Pope Benedict XVI's former butler Paolo Gabriele, sentenced on
Saturday to 18 months in jail for leaking secret memos, said he was a
loyal servant disgusted by "evil and corruption" in the Vatican.
A
married father-of-three who lives inside the Vatican as one of the tiny
state's 594 citizens, Gabriele was born in Rome and started out as a
cleaner in the Secretariat of State -- the main administration of the
Catholic Church.
Gabriele then worked as part of the domestic
staff of late pope John Paul II before being promoted in 2006 to the
prestigious post of butler to the pope -- a position that gave him
unique access for a layman to the pontiff himself.
But he was
suspected of using his position to steal secret Vatican papers and was
put on trial last weekend. During his final plea on Saturday, he said he
acted "out of love for the Church of Christ and of its leader on
Earth".
At an earlier hearing, he had told the court that he was
innocent of the charge but acted because he felt the pontiff was being
"manipulated".
"Concerning the accusation of aggravated theft, I
declare myself innocent," he said, though he admitted: "I feel guilty
for having betrayed the trust that the Holy Father gave me, whom I love
like a son" loves his father.
Along with four women from the
Memores Domini religious movement who help the 85-year-old pope in his
daily life and run the papal household, Gabriele was one of the few lay
members of what has been called the "pontifical family".
Gabriele
accompanied the pope on his many foreign trips and can be seen in the
corners of official photographs, adjusting the pope's cloak, holding his
umbrella or escorting him on the "popemobile" through crowds of
faithful.
The 46-year-old, nicknamed "Paoletto", served meals for
the pope and helped the 85-year-old don his robes every day. His wife
and children were well known and liked in the tiny community that
inhabits the world's smallest state.
His co-defendant Claudio
Sciarpelletti told investigators in one interrogation that he knew about
what he called Gabriele's "painful" childhood although no further
details were provided in court documents.
"He was very pious. He
went to the mass celebrated by the Holy Father every day and prayed a
lot," said one of the four Memores Domini housekeepers.
But
reports in the Italian press said Gabriele had a reputation for being a
bit too talkative, considering the discretion demanded of the post he
held.
Investigators asked two psychologists to analyse Gabriele
while he was being held in detention and concluded that he was "an
impressionable subject able to commit a variety of actions that can
damage himself and/or others".
Gabriele insists that he leaked the documents for the pope's benefit.
"What
really shocked me was when I sat down for lunch with the Holy Father
and sometimes the pope asked about things that he should have been
informed on," he told the court when he was given a chance to defend
himself.
"It was then that I became firmly convinced of how easy it was to manipulate a person with such enormous powers," he said.
His
lawyer, Cristiana Arru, called on the judge in her summing up speech to
be lenient on a man who was driven by "a moral motivation" and who had
by no means cooked up a "scheme or plot" aimed at damaging the Church or
the pope.
His devotion to the pope and the written apology
begging for his forgiveness moved the Vatican's presiding judge to cut
his sentence from three years to 18 months -- and the pontiff may still
decide to pardon his former butler.
The only recorded interview
that Gabriele has given was with Gianluigi Nuzzi, the investigative
journalist who published the confidential Vatican documents that
Gabriele leaked to him in the book "Your Holiness".
The butler
expressed frustration with a culture of secrecy in the Vatican -- from
the mysterious disappearance of the daughter of a Vatican employee in
1983 to a quickly hushed-up double murder and suicide by a Swiss guard
in 1998.
"There is a kind of omerta against the truth, not so much
because of a power struggle but because of fear, because of caution,"
Gabriele said in the interview, using the term for the code of silence
of the Sicilian Mafia.
He told Nuzzi he was acting with "around 20
other people" in the Vatican, though he later denied others had been
actively involved in helping him.
Gabriele comes across in the
interview as a deeply religious man who says he was inspired by the Holy
Spirit to reveal intrigues behind the Vatican walls so as to help the
pope clear out corruption from the heart of the Catholic Church.
He
said he was aware of the consequences of his actions but said the
potential to change something in the Vatican was worth the risk.
"Being a witness to truth means being ready to pay the price," he said.