Pope Francis opens the Holy Door of St Peter’s Basilica to mark the start of the Catholic Jubilee Year on Christmas Eve 2024.Credit:AP
The cinematic release ofConclave,a Hollywood film adapted from the novel by British author Robert Harris,has once again thrown the spotlight on one of the most arcane,storied and secretive events in human history:the election of a new pope.
Scholars agree the film is fun but rather outrageous. Secret messages,a sex scandal,a crisis of faith and emergent questions about what exactly happened with the previous pope in his final hours keep causing the balance of power to shift among the various hopefuls. But Vatican experts say none of it rings true to the secretive process,and suggest that those who seek a serious dramatic inquiry into the inner workings should look elsewhere.
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Late last year,Francis surprised many when he named 21 new cardinals in a power play that ensures the now 140-member College of Cardinals – whose main job is to elect the next pope – is 80 per cent made up of those of his choosing. Just what it will mean for his successor is unclear.
While various names have been thrown around as candidates,such as Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet,Dutch Cardinal Wim Eijk or Hungary’s Cardinal Peter Erdo on the conservative side – alongside compromise figures such as Maltese Cardinal Mario Grech or Italian Cardinal Matteo Zuppi,a peace envoy to Ukraine and Gaza – Francis was said to have favoured the Philippines’ Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle or Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin.
Touted as the “Asian Francis”,Tagle would be hailed by more progressive Catholics,given the changing demographic of the church. However,in November,Parolin,the Vatican’s secretary of state,or highest-ranking diplomat,became the favourite with bookmakers.