Sunday, November 6, 2011

Story San Juan Sun...



Monsignor Antonio Arregui Yarza, who is in charge of the investigation against Catholic Monsignor Roberto González Nieves, is not only a member of the Opus Dei but has been described as a conservative person who frowns upon priests who support popular causes.

Arregui Yarza was allegedly sent by the Vatican to Puerto Rico to investigate a complaint that González intervenes in political causes.

According to his official biography, Monsignor Antonio Arreguí has a doctorate degree in cannon law from the Pontificio Ateneo Angelicum of Rome and a law degree from the University of Navarra. He was a professor at the Catholic University in Ecuador and coordinator of Pope John Paul II to that country in 1985.

He was born in San Sebastián, Spain where he joined the Opus Dei in 1957 and became a priest in 1964. In Quito, he has directed the National Catholic Radio and the area of social communications. In 2009, the group Human Life International gave Monsignor Arregui Yarza the “Cardinal Von Galen Award,” for his defense of human rights and the defense of life, according to another statement from Ecuador.

The statement read that the Monsignor Arrequí Yarza is a staunch defender of the causes of the poor and of the unborn children.

During the process to select the president of Ecuador’s Episcopalian Conference, for which he was elected, the daliy Ecuador newspaper, Expreso, put forward a theory as to who will be selected president, noting that the person will be a conservative.

“Looking at what has happened since 1939, when the first Episcopalian meeting took place, the person who will be designated will probably be a Bishop of a conservative ideology, who identifies with the groups in power, avoid progressive people identified as communists for promoting the church of the poor,” the newspaper read.

Early today, Eduardo Ibarra, a physician and former head of the Medical Association, wrote to the Vatican, praising González’s job in Puerto Rico and noting that in a highly politicized country like Puerto Rico, people get upset with those that promote cultural values.

González Nieves, in the past, supported efforts to get the U.S. Navy out of Vieques and objected efforts to have the Legislature legalize domestic partnerships in the proposed Civil Code.


eaction=activity1&topicID=4&storyID=178http://www.cdlponline.org/index.cfm

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