamlet of a few dozen houses has expanded 
tenfold and Medjugorje, which is said to have attracted up to 22 million pilgrims, 
now has the air of an established tourist resort. 

Mere hundreds arrived for Christmas, but From Easter onwards the town will 
be packed until the autumn. 

To local businessmen this is manna from heaven, but to the Vatican it is 
distinctly dubious. The Catholic bishop of Mostar, Ratko Peric, has denounced 
the money-spinning and the Pope, who has refused invitations to visit, has 
ordered an inquiry into the phenomenon. 24 

Medjugorje lies in Herzegovina, one of the most fiercely nationalist 
Croatian areas of Bosnia, where strangers have traditionally been viewed with 
suspicion. A wall of silence meets most queries from non-pilgrims. 

Three of the six "seers", as they are known, have stayed in the town and their 
prosperity has risen to reflect the Madonna gold rush. Two of them, Jakov Colo, 
31, and Mirjana Dragicevic-Soldo, 37, live in smart executive houses with 
immaculate gardens, double garages and security gates. On the other side of town 
the residence of Ivanka Ivankovic-Elez, 36; is even more sumptuous, with a 
brand new tennis court. 

All three refused to discuss their experiences and the huge wealth it has 
generated. Local Franciscan monks who gave credence to the visions preferred to 
say nothing, demanding that any questions be sent by fax. 

Peric, however, does not mince his words. In a booklet handed out by his 
office he complains of the "incomprehensible disobedience" of the Franciscans 
and says he told the Pope that "no competent authority has recognised any 
apparition in Medjugorje". 

Compiled by a Dutch priest, Rudo Franken, the booklet asks 
fundamental questions including why the Virgin appears to the 
visionaries — while remaining invisible to everybody else — daily at 6.40pm in 
the summer when the tourist trade is at its peak, then limits her appearances to 
once a month in the winter. He also picks out inconsistencies in the seers' 
accounts. 

The international authority in Bosnia, the Office of the High 
Representative, is also looking at Medjugorje, where Madonna profits are 


24 


This is not correct. 


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suspected to have swollen the coffers of the Croatian nationalist parties that are 
hoping to break Bosnia apart. 

The Vatican has been alarmed since the apparitions began. The Catholic 
Church in Italy was thrown into disarray in 1995 by a Madonna brought back 
from Medjugorje that was said to have wept tears of blood. Soon dozens of 
weeping statues were reported all over the country; almost all were later 
unmasked as cases of people splashing red paint or water over the figures and 
then proclaiming a miracle. 

Before he travelled to Croatia in 1998 the Pope refused to cross the border 
to Medjugorje, instead visiting the lesser-known shrine of Marija Bistrica near 
Zagreb. 

The Vatican is drawing up new guidelines with "updated criteria" for 
establishing the authenticity of apparitions. A ruling on Medjugorje is expected 
early next year and is likely to rule that there is no evidence of supernatural 
visions there. 

Since 1905 only 12 visions of the Madonna have been approved by Catholic 
bishops and 284 have been rejected. But Monsignor Arthur Calkins, an American 
expert working in the Vatican, said that if Medjugorje were to close down, 
pilgrims would soon be attracted elsewhere. 

One of the Franciscans who has always defended the reclusive seers of 
Medjugorje, Father Jozo Zovko, says he was imprisoned by the "communists" of 
the former Yugoslavia for his views and is prepared to be jailed again to protect 
the good name of the village. 

The bishop of Mostar was entitled to his opinion, he said in his faxed reply to 
questions, "But I believe in Our Lady's apparitions. She told the parish that she 
has chosen it. The reason for this choice remains a mystery to us." 


A Definitive Statement by Monsignor Peric 

Although this book is intended to document the Medjugorje phenomenon up 
to 2002, 1 decided to include this statement by Monsignor Peric summarizing the 
situation at the beginning of 2004. Although much of what the bishop states is 
already included in the book it is appended here in full. 

MEDUGORJE: 

SECRETS, MESSAGES, VOCATIONS, PRAYERS, CONFESSIONS, COMMISSIONS 
Ratko Peric, bishop of Mostar-Duvno 


Msgr. Ratko Peric 


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bishop of Mostar-Duvno, BiH 


MEDUGORJE: 

SECRETS, MESSAGES, VOCATIONS, PRAYERS, CONFESSIONS, 
COMMISSIONS 

Maynooth/Dublin, February 17, 2004 


Medjugorje is a parish in the diocese of Mostar-Duvno in Bosnia-Herzegovina, with a population 
of about 4,000 persons, which has been entrusted to the pastoral care of the Franciscan fathers 
OFM. From 24 June 1981 onwards, some events have been occurring which many people, some 
Franciscans included, have attributed to so-called apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary, who has 
seemingly presented herself as the "Queen of Peace". 

I. How many so-called visionaries and visions are there? 

1. Vicka Ivankovic, born on 3 September 1964, in the parish of Medjugorje, has been receiving 
"apparitions" from 24 June 1981. Every day. There have been pauses, but there have also been days 
with up to ten "visions". Vicka married Mario Mijatovic in 2002 and now has one child and lives 
in the neighbouring parish of Gradina. 

How many ", visions " has she had till now ? - According to a simple calculation of the days, it would be 
8,270 including yesterday's. These "apparitions" were with the other "seers" during the first years, 
yet for many years now she has been having them alone, separately, in the evening, regardless of her 
location. As if they were programmed. 

2. Marija Pavlovic, born on 1 April 1965 in the parish of Medjugorje, has been a "seer" from the 
second day of the "apparitions", 25 June 1981, every day up till now. In 1993 she married an Italian, 
Paolo Lunetti. She has three children and is now living in Monza, near Milano, Italy. 

How many ", visions " has she had till now ? Around 8,270 including yesterday's, together with the other 
"privileged" few or separately. The "apparitions" are not tied so much to the locality of Medjugorje 
as to persons: wherever these persons travel in the world, the "apparitions" travel with them. 

3. Ivan Dragicevic, born in Mostar on 25 May 1965, has had daily "apparitions" from 24 June 1981 
to this day. He married the former Miss Massachusetts, Loreen Murphy in 1994 and has four 
children. He lives with his family part of the time in Boston and the rest of the time in Medjugorje. 
How many "visions" has Ivan had till now? About 8,270 with last night's, together with the other "seers" 
or separately. 

4. Mirjana Dragicevic, born in Sarajevo on 18 March 1965, has had "visions" from 24 June 1981. 
Her last regular encounter was on Christmas day 1982. From that day onward, she has received an 
"apparition" once a year - on her birthday - 18 March. Along with this, from 2 August 1987, on each 
2nd day of the month, she hears the Madonna's voice and sometimes sees her. That would make it 
17 years times 12 months, she either hears or sees the Madonna. Mirjana married Marko Soldo in 
1989 and has two children. She is now living in Medjugorje. 

How many "visions" has Mirjana had till now ? All totalled: about 770. 

5. Ivanka Ivankovic was born in the parish of Medjugorje on 21 June 1966. The phenomenon 
appeared to her from 25 June 1981 to 7 May 1985. She now has a "vision" once a year, on 25 June, 
on the anniversary of the "apparitions". She married Rajko Elez and has three children. She is 
currently living in Medjugorje. 

How many "visions" has Ivanka had till now ? About 1 ,450 all together. 


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V 

6. Jakov Colo was bom on 6 March 1971 in the parish of Medjugorje. From 25 June 1981 he 
received daily "apparitions" till 12 September 1998. From this date onward, he has only had one a 
year - on Christmas day. In 1993, he married Anna-Lisa Barozzi from Italy. They have three 
children and now live in Medjugorje. 

How many "visions" has he had till now? Together with the others and separately, around 6,290. 

The Madonna has been presumably "appearing" on a regular basis and at one and the same time, 
even if one of the "seers" is in America, another "visionary" in Flerzegovina, a third in Italy or a 
fourth in Maynooth. Adding all this up together makes for 33,320 "apparitions" up till now. Please 
don't ask me about the accuracy of these statistics, because a thousand "apparitions" more or less, 
have no role to play here! The hierarchical Church at various levels, diocesan, national and Holy 
See, hasn't accepted a single apparition as authentic. 

Let us now compare Medjugorje to two recognized Marian shrines: 

At Lourdes in 1858, the Madonna appeared as the "Immaculate Conception", 18 times to 
Bernadette. The Church accepted these apparitions and four years afterwards declared them 
authentic, in 1862. 

At Fatima in 1917, the Madonna appeared as "Our Lady of the Rosary" 6 times to the ten year old 
shepherd children Lucia, Francisco and Jacinta. 13 years later, in 1930, the Church accepted these 
apparitions as authentic. 

Three of the Medjugorje "seers", who say they have daily "apparitions", live most of the time 
outside of Medjugorje, while the remaining three that live in Medjugorje supposedly have only one 
"apparition" a year. 

II. HOW MANY SECRETS HAS THE ALLEGED MADONNA 
GIVEN TO THE SO-CALLED SEERS? 

Those who have daily "visions" have received nine secrets, while those who have "apparitions" 
once a year, have ten secrets. It is not clear if nine or ten secrets have been given and are known to 
each of the "seers", or if each of the "seers" has his/her own number of secrets which differ from 
the rest. 

If we compare this to the authentic apparitions, then one can see that at Lourdes there were no 
secrets for the world, while at Fatima one secret was divided into three parts. Yet at Medjugorje till 
now there have been 9 or 10, or even 57 possible secrets, which have been divided by three "seers" 
who have received 10 and another three who have received 9. To this day not a single secret has 
been revealed. 

In the first years there was apocalyptic talk about a "great sign" to happen, yet to this day this "great 
sign" has not occurred, and the expectation of a sign has diminished. 

III. HOW MANY PRESUMED MESSAGES HAVE THERE BEEN? 

All the "messages" of Medjugorje can be summed up into five basic ones, as is usually the case, yet 
these "five" are actually the following "fourteen": peace, conversion, prayer, fasting, vigilance, 
penance, adoration, witnessing, faith, call to holiness, Eucharist, Word of God, monthly 
confession, rosary. . . 

Many authors greatly differ which five should be taken from these fourteen. Italian, French and 
Croat authors. . . all have their own interpretations. It's important to mention here that besides the 
daily "messages", there are also special monthly "messages" on the 25th of each month, which are 
given to Marija in Italy, which she then sends to the parish rectory of Medjugorje for verification 
and are then sent out into the world. 

All these "messages" of the various interpreters of Medjugorje, are heard every Sunday in churches. 
For us, the novelty of Medjugorje would be that the "Queen of Peace" on the 25th of each month 


190 



sends out a special communication with the message: "Thank you children, for responding to my 
invitation". The Madonna thanks the "seers" for having the time, for wanting to, and deigning 
themselves to meet and talk with her. According to these words the "Madonna" is amazed and 
grateful to the "seers" who have responded to her invitation! This is somewhat like parents 
thanking their children for being born, or physicians thanking the infirm for seeking their health 
back! ( Ogledalo Pravde— Mirror of Justice, Mostar, 2001, pp. 249-250). 

IV. HOW MANY VOCATIONS HAVE RESULTED FROM THE "APPARITIONS"? 

Of the six "seers" of Medjugorje, none of them have achieved a religious vocation. Three of them 
mentioned that they were going to enter and two even went on to follow this inexplicable voice, yet 
with time everything vanished. 

Ivan Dragicevic, became a candidate for the Franciscan Province of Herzegovina. In 1981 he 
went to the minor seminary of Visoko where he continued with the "apparitions". Due to the fact 
that he failed to pass his repeat examination, it was decided that he could possibly do better if he 
went to the minor seminary of Dubrovnik. While in Dubrovnik, he managed to pass his repeat 
examination and enter into the second year, but he didn't show an aptitude for school as he did for 
the "apparitions", and hence he returned home in January 1983. 

Having said farewell to the seminary, Ivan continued not only with daily "apparitions" to this 
day, but at a certain point began imposing the harsh demands of this phenomenon of his upon 
the local bishop Pavao Zanic, that he accept the "messages" of Medjugorje. In 1994 he married 
an American woman in Boston and thereby irrevocably transformed his religious vocation into a 
marriage (O. P., p. 34). 

Vicka Ivankovic from the outset demonstrated enthusiasm for the religious life. In September 
1981 she confided this to an Italian weekly: I would like to enter a convent and become a nun. 

Even though she was an "enrolled nun", Vicka never entered a convent. Twenty years later, she 
found a young man from the neighbouring parish of Gradina and the two of them were married in 
Medjugorje. Over two thousand invited and curious guests attended their wedding party. During 
the wedding festivities, the "seer" went to her new house a few kilometres away from the noise of 
the wedding party with husband alongside her and had a "vision". Everything according to routine 
and regular programming. Afterwards they went back to the wedding party. 

The "visionary" in the beginning announced Urbi etOrbi - "to Rome and the world" - that she is an 
"enrolled nun", but twenty years later she travelled to Rome to buy her wedding dress. The 
"visionary" explained this to a journalist: the Madonna gave each of us our freedom to choose. Everyone can 
respond to the vocation they desire. Regardless of the fact that I'm now married, I shall continue to spread the messages 
of the Madonna, because Christian faith can be witnessed in marriage as well. 

Regarding her religious vocation - she's free, yet as regards "spreading the messages of the 
Madonna" - she's obligated?! 

Marija Pavlovic. In response to an Italian journalist's question Why haven't any one of you decided to 
become a priest or nun? M ari j a in 2001 gave the following explanation: For many years I thought thafl would 
become a nun. I began visiting a convent and my desire to go there was very strong. But the sister superior once told me: 
"Marija, if you want to enter, you are very welcome; but if the bishop decides thatyou must not speak about Medjugorje, 
you will have to obey". At that moment I began thinking that my vocation might possibly be to witness to that which 
I saw and heard, and that I will be able to find the road to holiness outside the convent (O. P., p. 28). 

Marija therefore came to terms with the demands of religious life in which she couldn't obey the 
bishop if he were to decide that she shouldn't spread the "apparitions" which the Church even to 
this day has not declared authentic. And hence, she decided to find the road to holiness "outside the 
convent". 

No God's work. Yet things weren’t exactly that way. Marija did eventually attempt entering a 
mixed spiritual community, where she remained for several months. She then left the community 

191 



with a written explanation that provoked not little public astonishment. First of all, it was written 
that the Madonna, through Marija, had said on 8 March 1987 that that community was God's plan, 
God's work. Later on, when she left the community with her boyfriend Paolo Lunetti, who helped 
her leave and write the letter, she denied everything in her own handwriting on 1 1 July 1988: before 
God, the Madonna, and the Church of Jesus Christ, she categorically denied that there were ever 
any "messages" through her for this community and for this work of God, in which she had lived for 
several months (O. P., pp. 30-31). 

At that time, in 1983, Fr. Tomislav Vlasic OFM, who was the spiritual director of the "seers" of 
Medjugorje, wrote to the Swiss theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar: The children have decided to enter 
the religious life, hut they are waiting for the right moment which only they know (O. P., p. 55). Today the whole 
world knows that these were only simple stories or children's fairytales. Not all the "privileged" 
children of Medjugorje entered the religious life, while those that tried - quickly left. Only the 
mature won't allow themselves to be misled by irrational "messages" and children's stories! Is this 
some kind of "sign", "secret" or "message" of Medjugorje? 

Though I believe that it's improper, I will nevertheless compare these "vocations" with the two 
best-known modern Marian shrines. 

At Lourdes the 14 year old Bernardette once said: I must become a nun, butl don't know in which Order. 
The Hof Virgin told me this and I'm waiting. She received her religious robes in July 1866. Though 
infirm, she held on to her death on 16 April 1879. Pope Pius XI canonized her on the Immaculate 
Conception in 1933. 

Secondly, at Fatima, the seer Lucia became a nun in 1921 and a discalced Carmelite in 1948. Little 
Francisco and Jacinta died as children and were both beatified by Pope John Paul II at Fatima in the 
year 2000. 

There's something strange in all of this: three "seers" who tried to "enrol" themselves into religious 
life, who later on dismissed themselves and were happily married, still have regular daily 
"apparitions". The other "seers" though, who didn't enter the religious life, receive an "apparition" 
only once a year. Can this be considered a reward for those who didn't enter the religious life? 

A grace of God. Keeping in mind the fact that many young boys from Herzegovina who entered 
the seminary and who later became priests and the numerous young girls who became nuns (from 
the parish of Medjugorje alone there are over 30 living priests and sisters) who from what I know, 
never had any apparition, message or encounter with any supernatural phenomenon; it's indeed 
odd that not one of the "seers" in these 23 years, who have had between 770 and 8,270 
"apparitions" realized a religious vocation. And this same phenomenon, in a threatening way, 
demands that bishop Zanic recognize the "messages" of Medjugorje as authentic without 
questioning them. Every true religious vocation is a grace of God and a serious matter. The 
manner in which religious vocations were handled by the "visionaries" has been shown to be 
irresponsible. Is this possibly a question of games without borders, regarding numbers, "visions", 
"messages", "revelations", "secrets" and "signs"? 

V. WHAT DO PRAYERS AND CONFESSIONS PROVE? 

1. Prayer as a context. Prayer is an important factor in the "apparitions" of Medjugorje. It's in the 
context of praying the Our Father that in most cases the "apparitions" begin for the "seers". They 
even cease praying so that the "apparition" can be followed for a few minutes. 

2. A Message not to pray. On 16 September 1981: "She also told them that they need not pray for 
themselves, because she has rewarded them in the best fashion. They should pray for others 
instead" (O. P., p. 111). 

- The Biblical Madonna will never say that people need not pray for themselves and that the 
"reward of apparitions" replaces personal prayer. This is false teaching. Even Jesus prayed firstly for 
himself, then for his apostles and then for the entire world "that all may be one" (Jn 17). 

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V 

3. A Message to pray for bishop Zanic. Concerning a prayer-group of Medjugorje "the 
Madonna has asked that they fast on bread and water twice a week. Three months later we are 
fasting on bread and water three times a week. The group is offering the majority of their prayers 
for him (bishop Zanic). We often offer our adoration, rosaries and visits to the place of the 
apparitions where we pray long into the night for him. God shall look upon our prayers and 
fasting" (O. ?., p. 126). So wrote Fr. Tomislav Vlasic OFM on 8 January 1984. 

The phenomenon established a prayer-group around Fr. Tomislav Vlasic OFM, who in a letter 
in 1984 presented himself to the Pope as the one "who through Divine providence guides the 
seers of Medjugorje" (O. P., p. 56). This group has been praying and fasting just so that the bishop 
would give in to their hallucinations. They also built a convent in Medjugorje with close to 100 beds 
and didn't even think of asking the bishop for permission to do this. Then the "mystifier" Fr. 
Vlasic was recently removed from his guiding role in the prayer-group, after having mixed the 
spiritual with spiritism in Medjugorje during a retreat! 

4. He could have but didn't want to? In an interview in 1993, during the height of the war, the 
"seer" Jakov said: "The Madonna has asked me today, as every day during these last twelve years, 
that I pray for peace in the former Yugoslavia. The Virgin convinced me that I could stop the war 
with my prayers. . ." (O. P., p. 37). 

- If this weren't so naive, a normal believer would ask himself: if the "seer" was capable of stopping 
the war in ex -Yugoslavia, then why didn't he go pray and bring to an end? Yet during the war over 
2 million people were displaced, over 200,000 were killed, thousands of religious sites and tens of 
thousands of homes were destroyed, and then the unjust Dayton accord was imposed upon us! 

5. Can prayer be considered proof? There are people within the Church who say: If the people 
are praying to God, let them then go to Medjugorje, let them make their pilgrimages and pray. It's 
better for them to pray than not to pray, better to venerate "the Madonna of Medjugorje" than not 
to venerate any Madonna at all! 

For 2000 years now the Church has been teaching and suggesting to the faithful that they pray, fast, 
do penance, go to confession and convert. She doesn't prohibit anyone from praying to God where 
they please. But she doesn't allow "pilgrimages to the place of the apparitions" to be endorsed in 
churches from the altar, that have not been accepted as authentic. She does this so that the tmth 
may be separated from falsehood, and tme doctrine separated from false doctrine. 

As if it were really necessary for someone to travel thousands of kilometres from Corea or Ireland 
to Medjugorje just to pray a rosary or to make a confession. Yet Jesus teaches us to go into your room 
and pray to your Father in heaven ! (Mt 6:6 ). 

Do those who say that they have travelled to Medjugorje over thirty times, really prove by saying 
this that they have "converted"? This could be a real sign that they haven't converted (O. P., pp. 
229-230). A truly converted person would never boast about this but would rather demonstrate it 
by his life! 

If the faithful of the parish of St. James's in Medjugorje sincerely confess their sins and pray, 
regardless of all the nursery rhyme "apparitions", they thereby certainly receive the same Divine 
graces that other believers receive who pray and validly receive the sacraments in Catholic churches 
throughout the world. The local Church has always held this belief (O. P., pp. 268-269). 

VI. HOW MANY CHURCH COMMISSIONS AND INTERVENTIONS 
HAVE THERE BEEN? 

Towards the end of June 1981, the sensational news of the "Madonna's apparitions" to children in 
Medjugorje started to spread in the mass-media. In mid-August of the same year, after having 
spoken with the so-called seers in Medjugorje on 21 July, in his first Statement , the bishop of 
Mostar-Duvno, Msgr. Pavao Zanic, emphasized that the most difficult question is whether or not 


193 



this is a "subjective experience of the children or something supernatural?" (O. P., p. 192). Even 
though he had informed the Pope and the Holy See on many occasions regarding the diverse 
opinions regarding Med jugorje, the bishop felt it was necessary to establish a diocesan commission 
in order to study the events. 

A - The Chancery of the Diocese of Mostar 

The First Church Commission (1982 - 1984) 

Bishop Zanic established the first Commission on 11 January 1982, which worked until 1984 (O. 
P., p. 43). It was comprised of four theologians, 2 diocesan priests and 2 religious. 

The bishop's new discoveries. The Commission hadn't even gathered yet when on 14 January 
1982 something happened that marked the bishop's position once and for all. That day, three of the 
"seers" came to Mostar with the "Madonna's" message that the bishop, regarding the famous 
Herzegovinian Affair acted too hastily, because he sought the removal of two Franciscan associate 
pastors who were causing problems in Mostar. The bishop, who during his lifetime venerated the 
Madonna with numerous devotions and pilgrimages, upon hearing that the phenomenon in 
Medjugorje was accusing him of irreligious disorder in reference to the parishes; that it didn't 
recognize in him a faithful son of the Church and the Madonna, the Mother of the Church, to 
whom a year earlier in September 1980, the Cathedral church of Mostar was consecrated; that the 
phenomenon was defending disobedient religious friars who were obstructing the normal 
functioning of the Cathedral, began to look with suspicion upon the "messages" and the 
"apparitions" in Medjugorje. Despite this, the Commission began its work. 

Great sign. The Commission held three conversations with the "seers". In 1982, the third meeting 
brought some results. On the bishop's request, the Commission asked the "seers" to write down in 
double copy, what kind of "great sign" shall appear and when it would happen. They were then to 
put their responses into two envelopes and then seal them. One of the envelopes was to kept by 
them while the other at the Chancery office. When the "great sign" occurs, then the envelopes 
would be opened and the truth verified. However, five of the "seers" refused to answer the 
questions, because the Madonna did not permit them to. Yet the seminarian Ivan did respond in 
writing to the questions. He even said that the Madonna did not forbid him from responding to the 
questions. His response was more than inappropriate. A good number of lies and tricks are tied to 
this "great sign" which to this day hasn't occurred (O. P., pp. 102-108). 

The Response to the Holy See. In November 1983, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the 
Faith asked the bishop if the Commission has come to some conclusions. Bishop Zanic wrote a 
study on Medjugorje and the Herzegovinian Affair, which he sent to Cardinal Josef Ratzinger. 
In the conclusion the bishop puts forth the question of the "apparitions": 

Are they from God? - The "Madonna" of Medjugorje has brought more disorder and disarray here 
than there was earlier! Hence he doesn't see how he can accept this as coming from God. 

Is it from the devil? - He has difficulty accepting this hypothesis as well, even though the thought 
has crossed his mind. 

Is it all a hoax? - From the outset one can notice that the children have sometimes lied. At times it's 
clear that what they say is what they have heard from the Franciscans, especially regarding the 
"Herzegovinian Affair". The bishop goes on to say that he awaits the judgement of the 
Commission and the cessation of the "apparitions". The bishop waited 17 years and he saw the 
Madonna in heaven on 11 January 2000 (the day of his death) before seeing the "visions" of 
Medjugorje cease. 

The Second extended Commission (1984 - 1986) 


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In 1984 bishop Zanic decided to extend the first Commission. He wrote to all the theological 
faculties in Yugoslavia and sought the permission of certain religious superiors to allow their 
experts to join the Commission. 

There were 15 members in the Second Commission: 12 priests and 3 medical experts. They held 
seven meetings in all. The first was in Mostar in March 1984, and the seventh in the same city in 
May 1986, during which the Commission completed its work. The members of the Commission 
voted on the following conclusion: Non constat de supematuralitate (1 1 voted 'for', 2 'against', 1 
accepted 'in nucleo', and 1 abstained). The Commission prepared a draft "Declaration" in which 
were listed the "unacceptable assertions" and "bizarre declarations", attributed to the curious 
phenomenon. The Commission also stated that further investigations were not necessary nor the 
delaying of the official judgement of the Church. The bishop duly informed the Bishops' 
Conference and the Holy See, and he then informed the public during his homily in Medjugorje in 
1987 (O. P., pp. 47-50). 

The well-known negative position of the bishop which he summarized in 28 points in 1990, is 
significant since it speaks of the inauthentic nature of these supernatural apparitions (O. P., p. 196). 
In August of 1993, bishop Zanic handed over the administration of the diocese to his successor 
who continued his work at a swift pace. 

B - The Bishops' Conference of Yugoslavia 

The Bishops of Yugoslavia intervened twice, in 1984 and 1985, and asked both priests and faithful 
to await the judgement of the Church regarding the events of Medjugorje, which shall be given after 
intense investigations. Hence, no pilgrimages are to be organized as if "the Church has already 
given a positive judgement" (O. P., p. 193). 

The Third Commission (1987 - 1990) 

In January 1987, upon the suggestion of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal 
Franjo Kuharic, president of the Bishops' Conference, and bishop Zanic made a joint 
communique in which they announced the formation of the third Commission and in which they 
asked the faithful not to organize pilgrimages motivated "from above" which would ascribe to 
the events of Medjugorje (O. P., p. 196). The Commission was comprised of 11 priests (6 religious, 
5 diocesan), 4 physicians and psychologists and one religious sister as secretary. 

The Commission held 23 meetings in Zagreb at the Secretariat of the Bishops' Conference. The 
first meeting was in April 1987 and the twenty-third in September 1990. 

A characteristic of the third Commission was to work on the findings and results of the previous 
Commissions and ex novo. Everything was done under oath and no statements for the public were 
made. The results of their four-year long efforts were presented to the members of the Bishops' 
Conference in Zagreb in 1990. Discussions at the Bishops' Conference on the "apparitions" were 
held on four occasions: 25 April, 9 October and 27 November 1990, and the Declaration on 
Medjugorje was accepted through a vote held in Zadar on 10 April 1991: 19 bishops voted for the 
Declaration while 1 abstained. 

The Declaration states: "During the regular session of the Bishops' Conference of Yugoslavia, 
held in Zadar from April 9-11, 1991, the following was accepted: 

DECLARATION 

From the very beginning, the Bishops have been following the events of Medjugorje through the 
local Bishop, the Bishops' Commission and the Commission of the Bishops' Conference of 
Yugoslavia for Medjugorje. 


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On the base of studies made so far, it cannot be affirmed that these matters concern supernatural 
apparitions or revelations. 

Yet the gathering of the faithful from various parts of the world to Medjugorje, inspired by reasons 
of faith or other motives, require the pastoral attention and care, first of all, of the local Bishop and 
then of the other bishops with him, so that in Medjugorje and all connected with it, a healthy 
devotion towards the Blessed Virgin Mary according to the teachings of the Church may be 
promoted. The Bishops will also provide special liturgical and pastoral directives corresponding to 
this aim. At the same time, they will continue to study all the events of Medjugorje through the 
commissions. 

Zadar, 10 April 1991 
The Bishops of Yugoslavia" 

The Aggression. In the years that followed, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina found themselves 
victims of a terrible aggression. With the formation of new states, new Bishops' Conferences were 
established. Despite the Declaration of the Bishops' Conference: Non constat de supematuralitate, that is, 
that it cannot be affirmed that these matters concern supernatural apparitions or revelations in 
Medjugorje, the adherents of this phenomenon consistently claim that the "Madonna is 
appearing". 

If our Bishops' Conference, despite numerous curious visitors to Medjugorje, notwithstanding 
massive publicity accompanied by charismatic inspirations, had the courage to declare on the base 
of serious, solid and expert investigations, that there is no proof in Medjugorje of any supernatural 
apparitions, this then is a sign that the Church even in the 20th century is still "the pillar and 
bulwark of the truth" (/ Tim 3, 15) - (O. P., p. 151). 

C - The Interventions of the Holy See 

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, has intervened four times through two of its 
Secretaries, while the Prefect, Cardinal Ratzinger, also made an important intervention. 

In 1985, Msgr. Alberto Bovone notified the Secretary of the Bishops' Conference of Italy not to 
organize official pilgrimages to Medjugorje. 

In 1995, Msgr. Tarcisio Bertone wrote to the bishop of Langres, Msgr. Leon Taverdet, and repeated 
the same to Msgr. Lucien Daloz of Besanyon, France, who were interested in knowing the position 
of the Floly See on Medjugorje. 

Finally, in 1998, the same Secretary wrote to Msgr. Gilbert Aubry, bishop of Reunion. All these 
letters emphasized that pilgrimages, whether private or public, are not allowed if they presuppose 
the authenticity of the apparitions, since this would be in contradiction to the declaration of the 
Bishops' Conference of Yugoslavia. 

Ratzinger's frei erfunden In 1998, when a certain German gathered various statements which 
were supposedly made by the Floly Father and the Cardinal Prefect, and forwarded them to the 
Vatican in the form of a memorandum, the Cardinal responded in writing on 22 July 1998: "The 
only thing I can say regarding statements on Medjugorje ascribed to the Holy Father and myself is 
that they are complete invention" - frei erfunden - (O. P., p. 283). 

Conclusion. Not only are these statements ascribed to the Holy Father and Cardinal Ratzinger 
"complete invention", but the numerous messages of Medjugorje, ascribed to the Madonna are also 
complete invention. If our faith is considered obsequium rationabile - rational service to God, tme and 
healthy spiritual worship, as it rightfully is ( Rm 12:1), then it cannot be any person's private fantasy 
or illusion (O. P., p. 84). The Church is competent to say this. In her name, 30 chosen priests and 
physicians, working together in three Commissions for 10 years, in more than 30 meetings, dutifully 
and experdy invesdgated the events of Medjugorje and brought forth their results of study. And not 
one, but twenty bishops responsibly declared that there exists no proof that the events in 


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Medjugorje concern supernatural apparitions or revelations. The believer who respects both 
principles: ratio et fides, adheres to this criterion, convinced that the Church does not deceive. 
Regarding Medjugorje, there's a real danger that the Madonna and the Church could be privatized. 
People could start contriving a Madonna and a Church according to their own taste, perception and 
deception: by not submitting their reason as believers to the official Magisterium of the Church, but 
rather forcing the Church to follow and recognize their fantasy. 

Naive believers could easily then leave the living fountains of grace in their own parishes to mosey 
on down to Medjugorje or follow the "seers" around the world, who by the way, thanks to the 
"apparitions" have good homes and a comfortable existence - at least that's what the mass-media 
say. 

There are at least 6 or 7 religious or quasi-religious communities, just initiating or already 
established, some of diocesan right, some not, which have arbitrarily been installed in 
Medjugorje without the permission of the local Diocesan authorities. These communities are more 
a sign of disobedience than a real charisma of obedience in this Church! 

There exists a problem in this diocese of Mostar-Duvno which in recent years has practically 
precipitated into a schism. At least eight Franciscan priests, who have rebelled against the decision 
of the Holy See to transfer a certain number of parishes administered by the Franciscans to the 
diocesan priests, have been expelled from the Franciscan Order and suspended 'a divinis'. In spite 
of this, they have occupied at least five parishes through force, and continue to exercise sacred 
functions. They invalidly assist at marriages, hear confessions without canonical faculties and 
invalidly confer the sacrament of confirmation. Three years ago they even invited a deacon of the 
Old-Catholic Church who falsely presented himself as a bishop, to preside at a confirmation and he 
"confirmed" about 800 young people in three parishes. 

Two of these expelled priests sought after episcopal consecration from Swiss bishop of the 
Old-Catholic Church, Hans Gerny, yet without any result. 

So many invalid sacraments, so much disobedience, violence, sacrilege, disorder, irregularities, and 
not a single "message" from tens of thousands of "apparitions" has been directed towards 
eliminating these scandals. A very strange thing indeed! 

The Church, from the local to supreme level, from the beginning to this very day, has clearly and 
constantly repeated: Non constat de supematuralitate\ No to pilgrimages that would ascribe a 
supernatural nature to the apparitions, no shrine of the Madonna, no authentic messages nor 
revelations, no true visions! 

This is the state of things today. How will things be tomorrow? We'll leave them in God's hands and 
under Our Lady's protection! 


APPENDIX I 

Criteria for Discerning Apparitions: Regarding the Events of 

Medjugorje - Part 1 
Msg. Ratko Peric 


Medjugorje, a parish in the diocese of Mostar-Duvno in Herzegovina, is 
known not only to Catholic Croats but to the entire world. For 14 years now, 
much has been spoken and written on the "seers", and on the "apparitions" of the 


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Blessed Virgin Mary in this parish. The ecclesiastical ministry of the diocesan 
bishop Monsignor Pavao Zanic, has been marked by commissions, 
investigations, communiques, declarations, meetings with the "seers", and 
persuasions and dissuasions regarding these events. His coadjutor and successor, 
from the time of his taking over the ministry of bishop in Mo star (1993), has 
received many letters of varying content, expressing all types of advice and 
suggestions on the events of Medjugorje. Some have sought to impede these 
phenomena, while others have endeavoured to have them approved and 
propagated. He himself volens-nolens has been asked in some public appearances 
and interviews to say something and to explain himself. He never refrained 
though, from supporting the declaration of the bishops' conference of 1991. He 
also mentioned the events of Medjugorje at the bishops' synod in Rome, in 
October of 1994. Therefore, this current and contemporary theme cannot be 
ignored. 

It is impossible to provide a brief summary of the events tied to Medjugorje. 
There exists an abundant amount of literature from the naive to the fanatic. This 
article limits itself to bringing out the theological criteria for heavenly "private" 
apparitions on earth. Many worthwhile articles and books have been written on 
this topic which systematically and expertly write on "private" apparitions and 
revelations. For this reason, the aim of this article is to gather criteria which can 
help those who already know certain facts, to compare them to these rules and 
evaluate the conclusions. Consequently, to bring forth the official documents and 
declarations of the Church regarding the events in the parish of Medjugorje in the 
diocese of Mostar-Duvno and finally, to summarize the position of the diocesan 
chancery in a few points keeping in mind the well-known declaration 

of die bishops' conference of 1991. 

1) According to the teachings of the II Vatican Council, the historical 
person of Jesus, His appearance and revelation, by word and deed, through 
miraculous signs, passed on to us through his apostles, is the final and complete 
revelation of God, to which nothing essential can be added or taken away. 
Therefore, beyond this first revelation, there shall be no other revelation before 
Jesus' Second Coming. In this sense, the Council is quite unambiguous: "As a 
result, He Himself — to see whom is to see the Father (cf. Jn 14:9) — completed 
and perfected Revelation and confirmed it with divine guarantees. He did this by 
the total fact of His presence and self-manifestation — by words and works, signs 
and miracles, but above all by His death and glorious resurrection from the dead, 
and finally by sending the Spirit of truth. He revealed that God was with us, to 
deliver us from the darkness of sin and death, and to raise us up to eternal life." 

2) Holy Scripture. In the Old Testament, the word "listen" is used twice as 


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often as the words "to see" or "to look" (1080 : 520). Along with this, the 
relationship of man to God, including the most humble friend of God, is a 
relationship of words and not one of seeing or of vision: One cannot see God and 
remain alive, was also valid for Moses. God revealed His glory to him but 
not hHs face (cf. Ex 33:20-23). On the other hand, "listening" to the word of God is 
the regular attitude of the believer, the prophet and the king. It is no surprise that the 
Jewish Credo-I believe, does not begin with the words "I believe in God almighty", 
but rather with: Shema Israel - Hear, O Israel (Deut 5:1). 

In the New Testament, especially in the Letter to the Hebrews (1:1-2), 
emphasis is made to the fact that God has spoken many times and in many ways to 
the fathers and prophets. Yet all revelation - of the Holy Trinity and of our 
salvation - definitely and completely, is found in the revelation of the only Son of 
God, who is the reflection of the glory and imprint of God's being. The theology 
of St. John the apostle and evangelist particularly emphasizes this vision and 
revelation of the Son: "No one has ever seen God; it is the only Son, who is 
nearest to the Father's heart, who has made Him known" (Jn 1:18). Jesus is the 
revelation of the Father, his image and icon. Hence, he who sees the Son, sees the 
Father. Jesus shall praise those who believe and have not seen (Jn 20:29). In 
John's theology, "seeing" and "believing" are one and the same. The Word of 
God, the Second Divine Person did not "appear" in a human body, but became 
body and lived amongst us, in our human condition, in space and time. This 
revelation is the substance of our faith and also the highest expression of 
revelation. For this reason, the religion of Christ is the religion of the Incarnation, 
which surpasses all types of apparitions. After His death and resurrection, Christ 
appeared many times in His glorious body, identical to the preceding one He had. 
These apparitions had a dual purpose: on the one hand, they proved Jesus' 
resurrection, and on the other, through these apparitions Jesus finished His 
instructions to His disciples: He gave them the power to forgive sins, he 
established their general mission to proclaim the Gospel to all creation, He told 
them to wait for the Holy Spirit, and to give witness to all, so that people could 
believe, be baptized and saved. After the ascension of Jesus, apparitions are no 
longer necessary. 

3) Theological problems and explanations. Theologians who are 
professionally involved in studying Revelation are loath to talk about private 
apparitions and messages. Yet amongst the people, many of the faithful are 
inclined to believe in such phenomena, because they provide something visible, 
touchable, something which can be felt or sensed. This is especially true if this is 
something which becomes visible in their lives in the form of some kind of 
emotional aid, a healing or similar experience. Such phenomenona and beliefs 
can easily slide into true superstition and forms of magic, especially if the desired 


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"grace" or "miracle" doesn't occur in the way the person expected and "prayed 
for". In such situations, it is not uncommon to come across even — suicide. Yet, it 
must be objectively recognized that in the last years and decades, tens of millions 
of people have made pilgrimages to the recognized Marian shrines of the world, 
such as Lourdes, Fatima, Czestochowa, Loreto, Marija Bistrica, etc. This is also 
another reason why so much is written and spoken on the problem of private 
apparitions. Moreover, he who in his ecclesiastical ministry feels it his 
responsibility, (whether this be in a theological, investigative or episcopal 
teaching ministry), has the duty to defend the faith of the common folk and not to 
allow (under the veil of various public religious gestures), the concealing of any 
superstitions, nor permit the faith of the people to be based upon false 
apparitions. 

Theologically speaking, in order to accept private apparitions as authentic, 
they must be characterized by some essential traits and be free of dubious 
elements. R. Silic, a professor of theology in Sarajevo, advised the priests of his 
time briefly and clearly: "May pastors of souls be careful not to quickly believe in 
revelations so that they may not be deceived by pious women." 

Another Franciscan priest from Flerzegovina, K. Vasilj, provides three 
criteria: 1) The appearing Mary must be in total concordance with Mary of the 
New Testament; 2) The person who claims that Mary is appearing to him/her 
must be completely sincere and truthful; 3) That person must also be 
psychologically healthy, unperturbed by illusions and hallucinations. 

A serious theological article on apparitions was written ten years ago by a 
Jesuit professor at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Rev. Jean Galot. 
fie presents three problems which should be resolved while questioning the 
authenticity of apparitions: 1) Did a true apparition occur? 2) Is the person who 
presented this trustworthy? 3) Can the theology of the apparitions be explained 
and placed within the life of the Church? This third problem should be placed 
first, and the theologian gives it much attention. Describing various apparitions 
depicted in the Bible, he also brings out his own theological considerations. In 
the faith, there exists a fundamental light which is shrouded by darkness. Hence, 
some seek apparitions in order to confirm their faith. They would like to 
compensate that which they lack in believing by "seeing". "It is exactly this desire 
which drives a good number of today's Christians towards persons who say that 
they have apparitions or visions." 

The first criterion for discerning authenticity is rarity and exceptionality. 
Apparitions are essentially very rare occurrences. They cannot replace the faith. 
"Hence, apparitions which would continue for a long period of time, becoming a 
part of daily life of the seers, would tend to transform Christian living into seeing 
and would then liberate it from the darkness of faith. Such frequency would be a 
motive to doubt the authenticity of the apparitions." 


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The second criterion forjudging authenticity would be the conformity of the 
ensuing messages and revelations to the truths of the faith. If there were to be any 
doctrinal errors, or affirmations incompatible with the teachings of the Gospel, 
with Christian love; or if they were to contain slander, to instigate rebellion, to 
entice "disobedience towards Church authority", in such cases their validity 
would have to be questioned. 

Thirdly, "it would equally be detrimental if the transcendent origin of the 
apparitions were to indicate a certain human manipulation: when the recipients of 
apparitions determine the place, date, regularity or program. They do not then 
concern a phenomenon from above, but more or less a direct experience of the 
actors on earth". 

Fourthly, one has to consider the fruits also. "It must be observed that the 
spiritual fruits alone cannot suffice in discerning the authenticity of apparitions. 
There have been cases where many conversions were registered, which then only 
wound up being rejected by Church authorities as unfounded" 

Z. Puljic, once a member of the diocesan commission for the investigation of 
the events of Medjugorje, and who today is bishop of Dubrovnik, emphasizes the 
necessity of a serious analysis of the following elements for the discernment of 
the authenticity of apparitions: 

- the psychological equilibrium of the person; 

- the object or content of private apparitions, and 

- the moral implications on the "seer" or on others who accept them. 

Other theologians present up to eight criteria for discerning authentic from 

false private apparitions and revelations. In order to evaluate them, one would 
have to respond to these questions: 

- What is the basic information on the "seers" like, and how are they judged 
to be? 

- Has there been a concrete realization of the seers' announced predictions? 

- Is the seer honest and respectful towards his superiors (spiritual director, 
pastor, bishop)? 

- Is an absolutely authentic text of the "messages" obtainable? 

- Does there exist any harmony between the so-called messages and 
revelations to the official teachings of the Church? 

- Are the so-called messages useful towards the eternal salvation of people? 

- Have the so-called apparitions survived all the difficulties of time and all 
investigations? 

- Have there been significant fruits in every aspect? 

R. Fisichella, a respected professor of theology at the Gregorian University 
in Rome, after making some biblical observations, stresses the following criteria 
for discerning the authenticity and truthfulness of private apparitions. 

- These visions must never overshadow the authentic and radical Revelation 


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described in Holy Scripture; 

- They must always respect the mystery and secrecy of genuine revelation; "it 
is absurd, not to say blasphemous, — not only to western mentality — that during a 
vision one could photograph the face of Jesus or the Virgin!"; 

- They must respect the mutual completion of charisms; and the greatest of 
these is love; hence they should not be directed against love which is the center of 
Christian revelation. 

Furthermore, for a theological analysis of so-called private apparitions, it is 
important to keep in mind the social and cultural factors of the place where the 
apparitions occur, a linguistic verification of the descriptions of the apparitions 
would be necessary, and finally, a thorough psychological analysis of the seers. 
One also must recall that apparitions are always something "extraordinary", rare, 
and this is an important element for their discernment. "If apparitions were to 
occur on a daily basis in the life of a believer, or if they were to continue for years, 
this would obviously create serious problems for the theology of faith". Every 
apparition must refer to or return to the revelation of Christ, presume it, and lead 
towards it as well. 

Referring to the "scientific research" on the "apparitions" at Medjugorje, of 
Father Rene Laurentin, a French priest and publicist, J. Curie, a professor at the 
Catholic Theological Faculty in Zagreb, provides a few significant critical points 
which greatly contribute towards clearing up the mentioned difficulties: 

Curie first of all differentiates between the popular term "scientific" as it was 
comprehended in the 19th century and the way it is understood today in the 20th 
century. Real scientists today are much more humble and careful, due to the likely 
rebuttals and replies they can easily receive tomorrow for their conclusions of 
today. 

- While the French scientist lists facts and figures, he remains in line with his 
historical profession. But when he presents the actual "visions" of the seers, he 
does not take into consideration the "experience of the presence" as a significant 
element of spiritual consciousness. This is one of his greatest drawbacks 
according to the Croatian Jesuit. 

- A three day stay in Medjugorje during the Christmas rush, gave Laurentin 
the opportunity to establish that the seers are mentally healthy, simple and totally 
honest. Curie observes though, that God does not reserve his gifts only to those 
who are "scientifically" sane. He portrays Laurentin's great leaps to conclusions: 
"Meanwhile, if he were to come to a perfectly certain conviction that the seers of 
Medjugorje are totally sincere in their declarations, this would not give him the 
right to conclude - that the subjective sincerity of their speech proves the 
objective truthfulness of their visions." 

- Following this, Curie poses a general problem of principle: "what if 
anything can science research and verify regarding extraordinary, miraculous 


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phenomenon, whether they be of divine or demonic origin? It appears that Glas 
Koncila did not proceed properly when it reiterated the "scientific nature" of 
Laurentin's approach to the Madonna's "apparitions"; as if the problem of the 
authenticity of these apparitions (after all our Balkan controversies), could now 
be resolved in a proper manner -the scientific way." Laurentin recognizes that in 
the end "the verdict must be left up to the Church". 

Curie then responds: "Why would this scientist, having concluded his 
scientific research, now restrain his scientific conclusions and bow before the 
unscientific authority of the Church? If science can scientifically establish that a 
certain virus causes cancer, then no bishop could ever deny this conclusion! 
Hence, if science scientifically establishes that the Madonna is "appearing" in 
Medjugorje, can the bishops along with their commissions deny this?" Here the 
critic is examining two things. The first: God's grace cannot be an "object" of 
scientific research; second: yet, through grace, God can touch a person in such a 
way that this encounter manifests itself in a miraculous healing, miraculous 
knowledge, etc. But science is incapable of establishing the miraculous nature of 
these happenings ! 

Curie differentiates between mystical and prophetic types of private 
revelations. Mystics usually cannot and do not know how to express what they 
have experienced. Prophetic souls "behave themselves diversely: they are 
convinced of the truthfulness of their experience and consciously wish to go 
public, so that people may listen and follow their 'message'". The phenomenon of 
Medjugorje falls into this prophetic category. Yet the mystical and prophetic 
types of revelations cannot be verified by science, but only through a spiritual 
evaluation. 

Curie also presents the differences between public Revelation which is 
absolutely necessary for salvation and which extends for all eternity to all of 
mankind, and private revelations which no one has the right to impose upon or 
extend towards others. This results from the private nature of private revelations. 

- This type of private revelation does not lose its private character even after 
the so-called "approval" or nihil obstat of the Church, which can also revoke this 
"approval". Curie’s conclusion is: "Whoever believes along with Laurentin that 
the Madonna has truly appeared to the seers of Medjugorje - and not once or 
twice, but thousands of times — that person would have to keep in mind the 
historical fact that even very noble divine initiatives have ended in failure, 
because they were defeated by the disproportionate propaganda of various naive 
and fanatical persons. On the other hand, one should not forget that according to 
the Bible, God is not bound by our human legal or scientific methods." 

4) The position of the Church Cardinal Prospero Lambertini, who became 
Pope Benedict XIV (1740-1758), explained the value and strength of "approval" 


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which is given to apparitions, visions and revelations: "It is important to know 
that the public approval (of apparitions) after serious examination, is provided for 
the education and benefit of believers. But even though such approved 
revelations cannot claim nor be given the consensus of the Catholic faith, they 
nevertheless require the assent of human faith according to the rules of prudence, 
in virtue of which these revelations are considered probable or piously credible." 
This wise rule is also valid today. 

In the most recent Catechism of the Catholic Church there exists a clear 
position regarding "private" apparitions and revelations: "Throughout the ages, 
there have been so-called 'private' revelations, some of which have been 
recognized by the authority of the Church. They do not belong, however, to the 
deposit of faith. It is not their role to improve or complete Christ's definitive 
Revelation, but to help live more fully by it in a certain period of history. Guided 
by the magisterium of the Church, the sensus fidelium knows how to discern and 
welcome in these revelations whatever constitutes an authentic call of Christ or 
His saints to the Church." 

5) The phenomenon of Medjugorje and declarations of the Church. 

From 1981 onward, three ecclesiastical commissions have worked in succession 
on studying the phenomenon of Medjugorje. They could not avoid taking into 
consideration the above mentioned principles and criteria during their 
investigations. The commissions, the local bishop and the bishops' conference 
through the course of time, gave certain communiques, declarations or 
explanations, which were accepted or rejected by the followers or the opponents 
of "supernatural apparitions". Here are the most important official declarations, 
signed and dated by the competent authorities: 

- In mid- August 1981, in the declaration of Monsignor Pavao Zanic, bishop 
of Mostar-Duvno, which was open to honest interpretation, it was said that the 
"most difficult question remains whether this is the subjective experience of the 
children or something supernatural?" 

- On 14 January 1984, the archbishop of Zagreb, Cardinal Franjo Kuharic, 
prohibited the seers of Medjugorje from appearing in all the parishes of the 
archdiocese of Zagreb until an ecclesiastical judgement was passed on the events. 

- On 24 March 1984, the first communique of the expanded commission was 
made public. The commission asked that the mass media refrain from giving 
judgments of the events until the competent Church commission provides its 
judgment. It also asked that organized pilgrimages not be allowed; that the 
"seers" and Church personnel in Medjugorje not give any statements regarding 
the so-called "apparitions": "Since the events in the parish of Medjugorje have 
had a considerable echo in our local Church and throughout the world, the bishop 
ordinary felt it necessary to expand the present four-member commission in order 
to choose new members from all the theological faculties from the Church in 


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Croatia and Slovenia, from various theological disciplines as well as experts in 
medical sciences... the commission does not approve of priests or Catholic lay 
people organizing pilgrimages to Medjugorje, or public appearances of the seers 
before it has made a judgment on the authenticity of the apparitions." 

- On 11 October 1984, in the second communique, we read amongst other 
things: "The commission has decided to further study all the experiences of the 
children and the interpretations of these experiences by the pastoral workers of 
Medjugorje, even though it already notices some difficulties of disciplinary and 
theological nature in the messages of Medjugorje." 

- On 12 October 1984, the bishops' conference asked that official 
pilgrimages to Medjugorje not be organized: "The bishops advise that regarding 
the events of Medjugorje, it is necessary to await the judgment of the competent 
Church authorities which shall be given after a thorough and expert examination 
of the events. Hence, official pilgrimages to Medjugorje cannot be organized as if 
the Church had already given a positive judgment on these events." 

- On the 30 October, Bishop Zanic presented the (unofficial) position of the 
diocesan chancery in a 15 point statement demonstrating negative factors and 
facts tied to the phenomenon of Medjugorje. 

- On 8 March 1985, the third communique of the mentioned commission on 
the results of experts and studies was made known. Amongst other things it said: 
"The commission feels that the most difficult question arising from the events 
concerns the ecclesiastical disobedience of two former chaplains of Mostar who 
refused to be transferred, appealing to the messages of Medjugorje.” 

- On the 18 April 1985, the bishops' conference once again made an appeal to 
the faithful against making official pilgrimages to Medjugorje: "The bishops are 
following the events of Medjugorje in Herzegovina with due attention. During 
this meeting they reconfirmed their previous directives and decisions regarding 
these events.” 

- On 23 May 1985, came the warning of the Congregation for the Doctrine of 
the Faith — signed by the Secretary of the Congregation, Monsignor Alberto 
Bovone — addressed to the Italian Bishops' Conference, not to organize 
pilgrimages to Medjugorje. Here is the entire text of the letter sent by the Holy 
See to the secretary of the Italian Bishops' Conference, Monsignor Egidio 
Caporello: 


Your Excellency, 

From many parts, especially from the competent ordinary of Mostar 
(Yugoslavia), one can gather and lament the vast propaganda given to the 
'events' tied to the so-called apparitions in Medjugorje, for which pilgrimages 
and other initiatives have been organized that only contribute to the creation of 
confusion amongst the faithful and interfere with the work of the appointed 


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commission which is delicately examining the 'events' under scrutiny. 

In order to avoid enhancing this mentioned propaganda and speculation 
going on in Italy, despite all that has been expressed and recommended by the 
bishops' conference of Yugoslavia, could this Presidency please suggest to the 
Italian Episcopate to publicly discourage the organizing of pilgrimages to the 
so-called centre of apparitions, as well as all other forms of publicity, especially 
written materials, which could be considered prejudicial to a sober assertion of 
the facts on the part of the special commission which has been canonically 
formed for this purpose. 

I take this opportunity to express the assurances of my highest regards..." 

- On 31May 1985, came the fourth communique of the mentioned 
Commission in which the themes and difficulties worked upon were presented: 
"... a comparison of the concept of conversion as presented in the Gospels to the 
phenomenon of Medjugorje; problems of discipline regarding two former 
chaplains of Mostar who appeal to the messages of Medjugorje; theological 
problems regarding some of the messages of Medjugorje; and insufficient 
documentation on the supposed miraculous healings." 

- On September 27th, 1985, the fifth Communique of the same Commission 
was published in which they briefly explained what the participants were doing. 

- In January of 1987, on the suggestion of the Congregation for the Doctrine 
of the Faith that a commission of experts be established at the level of the bishops' 
conference, a communique by Cardinal Kuharic and Bishop Zanic was published: 
"While waiting for the results of the Commission's investigations and the 
judgment of the Church, may pastors and the faithful observe prudence in these 
circumstances. Therefore, organized pilgrimages or other manifestations, 
motivated by supernatural attributes given to the phenomenon of Medjugorje are 
not allowed." 

- On 25 July 1987, during a Mass held in the parish of Medjugorje, Bishop 
Zanic referred to the so-called apparitions. Here is a paragraph which was cited in 
many newspapers throughout the world: "It is said that Our Lady began 
appearing at Podbrdo on mount Crnica, but when the police banned going there, 
she went into homes, on fences, into the fields, into vineyards and tobacco fields, 
she appeared in the church, on the altar, in the sacristy, in the choir loft, on the 
roof, on the bell-tower, on roads, on the road to Cemo, in a car, in a bus, on a 
carriage, in a few places in Mostar, in more places in Sarajevo, in the convents of 
Zagreb, in Varazdin, in Switzerland, in Italy, again on Podbrdo, on Mount 
Krizevac, in the parish, in the parish rectory, etc. Surely not even half the places 
of the so-called apparitions have been counted, and a sober person who venerates 
Our Lady, would naturally ask himself: “Dear Mother of God, what are they 
doing to you?" 


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- In 1990 the diocesan bishop, Monsignor Zanic published his position on 
Medjugorje by summarizing in 29 points that which deeply dissuaded him 
regarding the truthfulness of the so-called supernatural apparitions, and which 
also scandalizes many faithful today regarding the events of Medjugorje. 

- On 10 April 1991, came the declaration of the former bishops' conference 
on the basis of the results of its commission, which said that there are no valid 
reasons which could verify the events of Medjugorje as supernatural apparitions 
or revelations. The declaration in its entirety follows. 

"During the regular session of the Bishops' Conference of Yugoslavia, held 
in Zadar from 9-11 April 1991, the following was accepted: 

A Declaration 

From the very beginning, the bishops have been following the events of 
Medjugorje through the local bishop, the bishops' commission and the 
commission of the Bishops' Conference of Yugoslavia for Medjugorje. 

On the base of studies made so far, it cannot be affirmed that these matters 
concern supernatural apparitions or revelations. 

Yet the gathering of faithful from various parts of the world to Medjugorje, 
inspired by reasons of faith or other motives, require the pastoral attention and 
care, first of all, of the local bishop and then of the other bishops with him, so 
that in Medjugorje and all connected with it, a healthy devotion towards the 
Blessed Virgin Mary according to the teachings of the Church may be promoted. 

The bishops will also provide special liturgical and pastoral directives 
corresponding to this aim. At the same time, they will continue to study all the 
events of Medjugorje through the commissions. 

The Bishops of Yugoslavia 
Zadar, 10 April 1991. 

The statement was approved by the bishops with 19 in favour and one 
abstaining. 

Later on, war broke out in the Republic of Croatia and the Republic of 
Bosnia-Herzegovina. The followers of the phenomenon of Medjugorje still claim 
that Our Lady is "appearing". The diocesan chancery has warned on many 
occasions that one cannot claim or preach in churches on supernatural apparitions 
due to the fact that it is impossible to confirm that Our Lady is appearing. Hence, 
official pilgrimages to Medjugorje are not allowed. 

6) The Church has still not recognized the supernatural nature of the 
"apparitions" at Medjugorje. Having in mind the previously mentioned rules, 
which the commission members empowered with the task of investigating the 


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phenomenon have taken into consideration, on the basis of which they have 
suggested to the local bishop and the bishops' conference to maintain the 
conviction that it is impossible to prove the supernatural nature of the 
"apparitions"; and also keeping in mind what was said and written in the past and 
especially recently on the events in the parish of Medjugorje, we present a few 
basic positions which the diocesan chancery has in various ways made public and 
duly informed the Holy See on, and still maintains today: 

a. The Case of Herzegovina — Medjugorje. The local bishop of Mostar 
Monsignor Pavao Zanic, at the beginning of the so-called apparitions in 1981, 
was open to news that on the territory of the diocese of Mostar -Duvno, in the 
parish of Medjugorje, there appeared the Blessed Virgin Mary. However, when 
the so-called seers in their "messages", which were presumed to be those of the 
Blessed Virgin, began giving anti-Church statements linked to the "case of 
Herzegovina" regarding parishes, parish jurisdiction and canonical faculties, 
defending the disobedience of certain Franciscan pastors of souls, prudence 
demanded taking a more cautious stance. The competent Church authorities, first 
of all the diocesan bishop on the basis of investigations made by his two 
commissions from 1982-1986, and then the commission of the bishops' 
conference on the grounds of its investigations from 1987-1990, both brought 
forth the following negative judgement regarding the supernatural nature of the 
apparitions at Medjugorje: "it cannot be affirmed that these matters concern 
supernatural apparitions or revelations", of the Madonna or any other saints. 
Therefore, it is forbidden to claim and profess the contrary, in churches and 
ecclesiastical communities, that is, as if Our Lady appeared there or is still 
appearing. 

b. The fruits. Despite the numerous people who come to Medjugorje "with 
religious and other motives", and even though there are religious, priests and 
bishops, the curious and those seeking physical healings and spiritual 
conversions; despite the tens of books and brochures written in favour of the 
so-called apparitions at Medjugorje, all from the pens of famous writers in the 
world; despite the hundreds of thousands of confessions and holy communions 
made, which the supporters of Medjugorje consistently stress, the declaration of 
the bishops' conference clearly states: "it cannot be affirmed that these matters 
concern supernatural apparitions or revelations" of the Madonna. The fruits 
which are so often mentioned, are not proof that they result from "supernatural 
apparitions or revelations" of the Madonna, but insomuch as they are 
authentically Christian, they can be understood as a product of the regular 
workings of the grace of God, through faith in God and the intercession of Mary 
the Mother of Christ, and through the holy sacraments present in the Catholic 


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Church. Not to mention anything at all about the negative fruits! 

c. The "messages" of Medjugorje on prayer, fasting, faith, conversion and 
peace, repeated daily as something new but in reality always the same, as if the 
Madonna conveyed them to the "seers", are already present in holy scripture and 
the magisterium of the Catholic Church. Anyone wishing to obey and live 
according to God's commandments and the teachings of the Church can pray, 
fast, believe, convert and work for peace anywhere in the world. This Christian 
requirement and duty cannot be lessened or enhanced or strengthened by any 
confirmed apparition, let alone thousands of unsubstantiated "apparitions" at 
Medjugorje. 

d. Contradictions. In some of the statements made by the so-called seers of 
Medjugorje published in the last 14 years, there are such contradictions, 
falsehoods and banalities, which cannot be attributed at all to our heavenly 
Mother Sedes Sapientiae - Seat of Wisdom, since there does not exist even a 
minimal guarantee of credibility. On the basis of such statements and the events 
tied to the statements: it cannot be affirmed that these matters concern 
"supernatural apparitions or revelations", of the Madonna or others. The talk of a 
"great sign", of "ten secrets", which Our Lady supposedly conveyed to the 
children, resembles the scare tactics which are typical of non-Catholic 
communities and not the sound teachings of the Catholic Church. 

e. Normal people. Of the six former children of Medjugorje who claimed 
that the Madonna "appeared" to them, one of them entered the seminary, another 
entered a type of mixed religious community, and with the passing of time both of 
them left their respective communities. Five of them have married, including the 
latter two mentioned. These faithful, even after thousands of so-called 
apparitions, remain so "normal" in their behaviour, that only their words attest to 
their "encounters" with the Madonna. They remain "normal" as do all other 
"normal" faithful who have never seen the Madonna, yet as Catholics still firmly 
believe in her and fervently pray for her intercession. Our holy faith which is 
based upon listening to the word of God and not upon seeing heavenly 
apparitions, is at the same time an obsequium rationabile (“reasonable service”) 
Rom 12:1), which contradicts the insistent propaganda on daily or very frequent 
"apparitions". Some are behaving in direct contradiction to the beatitude which 
Jesus said to the doubting apostle Thomas: "Blessed are those who have not seen 
and yet believe" (Jn 20:29). 


f. Charitable activities. Despite all the charitable-humanitarian aid which 
has been collected and is still being collected throughout the world during this 

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terrible war in this war-stricken area, through the help of the mass-media serving 
the Medjugorje propaganda machinery (in the name of Medjugorje and also 
passing through Medjugorje channels to the needy), there exists no reason to 
profess the claim that "these matters concern supernatural apparitions or 
revelations", neither of the "Queen of Peace" nor of any other type of 
supernatural apparition. 

g. Destroyed and undestroyed churches Neither can it be considered proof 
of the supernatural nature of the "apparitions" the fact that the church of St. James 
the Apostle in Medjugorje was not hit by grenades during this war, while for 
instance, both of the churches of Mostar and many other churches in 
Herzegovina, Bosnia and Croatia were bombed and destroyed. 

h. The unrelenting process of "apparitions". Those who for the last 14 
years claim that the "Queen of Peace is appearing" in Medjugorje precisely every 
day (even though on 30 June 1981 it was said that there would be "apparitions for 
only three more days"), who not knowing how to stop the process of 
"apparitions" without stopping those who come there called by some so-called 
apparitions or with other motives, are certainly not doing any favours to the 
honour and truth of the Madonna, the Mother of the Church. Nor are they doing 
any favours to the Church itself, the spiritual Mother of all Catholics who base 
their Catholic faith in God and devotion to Mary not upon some childish stories 
and hallucinations, but upon the authentic Revelation of God and its authentic 
interpretation guaranteed by the Holy Spirit received through the living 
magisterium of the Church. 

i. Tourism. By stating the truth that it is impossible to prove and affirm that 
the Blessed Virgin Mary has ever appeared to anyone in Medjugorje, we do not 
wish to dissuade the efforts of the republic and the media to attract the greatest 
possible number of tourists to our country. Yet, let these necessary and useful 
tourist aims be based upon our praiseworthy Christian traditions and the 
martyrdoms for the faith undergone in the past and present, along with the 
well-known values and beauty of our homeland, which the Almighty has given 
her, and not upon unsubstantiated and groundless supernatural "apparitions", 
"revelations" and "messages". The Croatian civil authorities and media should 
clearly differentiate these facts and keep in mind the official position of the 
Church, if they wish to adhere to the principle of not intervening in the affairs of 
the Church and want to remain objective. 

j. No shrine and no pilgrimages. Neither the diocesan b.OOishop as the head 
of the local diocese of Mostar-Duvno, nor any other competent authority has ever 

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officially declared the parish church of St. James the Apostle in Medjugorje as a 
"Marian shrine" and no "cult" of the Madonna based upon so-called apparitions 
has ever been proclaimed. Due to these discrepancies, the local bishop has 
repeatedly forbidden anyone from preaching or speaking in churches on the 
supernatural nature of these so-called "apparitions and revelations", and he has 
asked that no official pilgrimages be organized be they at the level of parishes, 
dioceses or generally in the name of the Church. These and similar warnings were 
made by our former bishops' conference and the Holy See. Whoever acts to the 
contrary, is directly going against the official statements of the Church, which 
even after 14 years of so-called apparitions and widespread propaganda, still 
remain valid in the Church. 

A healthy devotion to the Mother of God in accord with the teachings of the 
Church, especially with the Papal Exhortation Marialis cultus of 1974, must be 
nurtured and promoted in every person, family, church, parish and diocese of the 
Catholic Church. 


Mostar, May 1995 


Monsignor Ratko Peric Bishop of 
Mostar. 


APPENDIX II 

EXTRACTS FROM VICKA'S DIARY 


These extracts from Vicka's diary, which Father Laurentin claimed did not 
exist, are from the archives of the chancery in Mostar. It will be noted that they 
are not in strict chronological sequence, but this is the case in the original. Vicka's 
educational standard is evidently not of a very high level, and she makes no use of 
quotation marks. It is not always completely clear whether a remark is to be 
attributed to her or to the Madonna. Quotation marks have been inserted into this 
translation at the points where they appear most appropriate. 

Saturday 19 December 1981 

I asked about the Herzegovinian problem, particularly where Father Ivica 
Vego was concerned. The Madonna answered that Bishop Zanic is the one most 
to blame for all this disorder. So far as Father Ivica Vego was concerned, the 
Madonna said that he was not at fault, but nevertheless the bishop has full 


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authority. She told him (Father Vego) to remain in Mostar and not to leave. 

Saturday 3rd January 1982. 

All we seers together asked the Madonna about Father Ivica Vego. The 
Madonna replied: "Ivica is not to blame. If he is expelled from the Franciscan 
Order, let him remain steadfast. Every day I say: 'Peace, peace', but there is ever 
more strife. Let him remain, Ivica is not at fault." She repeated this three times. 
We all heard it, and we told him. "The bishop is not maintaining order and that is 
why he is to blame. He will not be bishop for ever. I will show justice in the 
(heavenly) kingdom ." 25 This lasted for ten minutes, all about Ivica. 

Monday 11 January 1982. 

Twice we asked about the two priests from Mostar, and the Madonna 
repeated twice what she has said before . 26 

Friday 20 January 1982. 

I asked some questions about Father Ivica Vego and Father Ivan Prusina, and 
the Madonna replied to me in the same way. Blessed Mother, the newspapers say 
that Ivica and Ivan have been expelled from the Franciscan Order. She replied: 
"They have not been expelled." She laughed. "Tell them just to be calm and 
steadfast. There are many trials. Let them persevere. Let the papers say what 
they want. They should pay no attention to that. That is not important." O 
Blessed Mother, put an end to all this so that Ivica and Ivan have no more 
problems. The Madonna answered: "I shall calm it down." She also mentioned 


25 


There is only one possible interpretation of the remark that Monsignor Zanic 
would not be bishop forever, and this is that his successor would adopt a different 
policy. This has manifestly not been the case, and Monsignor Peric opposes the 
spurious apparitions as adamantly as Monsignor Zanic did. 


26 


Note carefully that this entry was made on 11 January 1982 and that three days 
later, on 14 January, at a meeting with the bishop in the chancery office Vicka denied 
that she knew Vego. See May 1990, no. 7. 


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some friars from Mostar, saying to leave it for the time being: "There will be an 
opportunity for me to tell them. There are three main ones (friars)." Blessed 
Mother, what about the bishop? Is he going to change his attitude?" The 
Madonna replied: "I am not going to hurry. I am waiting to see whether he will 
submit to these instructions of mine, which I have conveyed through you." But 
this is all very hard on me (Vicka). It is too much for me, let alone for Ivica and 
Ivan. When we were with the Blessed Mother yesterday, we asked her whether 
she would recite one "Our Father" for those two (Ivica and Ivan). She replied at 
once: "By all means." And she began to pray. When we finished, she smiled and 
said to me: "The only thing that is on your mind is those two." I said: "That isn't 
so." 


Monday 26 April 1982. 

"In his heart the bishop is completely lacking in Christian charity towards 
those two. Let Ivica and Ivan not be distressed by the bishop, for he is imposing 
too heavy a burden upon them only in order to be rid of them. He has begun by 
persecuting the youngest among the Franciscans, and then from them slowly 
upwards. This is a sign that this is the last great blow. Let them not be troubled 
about it. Let them freely wipe it from their minds. Let them learn how to suffer 
for the sake of righteousness. What the bishop is doing is not in accordance with 
the will of God. They are innocent and without guilt, yet they suffer so much. 
God would not have allowed this, but the bishop does not act in accordance with 
God's mercy, because he is able to do as he pleases. But one day all will see 
justice the like of which you have not seen for a long time. I shall slowly set work 
to restore peace, and many of the friars will be filled with great joy." 27 

Wednesday 29 September 1982. 

Father Ivica asked, "Shall we leave Mostar or shall we stay?" The Blessed 
Mother replied: "Stay!" Towards the end of August 1982, Vicka said to him: 


27 


Far from peace being restored, the Franciscans of Herzegovina are now in a 
state of open rebellion against legitimate authority in the Church, and, as has been 
documented above, are establishing parishes outside the diocesan structures, hearing 
confessions and solemnizing marriages without faculties (thus rendering these 
sacraments invalid), and bringing in a bishop from outside the diocese to confer illicit 
confirmations. 


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"The Madonna instructed me that Ivan and Ivica were not to go away from 
Mostar." 


Thursday 15 April 1982. 

Ivica Vego and Ivan Prusina. I asked the Madonna in this way to tell me 
everything about the two of you. She first laughed, and then she began to speak. 
"They are not to blame in the least" She repeated this twice. "Let them not worry 
about the subject. Many are against the two of them, who can scarcely wait for 
them to be expelled from the Franciscans, and to leave Mostar. The bishop is at 
fault here, and there are many who support him Every day they urge him to expel 
you so that they do not see you around any more. Don't listen to any of them. Do 
not reproach yourselves in any way. The most important thing is that you should 
not leave Mostar. They are doing you a great injustice. They do not wish to act 
in accordance with God's law, but they are all against Him, and they are 
delivering heavy blows to the faith and to the Church, and sowing ever greater 
disorder." O Blessed Mother, you told me that you would in some way show the 
bishop that they should be left in peace. And so now I beg you to do so as soon as 
possible, for we are in rather a hurry, and I expect that the whole situation will be 
calmed down and made better. One hundred times a day, Ivica and Ivan pass by 
many who do not even glance at them as if they do not exist. O Blessed Mother, 
you know how things are for them, so I beg you to help them as soon as possible, 
and to free them from their troubles so that they will be in the same position as 
other priests. 

The Madonna laughed and said: "Be patient. I shall calm the whole situation 
down and there will not be any more problems. They can say Mass from time to 
time. Let them be discreet about it until the situation has calmed down. They are 
not to blame for anything. If they were at fault in any way I would have said let 
them go and not to be in the way ." 28 Then I said no one but you can calm the 
situation. If you choose to do nothing, then so be it. She replied: "All in good 
time." 

16 April 1982. In the evening. 

I asked some questions on behalf of the two of you, and once again the 
Madonna said: "Many Franciscans are troubled in conscience because of what is 
happening to these two. They will reveal themselves in their true colours little by 
little." And she emphasized: "Pay no attention to them. Do the task that is allotted 


28 The alleged promise of Our Lady has certainly not been fulfilled. 


214 



to you." That is all that I have written about Ivica and Ivan. The rest I made 
known to them, by notes that I sent them. I did not have time to write down 
everything in full detail. 


215