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Vatican touts new memoir by Benedict XVI’s second secretary

Vatican City
AP

Retired Pope Benedict XVI’s second secretary came out with a new memoir Thursday, a light, photo-filled daily journal that sharply contrasts with the bombshell tell-all book published last month by the late German pope’s main assistant.

My Days With Benedict XVI by Archbishop Alfred Xuereb is the latest book to hit Italian bookshelves following Benedict’s 31st December death. It was launched Thursday at a semi-official Vatican event alongside another book by a longtime Vatican reporter The Resignation: I Didn’t Flee.

Monsignor Alfred Xuereb adjusts Pope Francis' cape as he leaves St Peter's square at the Vatican after his weekly general audience June 12, 2013. Retired Pope Benedict XVI’s other secretary Archbishop Alfred Xuereb, came out with a new memoir Thursday Feb 9, 2023

Monsignor Alfred Xuereb adjusts Pope Francis’ cape as he leaves St. Peter’s square at the Vatican after his weekly general audience on 12th June, 2013. Retired Pope Benedict XVI’s other secretary Archbishop Alfred Xuereb, came out with a new memoir on Thursday 9th February, 2023, a photo-filled daily journal that serves as a sharp contrast to the bombshell tell-all book published last month by the late German Pope’s main assistant. PICTURE: AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino/File photo.

The two new publications served to blunt, in some ways, the negative criticism of Francis that erupted in the weeks after the death of the first “Emeritus Pope” by refocusing attention on Benedict himself.

Pope Francis recently acknowledged that Benedict’s death had been “instrumentalized” by conservatives to accentuate the idea of competing papal camps, a reference to the books, interviews and memos published by Benedict’s longtime secretary, Archbishop Georg Gaenswein, and some conservative cardinals that were highly critical of the reigning pontiff.

Xuereb was the “second secretary” to Benedict during his 2005-2013 pontificate, and remained on as secretary to Francis for the first months of his papcy. Francis then placed Xuereb in his new Economy Ministry before making him ambassador to Korea and Mongolia, where Francis is expected to visit later this year in the first-ever papal visit.

All of which suggests Xuereb remained on excellent terms with both Benedict and Francis, as his memoir My Days with Benedict XVI makes clear. The book reads as a daily journal, retracing Benedict’s travels, audiences, intimate lunches and jokes, as well as the tear-filled moments surrounding his historic resignation. But it ends when Xuereb bids Benedict farewell a few weeks into his retirement, and makes few comments about the current pontificate.



The same cannot be said for Nothing but the Truth: My Life Beside Pope Benedict XVI, by Gaenswein, which also chronicled Benedict’s papacy but dedicated several chapters to his 10-year retirement and Gaenswein’s not-so-easy relations with Francis.

The Xuereb book launch Thursday suggested that his is the Benedict memoir the Vatican wants to promote: Held in the press conference room of Vatican Media, the launch was attended by the hierarchy of the Vatican communications office and was covered by Vatican Media. The book features a prologue by a former Vatican spokesman, Rev Federico Lombardi.

Xuereb, who attended via video conference from Seoul, was asked about Francis’ recent comments that Benedict’s death head been “instrumentalized” by critics of the current pontificate.

“I agree, unfortunately,” Xuereb said, without elaborating.

In one indiscretion, he confirmed that indeed Benedict had suffered from sleep problems though he said he had never heard him complain of insomnia. Recently, Benedict’s biographer said that chronic, years-long insomnia was the primary reason behind the 2013 resignation.

“We never heard him talk about that with us, but we knew he had problems sleeping,” Xuereb said. He recalled the 2012 papal visit to Mexico, when Benedict fell during the night and hit his head. The episode was later cited as one of the reasons why Benedict resigned, believing that global travel was a pre-requisite for any pope and that he no longer was up to the task.

“I remember that night in Mexico, he couldn’t sleep at all,” Xuereb said.

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