Bishop Richard Williamson, who last month denied the existence of the Holocaust in an interview with Swedish television, was ordered Thursday to leave Argentina within 10 days, the Ministry of Interior said.
“The bishop has repeatedly forged the true motive for his stay in the country, having declared that he is an employee of ‘La Tradicion’ Civil Society when, in reality, his true activity was as priest and seminary director of the Society of Saint Pius X in the neighborhood of Moreno,” Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo said in a written statement.
“Williamson has had public notoriety following his anti-Semitic statements to Swedish media in which he questioned whether Jewish people were victims of the Holocaust,” Randazzo continued.
“For these reasons, along with the strong condemnation from the Argentine government of how statements like these harm Argentine society, the Jewish community, and all of humanity by trying to deny a historic truth, the national government has decided to demand that the Bishop leave the country or be expelled.”
In the interview with Swedish television, Williamson said, “I believe that the historical evidence is strongly against — is hugely against — 6 million Jews having been deliberately gassed in gas chambers as a deliberate policy of Adolf Hitler.
“I believe there were no gas chambers,” he stated.
Williamson’s views about the Holocaust created an uproar last month when Pope Benedict XVI lifted his excommunication and that of three other bishops consecrated by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre as part of a process meant to heal a rift with ultraconservatives.
The pope said he did not know of Williamson’s views on the Holocaust when he lifted the excommunication.
The Vatican said Williamson will not be allowed to perform priestly functions until he recants his Holocaust denial.
(Source: Associated Press / CNN)
4 Responses
An interesting, but highly commendable, move for a country which offered a safe haven for Nazis ym”s escaping Europe after the Holocaust
People do make mistakes. It looks like for now we should just look at it as commendable.
Why is the church playing games? Either they accept him or they should have him resign. His quote in the article is no different than what neo-nazi (ys) thugs spread at their hate rallies and in their leaflets, except Williamson says it sans a white tank top, red suspenders, and black, Doc Martin boots.
Resign from what? He has no position in the church. He’s a bishop because he was consecrated by an archbishop – there’s nothing the church can do about that. But he has no license to practise as a clergyman.