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Searching For the Illuminati Deep Within The Bowels Of The Vatican
All roads lead to Piazza San Pietro when it comes to power, leadership and
initiation into the devious and diabolical Illuminati. In the 1980's, the
Vatican Bank Scandal brought to light the connections between the
Freemasons/Illuminati, the Vatican and the mafia. Secret initiatons are said
to take place in the catacombs of the Vatican and was Pope John Paul I
killed after 39 days in office for wanting to expose the truth about Vatican
finances and the Illuminati?
16 Jan 2006
By Greg Szymanski
Part I
While Mass is being said in the Sistein Chapel and tourists are being shown
the works of Michelangelo, deep within the bowels of the Vatican sits a
large, circular room with 13 separate chambers, each leading to a distinct
catacomb.
When a mummified body is placed in front of each doorway, a young child is
then brutally sacrificed with a long, golden knife during what is said to be
a secret induction ceremony for new members of the Illuminati, better known
as the New World Order.
As a young freelance reporter in Rome during the early 1980s, I heard many
rumors of these secret ceremonies from local shop owners, several drunken
priests and a couple of local clairvoyants or fortune-telling card readers,
one who apparently advised and guided the film career of the famous Italian
film director, Federico Fellini.
Although a product of a Catholic education and graduate of Notre Dame High
School before going on to college, I still couldn't help but wonder if the
stories about the brutal child sacrifices were actually true.
While on a story assignment or covering the weekly Papal address, I remember
sneaking around the Vatican, on one occasion taking a flight of stairs down
to the basement level in search of the secret room and the catacombs.
Of course, I never found the secret room or a hidden doorway leading to the
tombs, my secret Indiana Jones hunt for the Satan's Den interrupted by a
Vatican security guard who escorted me to the top of the stairs after
showing my press card and saying I was lost.
"One night alone in this place and I know I could break the biggest story in
my lifetime," I thought to myself, as I walked through St. Peter's Square
and looked up at the sculptures of the 12 Apostles staring down at me from
the Vatican roof.
Rome is like a huge small town with many neighborhoods, functioning like
dozens of little villages within the city proper, each having its own
distinct feel and flavor.
That particular day after trying to uncover the exact location of the
Illuminati's secret induction ceremonies, I stopped for cheese and a glass
of white wine on the first narrow, cobblestone street next the Vatican,
known in English as the "Street of the Whores."
According to the locals, the street received this rather unusual name since
for hundreds of years it housed many of the whores whose primary clientele
were the Vatican cardinals, bishops and priests, as well as any visiting
members of the clergy.
After World War II, the prostitution on the street eventually moved to a
more secretive location, making way now for stores engaged in the lucrative
business of selling religious paraphernalia like rosaries, pictures of the
Pope's and holy water.
As I sat having a glass of wine and going through the Italian papers, the
main headline read how Cardinal Paul Marcinkus, head of the Vatican Bank
from 1971 to 1989, was indicted by Italian authorities (in 1982) as an
accessory in the $3.5 billion collapse of Banco Ambrosiano, an Italian
financial institution with close ties to the Vatican Bank.
Although I tried many times without success to interview Marcinkus, since he
was from my hometown of Chicago, the case never came to trial in Italy, as
courts corruptly ruled that as a "Vatican employee he was immune from
prosecution." The Vatican Bank also refused to admit legal responsibility
for the Bank of Ambrosiano's downfall but did acknowledge "moral
involvement", paying $241m (?169m) to creditors.
Little did I know that this story, the 1978 death of Pope John Paul I, the
murder of the bank's president, Robert Calvi, found dangling under the
Blackfriars Bridge in London, a little known mafia figure named Mario Cuomo
(not the former mayor of New York) and a mysterious woman named Maria would
all help in putting the pieces together of a larger more sinister puzzle.
Although still incomplete, the small pieces of the puzzle I uncovered in the
1980s all lead to direct involvement of members of the
Illuminati/Freemasons, through groups like "P Due", the Prieure du Sion and
others, as well as the deep involvement of the Vatican, the hub and
centerpiece of this secret worldwide organization known to the public as the
Illuminati but known by members as "The Family or The Order."
After writing several stories about the Vatican Bank Scandal and traveling
to London on the Calvi story, finding very little new evidence, I didn't
give much thought to the Illuminati and child sacrificing until about a year
later when I was sitting on Via Venato, having coffee for a brief hour or
two with the rich and famous. As a quick aside, no one ever really believes
me anyway when I mention I once sat on Sophia Loren's lap, so I will leave
that story for happier times.
Mysterious Maria
As I mentioned, I put the gruesome picture of a child sacrificing out of my
mind until a strikingly beautiful, black-haired Italian woman in her late
20s, named Maria, asked if she could join me at my Via Veneto outdoor table.
Rome is a small town, like I mentioned, later learning Maria desperately
wanted an outlet to tell her incredible story, finding out through street
talk that I was an American journalist researching stories about secret
societies and the Vatican's involvement.
Maria prefaced her story by saying she cold never reveal her full name,
saying it meant an immediate death sentence for both of us if her identity
hit newsstands, linking her to what she called "The Chosen Ones" or the
Illuminati.
I, on the other hand, remember feeling like I might be dealing with a quack
or a mental patient, especially after she graphically explained how
involvement with the Illuminati caused her to attempt suicide on three
separate occasions, twice by poisoning and once by slitting her wrists, but
each attempt played out in a bathtub surrounded by candles and bouquets of
colored roses.
I spoke to Maria on three occasions taking copious notes for total of about
five hours at the same outside cafe during a three-week time span before
learning through a mutual acquaintance about a month after our last meeting,
she finally succeeded in committing suicide.
This time, however, she didn't sit in her bathtub with flowers, deciding
instead to make a public display, jumping from the roof of the Vatican in
the early morning hours after hurling her body to the concrete of St.
Peter's Square (Piazza San Pietro) after standing beside the statue of St.
Peter.
Although I tried in vane to get her real identity, stories of the strange
suicide were verified but, at the same time, covered up as her identity
mysteriously disappeared from the face of the earth as did any possibility
of selling my story.
More than twenty years have passed but I can still hear her words and see
Maria's distraught face, sitting across from me at the Via Veneto cafe like
it was yesterday. To the best of my recollection, these are the most
important parts of her story of being recruited from birth by the
Illuminati, a story that essentially died when Maria hurled herself off the
Vatican roof.
"I can never tell you my name and only come to you as a last resort," were
Maria's first words, as she appeared agitated and uncertain she was doing
the right thing. In Italian she then said something like "May I rot in hell
if I violated her trust" and I remember feeling as if someone just pointed a
gun at my head.
Coming from an aristocratic northern Italian background, she continued as I
was able to understand most of what she said, save the complex and educated
Italian verb and tense forms as I essentially learned to speak the language
in the streets of Rome with the common-folk.
In our first meeting, she delved heavily into her involvement with the
"Family" or the "Chosen Ones," saying her aristocratic background left her
no choice in the matter. She said she was born into the ranks of the
Illuminati, taught as a child she was one of the "divine chosen ones" to
rule over the masses and initiated into the "Order" at a secret Vatican
underground ceremony in a room very similar to the type I previously heard
about on the street.
And when I finally got up enough courage to ask her about the child
sacrifices, she couldn't talk about it, only burying her head in her hands
as tears rolled out from between her fingers.
The remainder of our discussions centered on the Illuminati origins, its
leadership centered in the Vatican, its worldwide reach, its operations in
Europe, its branches in America and its eventual goals of population control
and world dominance. I remember how AIDS was not mentioned overseas and how
she confused me with saying the Illuminati or the "Chosen Fathers" had
purposely inflicted the disease on the masses.
Besides being convinced she was telling the truth, Maria also said the
Illuminati, referring to them in Italian swear words as "pig gods", had been
entrenched for years in America, with many of its leaders among the loyal
followers of the "Order."
Our last conversation became quite personal, straying away from the names of
powerful church and political figures, instead centering on how the
Illuminati personally devastated Maria's life. To this day, as she said her
final words, I wish I would have said or done something more to save her
life, but I had no inkling whatsoever it would come to a shocking end at the
Vatican in less than a month.
"They killed Pope John Paul I and he didn't die of natural causes. I cannot
live like this any longer but there is now way out. I am a trapped soul,
destined to burn in the depths of hell for all the wrongs I have witnessed
and have done nothing in my life to stop," said Maria, as she stood up from
table and began walking away.
As she left, I still remember her final words: "I have had all the riches in
the world, but I feel so empty and alone. Dio have mercy on me."
After Maria died, I began searching harder and harder to connect the dots of
the Vatican's involvement in the Illuminati, as well as the bank scandal,
the Pope's 1978 mysterious death and other stories related to Marcinkus,
Calvi, financier Licio Gelli known as the head of the P-2 lodge.
Although I could never pinpoint or verify the secret Vatican ceremonies,
enough information surfaced to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
Vatican functioned as the nerve center of the Illuminati, as the appointment
of John Paul II revealed he never followed through on his predecessors final
orders to investigate the operations of the Vatican Bank, Marcinkus and ties
to the mafia and the Illuminati.
Instead, John Paul II protected Marcinkus, quashed any investigations to be
carried out by John Paul I's secretary of state Cardinal Jean Villot and
buried all the people on Villot's list to be relieved of Church duties or
transferred, all the people on thelist suspected of being members of the
Freemason's P-2 group and the Illuminati.
Gangster Mario Cuomo
Although I didn't know it at the time, a Naples "Camorra" mafia figure,
named Mario Cuomo, who lived in near me in a small town outside of Rome and
who eventually was killed in a gangland shooting, was instrumental in saving
my life on several occasions.
Cuomo, who drove a Mazzerati, lived in a huge villa, dressed to the 9's and
who I knew as a land investor, made it a habit every time he saw me to
practice his English, buy me coffee or dinner while, at the same time,
telling me "when I was playing with fire" regarding the Calvi murder and its
ties to the mafia and the Vatican.
His sound advice perhaps frightened me away from some doors I never walked
through, but looking back, they were probably dangerous doors better left
closed as I probably would have never walked out of them or seen the light
of day ever again.
Editor's Note: Read Part II of Greg's series on the Illuminati, coming this
week, as he talks with a U.S. former member who provides shocking details
that is bound to scare the socks right off your feet.
Story Updates, Notes and Important Timeline:
Cardinal Marcinkus
He is still alive, saying Mass and living in Phoenix, Arizona. Marcinkus
carries a Vatican passport and still is the recipient of diplomatic
immunity.
Among those linked to the Calvi murder and who Italian authorities are still
seeking to question, Marcinkus was originally ordained in Chicago. Being a
mover and shaker in the Church, he was quickly elevated to the Holy See in
Rome, and served in the Vatican Secretariat of State.
He rapidly moved up the Vatican chain of command from personal papal
bodyguard to head of the Vatican Bank, a position he held from 1971 to 1989.
There he worked closely with international financier, Michael Sindona, to
expand the Vatican's portfolio of international holdings, transforming the
Institute for Religious Works into a quiet but reliable shelter for
questionable and what many have said was "dirty money."
The Vatican Bank, through Sindona, was suspected of laundering money from
associates in organized crime, funneled huge sums of money through Banco
Ambrosiano and the Vatican.
The Vatican Bank also has worked closely with the U.S. government as a cover
money conduit to groups like the Solidarity Trade Union in Poland and other
sordid CIA affairs. With the help of Marcinkus, Sindona was to become a
"inside man of confidence" within the Vatican who enjoyed unique access to
officials of the Holy See, even the pope.
A 1982 story in the foreign edition of Time magazine had this to say about
the relation between Sindona, Calvi and Marcinkus:
"In 1971, Sindona introduced Calvi to Marcinkus. Sindona and Calvi hoped to
use Marcinkus for their own purposes, and the bankers and the churchman
obviously found it advantageous to do business together. Although the
Vatican bank denies it had much to do with either Sindona or Calvi, the le
Opere di Religione (I.O.R. or Vatican Bank) eventually became Banco
Ambrosiano's fourth-largest stockholder, acquiring over the years at least
794,390 shares, or 1.589% of the bank's stock.
"A few months after Sindona and Calvi set up the Bahamian bank in 1971, a
"Mr. Paul Marcinkus" was listed as a director. "We used his name a lot in
business deals," Sindona said. "I told him clearly that I put him in because
it helps me get money."
The Calvi Murder Trial
In April, 2005, a Sicilian mobster, a Roman crime boss and two others were
indicted in connection with the 1982 hanging of Roberto Calvi, a financier
dubbed "God's banker" for his close ties to the Vatican.
A Reuters story added:
"Calvi, once thought to have committed suicide, was found hanging from
scaffolding under London's Blackfriars Bridge in June 1982 with bricks in
his pockets and $15,000 (8,000 pounds) on his person.
"But in the latest twist to the saga, prosecutors now say the Mafia killed
Calvi for stealing from them and from Italian financier Licio Gelli. Gelli
was the head of the P2 lodge -- a shadowy Masonic organization whose members
once included prominent politicians, businessmen and military officers.
"The judge said the trial will start on Oct 6 and will involve the convicted
Cosa Nostra treasurer Pippo Calo, Roman crime boss Ernesto Diotallevi,
Sardinian financier Flavio Carboni and his ex-girlfriend Manuela Kleinszig.
"The prosecutors' inquiry has focused on millions of dollars that flowed
through the bank's offshore accounts in the weeks preceding Calvi's death.
"Shortly before Calvi's hanging, the bank he headed at the time, Banco
Ambrosiano, had gone bankrupt. It was then Italy's largest private banking
group and worked with the Vatican."
Without question, one of the strangest characters in the Calvi saga, with
ties to Marcinkus and Sindona, was Liccio Gelli. A former member of the
fascist Black Shirts Battalion and connected to the Mussolini regime and the
Herman Goring SS Division in World War II, Gelli survived the conflict and
amassed tremendous amounts of money and influence.
Considered the head of the P-2 Masonic Lodge, he was also privy to sensitive
information on hundreds of key political, military and financial figures not
only in Italy but throughout Europe, Latin America and elsewhere due to his
access of files from the Italian secret service (OVRA) and possibly British
Intelligence.
It was common knowledge in Italy that Gelli helped to smuggle Klaus Barbie,
the infamous "Butcher of Lyon" to safe haven in Argentina, and even managed
to work for and sell his services to the CIA and NATO.
Important Timeline (Reprinted from The Financial Post, Victor Golancz Ltd.
1983.)
Early September 1978: Pope John Paul I asks his secretary of state, Cardinal
Jean Villot, to initiate an investigation into Vatican bank operations.
September 28, 1978: John Paul I presents Cardinal Villot with a list of
people who are to be transferred, asked for their resignations, or
reassigned. All the people on the list are suspected to be members of the
Freemason's group "P2." The reshuffle of power will have major implications
for the existing Vatican power structure and its financial dealings.
September 29, 1978: John Paul I found dead in his bed. Villot issues false
statements to the press about the circumstances surrounding the death,
removes key evidence from John Paul's room, and orders the body to be
embalmed immediately without an autopsy.
October 1978: John Paul II to replace John Paul I. None of John Paul I's
instructions to Villot before his death are carried out.
January 21, 1979: Murder of Judge Emilio Alessandrini, the Milan magistrate
investigating the activities of Banco Ambrosiano, whose director, Roberto
Calvi, has close ties with Michele Sindona and the Vatican.
March 20, 1979: Murder of Mino Pecorelli, an investigative journalist in the
process of publishing articles exposing the membership and dealings of "P2"
-- a powerful group of Freemasons whose membership was involved in Vatican
financial dealings, and whose founder, Lucio Gelli, was deeply connected
with Roberto Calvi.
March 25, 1979: Arrests on false charges of Mario Sarcinelli and Paolo Baffi
of the Bank of Italy. The two men were pressing for action on the
investigation of the financial dealings of Roberto Calvi and Banco
Ambrosiano.
July 11, 1979: Murder of Giorgio Ambrosioli following his testimony
concerning Michele Sindona's financial dealings with Calvi and other Vatican
interests, the activities of P2 and its members among powerful government
and business circles, and the connections between Calvi, Sindona, and Bishop
Paul Marcinkus of the Vatican Bank.
July 13, 1979: Murder of Lt. Col. Antonio Varisco, head of the Rome security
service, who was investigating the activities and membership of P2 and had
spoken with Giorgio Ambrosioli two days before Ambrosioli's death.
July 21, 1979: Murder of Boris Guilano, the Palermo police deputy
superintendent and head of Palermo CID. Guilano had spoken with Giorgio
Ambrosioli two days before Ambrosioli's death concerning Sindona's
laundering of Mafia money through the Vatican Bank into Switzerland.
October 1979: Bomb explosion at the apartment of Enrico Cuccia, managing
director of Mediobanca and witness to Sindona's threat to the life of
Giorgio Ambrosioli.
February 2, 1980: The Vatican withdraws at the last moment its agreement
that Cardinals Guiseppe Caprio and Sergio Guerri and Bishop Paul Marcinkus
will provide videotaped depositions on behalf of Michele Sindona in his
trial in the US on charges of fraud, conspiracy and misappropriation of
funds in connection with the collapse of Franklin National Bank.
May 13, 1980: Michele Sindona attempts suicide in jail.
June 13, 1980: Michele Sindona sentenced to 25 years.
July 8, 1980: Roberto Calvi attempts suicide while in jail on charges of
fraud, etc. Later released on bail and reconfirmed as chairman of Banco
Ambrosiano.
September 1, 1981: The Vatican Bank, apparently at the request of Roberto
Calvi, issues "letters of comfort" acknowledging its controlling interest
in, and assuming responsibility for, a more than 1 billion dollar debt of a
number of banks controlled by Calvi.
January 12, 1981: A group of shareholders in Banco Ambrosiano send a
letter to John Paul II outlining the connections between the Vatican Bank,
Roberto Calvi and the P2 and the Mafia. The letter is never acknowledged.
April 27, 1982: Attempted murder of Roberto Rosone, general manager and
deputy chairman of Banco Ambrosiano, who was trying to "clean up" the bank's
operation.
June 17, 1982: Roberto Calvi found hanged to death from a bridge in London.
A few days later, a 1.3 billion dollar "hole" is discovered in Banco
Ambrosiano, Milan.
October 2, 1982: Guiseppe Dellacha, executive at Banco Ambrosiano, dead of a
fall from a window of Banco Ambrosiano, in Milan.
March 23, 1986: Michele Sindona found dead of poisoning in the Italian jail
to which he had been extradited on charges of ordering the murder of Giorgio
Ambrosioli. Albino Luciano, Pope John Paul I
List of Masons in the Italian Church and Vatican
The following is a Mason list reprinted from the Bulletin de l'Occident
Chretien Nr.12, July, 1976, (Directeur Pierre Fautrad a Fye - 72490 Bourg Le
Roi.)
If still alive, it should be noted with interest that all of the men on this
list, are subject to excommunication by Canon Law 2338. Each man's name is
followed by his position, if known; the date he was initiated into Masonry,
his code #; and his code name, if known:
Albondi, Alberto. Bishop of Livorno, (Leghorn). Initiated 8-5-58; I.D. #
7-2431.
Abrech, Pio. In the Sacred Congregation Bishops. 11-27-67; # 63-143.
Acquaviva, Sabino. Professor of Religion at the University of Padova,
(Padua). 12-3-69;# 275-69.
Alessandro, Father Gottardi. (Addressed as Doctor in Masonic meetings.)
President of Fratelli Maristi. 6-14-59.
Angelini Fiorenzo. Bishop of Messenel Greece. 10-14-57; # 14-005.
Argentieri, Benedetto. Patriarch to the Holy See. 3-11-70; # 298-A.
Bea, Augustin. Cardinal. Secretary of State (next to Pope) under Pope John
XXIII and Pope Paul VI.
Baggio, Sebastiano. Cardinal. Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of
Bishops. (This is a crucial Congregation since it appoints new Bishops.)
Secretary of State under Pope John Paul II from 1989 to 1992. 8-14-57; #
85-1640. Masonic code name "SEBA." He controls consecration of Bishops.
Balboni, Dante. Assistant to the Vatican Pontifical . Commission for
Biblical Studies. 7-23-68; # 79-14 "BALDA."
Baldassarri Salvatore. Bishop of Ravenna, Italy. 2-19-58; # 4315-19.
"BALSA."
Balducci, Ernesto. Religious sculpture artist. 5-16-66; # 1452-3.
Basadonna, Ernesto. Prelate of Milan, 9-14-63; # 9-243. "BASE."
Batelli, Guilio. Lay member of many scientific academies. 8-24-59; # 29-A.
"GIBA."
Bedeschi, Lorenzo. 2-19-59; # 24-041. "BELO."
Belloli, Luigi. Rector of Seminar; Lombardy, Ita- ly. 4-6-58; # 22-04.
"BELLU."
Belluchi, Cleto. Coadjutor Bishop of Fermo, Italy. 6-4-68; # 12-217.
Bettazzi, Luigi. Bishop of Ivera, Italy. 5-11-66; # 1347-45. "LUBE."
Bianchi, Ciovanni. 10-23-69; # 2215-11. "BIGI."
Biffi, Franco, Msgr. Rector of Church of St. John Lateran Pontifical
University. He is head of this University and controls what is being taught.
He heard confessions of Pope Paul VI. 8-15-59. "BIFRA."
Bicarella, Mario. Prelate of Vicenza, Italy. 9-23-64; # 21-014. "BIMA."
Bonicelli, Gaetano. Bishop of Albano, Italy. 5-12-59; # 63-1428, "BOGA."
Boretti, Giancarlo. 3-21-65; # 0-241. "BORGI."
Bovone, Alberto. Substitute Secretary of the Sacred Office. 3-30-67; #
254-3. "ALBO."
Brini, Mario. Archbishop. Secretary of Chinese, Oriental, and Pagans. Member
of Pontifical Commission to Russia. Has control of rewriting Canon Law.
7-7-68; # 15670. "MABRI."
Bugnini, Annibale. Archbishop.Wrote Novus Ordo Mass. Envoy to Iran, 4-23-63;
# 1365-75. "BUAN."
Buro, Michele. Bishop. Prelate of Pontifical Commission to Latin America,
3-21-69; # 140-2. "BUMI."
Cacciavillan, Agostino. Secretariat of State. 11-6-60; # 13-154.
Cameli, Umberto. Director in Office of the Ecclesiastical Affairs of Italy
in regard to education in Catholic doctrine. 11-17-60; # 9-1436.
Caprile, Giovanni. Director of Catholic Civil Affairs. 9-5-57; # 21-014.
"GICA."
Caputo, Giuseppe. 11-15-71; # 6125-63. "GICAP."
Casaroli, Agostino. Cardinal. Secretary of State (next to Pope) under Pope
John Paul II since July 1, 1979 until retired in 1989. 9-28-57; # 41-076.
"CASA."
Cerruti, Flaminio. Chief of the Office of the University of Congregation
Studies. 4-2-60; # 76-2154. "CEFLA."
Ciarrocchi, Mario. Bishop. 8-23-62; # 123-A. "CIMA."
Chiavacci, Enrico. Professor of Moral Theology, University of Florence,
Italy. 7-2-70; # 121-34. "CHIE."
Conte, Carmelo. 9-16-67; # 43-096. "CONCA."
Csele, Alessandro. 3-25-60; # 1354-09. "ALCSE."
Dadagio, Luigi. Papal Nuncio to Spain. Archbishop of Lero. 9-8-67. # 43-B.
"LUDA."
D'Antonio, Enzio. Archbishop of Trivento. 6-21-69; # 214-53.
De Bous, Donate. Bishop. 6-24-68; # 321-02. "DEBO."
Del Gallo Reoccagiovane, Luigi. Bishop.
Del Monte, Aldo. Bishop of Novara, Italy. 8-25-69; # 32-012. "ADELMO."
Faltin, Danielle. 6-4-70; # 9-1207. "FADA."
Ferraioli, Giuseppe. Member of Sacred Congregation for Public Affairs.
11-24-69; # 004-125. "GIFE."
Franzoni, Giovanni. 3-2-65; # 2246-47. "FRAGI."
Gemmiti, Vito. Sacred Congregation of Bishops. 3-25-68; # 54-13. "VIGE."
Girardi, Giulio. 9-8-70; # 1471-52. "GIG."
Fiorenzo, Angelinin. Bishop. Title of Commendator of the Holy Spirit. Vicar
General of Roman Hospitals. Controls hospital trust funds. Consecrated
Bishop 7-19-56; joined Masons 10-14-57.
Giustetti, Massimo. 4-12-70; # 13-065. "GIUMA."
Gottardi, Alessandro. Procurator and Postulator General of Fratelli
Maristi. Archbishop of Trent. 6-13-59; # 2437-14. "ALGO."
Gozzini, Mario. 5-14-70; # 31-11. "MAGO."
Grazinai, Carlo. Rector of the Vatican Minor Seminary. 7-23-61; # 156-3.
"GRACA."
Gregagnin, Antonio. Tribune of First Causes for Beatification. 10-19-67; #
8-45. "GREA."
Gualdrini, Franco. Rector of Capranica. 5-22-61; # 21-352. "GUFRA."
Ilari, Annibale. Abbot. 3-16-69; # 43-86. "ILA."
Laghi, Pio. Nunzio, Apostolic Delegate to Argentina, and then to U.S.A.
until 1995. 8-24-69; # 0-538. "LAPI."
Lajolo, Giovanni. Member of Council of Public Affairs of the Church.
7-27-70; # 21-1397. "LAGI."
Lanzoni, Angelo. Chief of the Office of Secretary of State. 9-24-56; #
6-324. "LANA."
Levi, Virgillio (alias Levine), Monsignor. Assistant Director of Official
Vatican Newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano. Manages Vatican Radio Station.
7-4-58; # 241-3. "VILE."
Lozza, Lino. Chancellor of Rome Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas of Catholic
Religion. 7-23-69; # 12-768. "LOLI."
Lienart, Achille. Cardinal. Grand Master top Mason. Bishop of Lille,
France. Recruits Masons. Was leader of progressive forces at Vatican II
Council.
Macchi, Pasquale. Cardinal. Pope Paul's Prelate of Honour and Private
Secretary until he was excommunicated for heresy by Pope Paul VI. Was
reinstated by Secretary of State Jean Villot, and made a Cardinal. 4-23-58;
# 5463-2. "MAPA."
Mancini, Italo. Director of Sua Santita. 3-18-68; # l551-142. "MANI."
Manfrini, Enrico. Lay Consultor of Pontifical Commission of Sacred Art.
2-21-68; # 968-c. "MANE."
Marchisano, Francesco. Prelate Honour of the Pope. Secretary Congregation
for Seminaries and Universities of Studies. 2-4-61; 4536-3. "FRAMA."
Marcinkus, Paul. American bodyguard for imposter Pope. From Cicero,
Illinois. Stands 6'4". President for Institute for Training Religious.
8-21-67; # 43-649. Called "GORILLA." Code name "MARPA."
Marsili, Saltvatore. Abbot of Order of St. Benedict of Finalpia near
Modena, Italy. 7-2-63; # 1278-49. "SALMA."
Mazza, Antonio. Titular Bishop of Velia. Secretary General of Holy Year,
1975. 4-14-71. # 054-329. "MANU."
Mazzi, Venerio. Member of Council of Public Affairs of the Church. 10-13-66;
# 052-s. "MAVE."
Mazzoni, Pier Luigi. Congregation of Bishops. 9-14-59; # 59-2. "PILUM."
Maverna, Luigi. Bishop of Chiavari, Genoa, Italy. Assistant General of
Italian Catholic Azione. 6-3-68; # 441-c. "LUMA."
Mensa, Albino. Archbishop of Vercelli, Piedmont, Italy. 7-23-59; # 53-23. "
MENA."
Messina, Carlo. 3-21-70; # 21-045. "MECA."
Messina, Zanon (Adele). 9-25-68; # 045-329. " AMEZ."
Monduzzi, Dino. Regent to the Prefect of the Pontifical House. 3-11 -67; #
190-2. "MONDI."
Mongillo, Daimazio. Professor of Dominican Moral Theology, Holy Angels
Institute of Roma. 2-16-69; # 2145-22. "MONDA."
Morgante, Marcello. Bishop of Ascoli Piceno in East Italy. 7-22-55; #
78-3601. MORMA."
Natalini, Teuzo. Vice President of the Archives of Secretariat of the
Vatican. 6-17-67; # 21-44d. "NATE."
Nigro, Carmelo. Rector of the Seminary, Pontifical of Major Studies.
12-21-70; # 23-154. "CARNI."
Noe, Virgillio. Head of the Sacred Congregation of Divine Worship. He and
Bugnini paid 5 Protestant Ministers and one Jewish Rabbi to create the Novus
Ordo Mass. 4-3-61; # 43652-21. "VINO."
Palestra, Vittorie. He is Legal Council of the Sacred Rota of the Vatican
State. 5-6-43; # 1965. "PAVI."
Pappalardo, Salvatore. Cardinal. Archbishop of Palermo, Sicily. 4-15-68; #
234-07. "SALPA."
Pasqualetti, Gottardo. 6-15-60; # 4-231. "COPA."
Pasquinelli, Dante. Council of Nunzio of Madrid. 1-12-69; # 32-124. "PADA."
Pellegrino, Michele. Cardinal. Called "Protector of the Church",
Archbishop of Torino (Turin, where the Holy Shroud of Jesus is kept).
5-2-60; # 352-36. "PALMI."
Piana, Giannino. 9-2-70; # 314-52. "GIPI."
Pimpo, Mario. Vicar of Office of General Affairs. 3-15-70; # 793-43. "PIMA."
Pinto, Monsignor Pio Vito. Attache of Secretary of State and Notare of
Second Section of Supreme Tribunal and of Apostolic Signature. 4-2-70; #
3317-42. "PIPIVI."
Poletti, Ugo. Cardinal. Vicar of S.S. Diocese of Rome. Controls clergy of
Rome since 3-6-73. Member of Sacred Congregation of Sacraments and of Divine
Worship. He is President of Pontifical Works and Preservation of the Faith.
Also President of the Liturgical Academy. 2-17-69; # 32-1425. "UPO."
Rizzi, Monsignor Mario. Sacred Congregation of Oriental Rites. Listed as
"Prelate Bishop of Honour of the Holy Father, the Pope." Works under
top-Mason Mario Brini in manipulating Canon Law. 9-16-69; # 43-179. "MARI,"
"MONMARI."
Romita, Florenzo. Was in Sacred Congregation of Clergy. 4-21-56; # 52-142.
"FIRO."
Rogger, Igine. Officer in S.S. (Diocese of Rome). 4-16-68; # 319-13. "IGRO."
Rossano, Pietro. Sacred Congregation of Non-Christian Religions. 2-12-68; #
3421-a. "PIRO."
Rovela, Virgillio. 6-12-64; # 32-14. "ROVI."
Sabbatani, Aurelio. Archbishop of Giustiniana (Giusgno, Milar Province,
Italy). First Secretary Supreme Apostolic Segnatura. 6-22-69; # 87-43. "ASA"
Sacchetti, Guilio. Delegate of Governors - Marchese. 8-23-59; # 0991-b.
"SAGI."
Salerno, Francesco. Bishop. Prefect Atti. Eccles. 5-4-62; # 0437-1. "SAFRA"
Santangelo, Franceso. Substitute General of Defense Legal Counsel. 11-12-70;
# 32-096. "FRASA."
Santini, Pietro. Vice Official of the Vicar. 8-23-64; # 326-11. "SAPI."
Savorelli, Fernando. 1-14-69; # 004-51. "SAFE."
Savorelli, Renzo. 6-12-65; # 34-692. "RESA."
Scanagatta, Gaetano. Sacred Congregation of the Clergy. Member of Commission
of Pomei and Loreto, Italy. 9-23-71; # 42-023. "GASCA."
Schasching, Giovanni. 3-18-65; # 6374-23. "GISCHA," "GESUITA."
Schierano, Mario. Titular Bishop of Acrida (Acri in Cosenza Province,
Italy.) Chief Military Chaplain of the Italian Armed Forces. 7-3-59;
#14-3641. "MASCHI."
Semproni, Domenico. Tribunal of the Vicarate of the Vatican. 4-16-60; #
00-12. "DOSE." Sensi, Giuseppe Mario. Titular Archbishop of Sardi (Asia
Minor near Smyrna). Papal Nunzio to Portugal. 11-2-67; # 18911-47. "GIMASE."
Sposito, Luigi. Pontifical Commission for the Archives of the Church in
Italy. Head Administrator of the Apostolic Seat of the Vatican.
Suenens, Leo. Cardinal. Title: Protector of the Church of St. Peter in
Chains, outside Rome. Promotes Protestant Pentecostalism (Charismatics).
Destroyed much Church dogma when he worked in 3 Sacred Congregations: 1)
Propagation of the Faith; 2) Rites and Ceremonies in the Liturgy; 3)
Seminaries. 6-15-67; # 21-64. "LESU."
Trabalzini, Dino. Bishop of Rieti (Reate, Peruga, Italy). Auxiliary Bishop
of Southern Rome. 2-6-65; # 61-956. "TRADI."
Travia, Antonio. Titular Archbishop of Termini Imerese. Head of Catholic
schools. 9-15-67; # 16-141. "ATRA."
Trocchi, Vittorio. Secretary for Catholic Laity in Consistory of the Vatican
State Consultations. 7-12-62; # 3-896. "TROVI."
Tucci, Roberto. Director General of Vatican Radio. 6-21-57; # 42-58. "TURO."
Turoldo, David. 6-9-67; # 191-44. "DATU."
Vale, Georgio. Priest. Official of Rome Diocese. 2-21-71; # 21-328. "VAGI."
Vergari, Piero. Head Protocol Officer of the Vatican Office Segnatura.
12-14-70; # 3241-6. "PIVE."
Villot, Jean. Cardinal. Secretary of State during Pope Paul VI. He is
Camerlengo (Treasurer). "JEANNI," "ZURIGO."
Zanini, Lino. Titular Archbishop of Adrianopoli, which is Andrianopolis,
Turkey. Apostolic Nuncio. Member of the Revered Fabric of St. Peter's
Basilica.
Searching For the Illuminati Deep Within The Bowels Of The Vatican
All roads lead to Piazza San Pietro when it comes to power, leadership and
initiation into the devious and diabolical Illuminati. In the 1980's, the
Vatican Bank Scandal brought to light the connections between the
Freemasons/Illuminati, the Vatican and the mafia. Secret initiatons are said
to take place in the catacombs of the Vatican and was Pope John Paul I
killed after 39 days in office for wanting to expose the truth about Vatican
finances and the Illuminati?
16 Jan 2006
By Greg Szymanski
Part I
While Mass is being said in the Sistein Chapel and tourists are being shown
the works of Michelangelo, deep within the bowels of the Vatican sits a
large, circular room with 13 separate chambers, each leading to a distinct
catacomb.
When a mummified body is placed in front of each doorway, a young child is
then brutally sacrificed with a long, golden knife during what is said to be
a secret induction ceremony for new members of the Illuminati, better known
as the New World Order.
As a young freelance reporter in Rome during the early 1980s, I heard many
rumors of these secret ceremonies from local shop owners, several drunken
priests and a couple of local clairvoyants or fortune-telling card readers,
one who apparently advised and guided the film career of the famous Italian
film director, Federico Fellini.
Although a product of a Catholic education and graduate of Notre Dame High
School before going on to college, I still couldn't help but wonder if the
stories about the brutal child sacrifices were actually true.
While on a story assignment or covering the weekly Papal address, I remember
sneaking around the Vatican, on one occasion taking a flight of stairs down
to the basement level in search of the secret room and the catacombs.
Of course, I never found the secret room or a hidden doorway leading to the
tombs, my secret Indiana Jones hunt for the Satan's Den interrupted by a
Vatican security guard who escorted me to the top of the stairs after
showing my press card and saying I was lost.
"One night alone in this place and I know I could break the biggest story in
my lifetime," I thought to myself, as I walked through St. Peter's Square
and looked up at the sculptures of the 12 Apostles staring down at me from
the Vatican roof.
Rome is like a huge small town with many neighborhoods, functioning like
dozens of little villages within the city proper, each having its own
distinct feel and flavor.
That particular day after trying to uncover the exact location of the
Illuminati's secret induction ceremonies, I stopped for cheese and a glass
of white wine on the first narrow, cobblestone street next the Vatican,
known in English as the "Street of the Whores."
According to the locals, the street received this rather unusual name since
for hundreds of years it housed many of the whores whose primary clientele
were the Vatican cardinals, bishops and priests, as well as any visiting
members of the clergy.
After World War II, the prostitution on the street eventually moved to a
more secretive location, making way now for stores engaged in the lucrative
business of selling religious paraphernalia like rosaries, pictures of the
Pope's and holy water.
As I sat having a glass of wine and going through the Italian papers, the
main headline read how Cardinal Paul Marcinkus, head of the Vatican Bank
from 1971 to 1989, was indicted by Italian authorities (in 1982) as an
accessory in the $3.5 billion collapse of Banco Ambrosiano, an Italian
financial institution with close ties to the Vatican Bank.
Although I tried many times without success to interview Marcinkus, since he
was from my hometown of Chicago, the case never came to trial in Italy, as
courts corruptly ruled that as a "Vatican employee he was immune from
prosecution." The Vatican Bank also refused to admit legal responsibility
for the Bank of Ambrosiano's downfall but did acknowledge "moral
involvement", paying $241m (?169m) to creditors.
Little did I know that this story, the 1978 death of Pope John Paul I, the
murder of the bank's president, Robert Calvi, found dangling under the
Blackfriars Bridge in London, a little known mafia figure named Mario Cuomo
(not the former mayor of New York) and a mysterious woman named Maria would
all help in putting the pieces together of a larger more sinister puzzle.
Although still incomplete, the small pieces of the puzzle I uncovered in the
1980s all lead to direct involvement of members of the
Illuminati/Freemasons, through groups like "P Due", the Prieure du Sion and
others, as well as the deep involvement of the Vatican, the hub and
centerpiece of this secret worldwide organization known to the public as the
Illuminati but known by members as "The Family or The Order."
After writing several stories about the Vatican Bank Scandal and traveling
to London on the Calvi story, finding very little new evidence, I didn't
give much thought to the Illuminati and child sacrificing until about a year
later when I was sitting on Via Venato, having coffee for a brief hour or
two with the rich and famous. As a quick aside, no one ever really believes
me anyway when I mention I once sat on Sophia Loren's lap, so I will leave
that story for happier times.
Mysterious Maria
As I mentioned, I put the gruesome picture of a child sacrificing out of my
mind until a strikingly beautiful, black-haired Italian woman in her late
20s, named Maria, asked if she could join me at my Via Veneto outdoor table.
Rome is a small town, like I mentioned, later learning Maria desperately
wanted an outlet to tell her incredible story, finding out through street
talk that I was an American journalist researching stories about secret
societies and the Vatican's involvement.
Maria prefaced her story by saying she cold never reveal her full name,
saying it meant an immediate death sentence for both of us if her identity
hit newsstands, linking her to what she called "The Chosen Ones" or the
Illuminati.
I, on the other hand, remember feeling like I might be dealing with a quack
or a mental patient, especially after she graphically explained how
involvement with the Illuminati caused her to attempt suicide on three
separate occasions, twice by poisoning and once by slitting her wrists, but
each attempt played out in a bathtub surrounded by candles and bouquets of
colored roses.
I spoke to Maria on three occasions taking copious notes for total of about
five hours at the same outside cafe during a three-week time span before
learning through a mutual acquaintance about a month after our last meeting,
she finally succeeded in committing suicide.
This time, however, she didn't sit in her bathtub with flowers, deciding
instead to make a public display, jumping from the roof of the Vatican in
the early morning hours after hurling her body to the concrete of St.
Peter's Square (Piazza San Pietro) after standing beside the statue of St.
Peter.
Although I tried in vane to get her real identity, stories of the strange
suicide were verified but, at the same time, covered up as her identity
mysteriously disappeared from the face of the earth as did any possibility
of selling my story.
More than twenty years have passed but I can still hear her words and see
Maria's distraught face, sitting across from me at the Via Veneto cafe like
it was yesterday. To the best of my recollection, these are the most
important parts of her story of being recruited from birth by the
Illuminati, a story that essentially died when Maria hurled herself off the
Vatican roof.
"I can never tell you my name and only come to you as a last resort," were
Maria's first words, as she appeared agitated and uncertain she was doing
the right thing. In Italian she then said something like "May I rot in hell
if I violated her trust" and I remember feeling as if someone just pointed a
gun at my head.
Coming from an aristocratic northern Italian background, she continued as I
was able to understand most of what she said, save the complex and educated
Italian verb and tense forms as I essentially learned to speak the language
in the streets of Rome with the common-folk.
In our first meeting, she delved heavily into her involvement with the
"Family" or the "Chosen Ones," saying her aristocratic background left her
no choice in the matter. She said she was born into the ranks of the
Illuminati, taught as a child she was one of the "divine chosen ones" to
rule over the masses and initiated into the "Order" at a secret Vatican
underground ceremony in a room very similar to the type I previously heard
about on the street.
And when I finally got up enough courage to ask her about the child
sacrifices, she couldn't talk about it, only burying her head in her hands
as tears rolled out from between her fingers.
The remainder of our discussions centered on the Illuminati origins, its
leadership centered in the Vatican, its worldwide reach, its operations in
Europe, its branches in America and its eventual goals of population control
and world dominance. I remember how AIDS was not mentioned overseas and how
she confused me with saying the Illuminati or the "Chosen Fathers" had
purposely inflicted the disease on the masses.
Besides being convinced she was telling the truth, Maria also said the
Illuminati, referring to them in Italian swear words as "pig gods", had been
entrenched for years in America, with many of its leaders among the loyal
followers of the "Order."
Our last conversation became quite personal, straying away from the names of
powerful church and political figures, instead centering on how the
Illuminati personally devastated Maria's life. To this day, as she said her
final words, I wish I would have said or done something more to save her
life, but I had no inkling whatsoever it would come to a shocking end at the
Vatican in less than a month.
"They killed Pope John Paul I and he didn't die of natural causes. I cannot
live like this any longer but there is now way out. I am a trapped soul,
destined to burn in the depths of hell for all the wrongs I have witnessed
and have done nothing in my life to stop," said Maria, as she stood up from
table and began walking away.
As she left, I still remember her final words: "I have had all the riches in
the world, but I feel so empty and alone. Dio have mercy on me."
After Maria died, I began searching harder and harder to connect the dots of
the Vatican's involvement in the Illuminati, as well as the bank scandal,
the Pope's 1978 mysterious death and other stories related to Marcinkus,
Calvi, financier Licio Gelli known as the head of the P-2 lodge.
Although I could never pinpoint or verify the secret Vatican ceremonies,
enough information surfaced to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
Vatican functioned as the nerve center of the Illuminati, as the appointment
of John Paul II revealed he never followed through on his predecessors final
orders to investigate the operations of the Vatican Bank, Marcinkus and ties
to the mafia and the Illuminati.
Instead, John Paul II protected Marcinkus, quashed any investigations to be
carried out by John Paul I's secretary of state Cardinal Jean Villot and
buried all the people on Villot's list to be relieved of Church duties or
transferred, all the people on thelist suspected of being members of the
Freemason's P-2 group and the Illuminati.
Gangster Mario Cuomo
Although I didn't know it at the time, a Naples "Camorra" mafia figure,
named Mario Cuomo, who lived in near me in a small town outside of Rome and
who eventually was killed in a gangland shooting, was instrumental in saving
my life on several occasions.
Cuomo, who drove a Mazzerati, lived in a huge villa, dressed to the 9's and
who I knew as a land investor, made it a habit every time he saw me to
practice his English, buy me coffee or dinner while, at the same time,
telling me "when I was playing with fire" regarding the Calvi murder and its
ties to the mafia and the Vatican.
His sound advice perhaps frightened me away from some doors I never walked
through, but looking back, they were probably dangerous doors better left
closed as I probably would have never walked out of them or seen the light
of day ever again.
Editor's Note: Read Part II of Greg's series on the Illuminati, coming this
week, as he talks with a U.S. former member who provides shocking details
that is bound to scare the socks right off your feet.
Story Updates, Notes and Important Timeline:
Cardinal Marcinkus
He is still alive, saying Mass and living in Phoenix, Arizona. Marcinkus
carries a Vatican passport and still is the recipient of diplomatic
immunity.
Among those linked to the Calvi murder and who Italian authorities are still
seeking to question, Marcinkus was originally ordained in Chicago. Being a
mover and shaker in the Church, he was quickly elevated to the Holy See in
Rome, and served in the Vatican Secretariat of State.
He rapidly moved up the Vatican chain of command from personal papal
bodyguard to head of the Vatican Bank, a position he held from 1971 to 1989.
There he worked closely with international financier, Michael Sindona, to
expand the Vatican's portfolio of international holdings, transforming the
Institute for Religious Works into a quiet but reliable shelter for
questionable and what many have said was "dirty money."
The Vatican Bank, through Sindona, was suspected of laundering money from
associates in organized crime, funneled huge sums of money through Banco
Ambrosiano and the Vatican.
The Vatican Bank also has worked closely with the U.S. government as a cover
money conduit to groups like the Solidarity Trade Union in Poland and other
sordid CIA affairs. With the help of Marcinkus, Sindona was to become a
"inside man of confidence" within the Vatican who enjoyed unique access to
officials of the Holy See, even the pope.
A 1982 story in the foreign edition of Time magazine had this to say about
the relation between Sindona, Calvi and Marcinkus:
"In 1971, Sindona introduced Calvi to Marcinkus. Sindona and Calvi hoped to
use Marcinkus for their own purposes, and the bankers and the churchman
obviously found it advantageous to do business together. Although the
Vatican bank denies it had much to do with either Sindona or Calvi, the le
Opere di Religione (I.O.R. or Vatican Bank) eventually became Banco
Ambrosiano's fourth-largest stockholder, acquiring over the years at least
794,390 shares, or 1.589% of the bank's stock.
"A few months after Sindona and Calvi set up the Bahamian bank in 1971, a
"Mr. Paul Marcinkus" was listed as a director. "We used his name a lot in
business deals," Sindona said. "I told him clearly that I put him in because
it helps me get money."
The Calvi Murder Trial
In April, 2005, a Sicilian mobster, a Roman crime boss and two others were
indicted in connection with the 1982 hanging of Roberto Calvi, a financier
dubbed "God's banker" for his close ties to the Vatican.
A Reuters story added:
"Calvi, once thought to have committed suicide, was found hanging from
scaffolding under London's Blackfriars Bridge in June 1982 with bricks in
his pockets and $15,000 (8,000 pounds) on his person.
"But in the latest twist to the saga, prosecutors now say the Mafia killed
Calvi for stealing from them and from Italian financier Licio Gelli. Gelli
was the head of the P2 lodge -- a shadowy Masonic organization whose members
once included prominent politicians, businessmen and military officers.
"The judge said the trial will start on Oct 6 and will involve the convicted
Cosa Nostra treasurer Pippo Calo, Roman crime boss Ernesto Diotallevi,
Sardinian financier Flavio Carboni and his ex-girlfriend Manuela Kleinszig.
"The prosecutors' inquiry has focused on millions of dollars that flowed
through the bank's offshore accounts in the weeks preceding Calvi's death.
"Shortly before Calvi's hanging, the bank he headed at the time, Banco
Ambrosiano, had gone bankrupt. It was then Italy's largest private banking
group and worked with the Vatican."
Without question, one of the strangest characters in the Calvi saga, with
ties to Marcinkus and Sindona, was Liccio Gelli. A former member of the
fascist Black Shirts Battalion and connected to the Mussolini regime and the
Herman Goring SS Division in World War II, Gelli survived the conflict and
amassed tremendous amounts of money and influence.
Considered the head of the P-2 Masonic Lodge, he was also privy to sensitive
information on hundreds of key political, military and financial figures not
only in Italy but throughout Europe, Latin America and elsewhere due to his
access of files from the Italian secret service (OVRA) and possibly British
Intelligence.
It was common knowledge in Italy that Gelli helped to smuggle Klaus Barbie,
the infamous "Butcher of Lyon" to safe haven in Argentina, and even managed
to work for and sell his services to the CIA and NATO.
Important Timeline (Reprinted from The Financial Post, Victor Golancz Ltd.
1983.)
Early September 1978: Pope John Paul I asks his secretary of state, Cardinal
Jean Villot, to initiate an investigation into Vatican bank operations.
September 28, 1978: John Paul I presents Cardinal Villot with a list of
people who are to be transferred, asked for their resignations, or
reassigned. All the people on the list are suspected to be members of the
Freemason's group "P2." The reshuffle of power will have major implications
for the existing Vatican power structure and its financial dealings.
September 29, 1978: John Paul I found dead in his bed. Villot issues false
statements to the press about the circumstances surrounding the death,
removes key evidence from John Paul's room, and orders the body to be
embalmed immediately without an autopsy.
October 1978: John Paul II to replace John Paul I. None of John Paul I's
instructions to Villot before his death are carried out.
January 21, 1979: Murder of Judge Emilio Alessandrini, the Milan magistrate
investigating the activities of Banco Ambrosiano, whose director, Roberto
Calvi, has close ties with Michele Sindona and the Vatican.
March 20, 1979: Murder of Mino Pecorelli, an investigative journalist in the
process of publishing articles exposing the membership and dealings of "P2"
-- a powerful group of Freemasons whose membership was involved in Vatican
financial dealings, and whose founder, Lucio Gelli, was deeply connected
with Roberto Calvi.
March 25, 1979: Arrests on false charges of Mario Sarcinelli and Paolo Baffi
of the Bank of Italy. The two men were pressing for action on the
investigation of the financial dealings of Roberto Calvi and Banco
Ambrosiano.
July 11, 1979: Murder of Giorgio Ambrosioli following his testimony
concerning Michele Sindona's financial dealings with Calvi and other Vatican
interests, the activities of P2 and its members among powerful government
and business circles, and the connections between Calvi, Sindona, and Bishop
Paul Marcinkus of the Vatican Bank.
July 13, 1979: Murder of Lt. Col. Antonio Varisco, head of the Rome security
service, who was investigating the activities and membership of P2 and had
spoken with Giorgio Ambrosioli two days before Ambrosioli's death.
July 21, 1979: Murder of Boris Guilano, the Palermo police deputy
superintendent and head of Palermo CID. Guilano had spoken with Giorgio
Ambrosioli two days before Ambrosioli's death concerning Sindona's
laundering of Mafia money through the Vatican Bank into Switzerland.
October 1979: Bomb explosion at the apartment of Enrico Cuccia, managing
director of Mediobanca and witness to Sindona's threat to the life of
Giorgio Ambrosioli.
February 2, 1980: The Vatican withdraws at the last moment its agreement
that Cardinals Guiseppe Caprio and Sergio Guerri and Bishop Paul Marcinkus
will provide videotaped depositions on behalf of Michele Sindona in his
trial in the US on charges of fraud, conspiracy and misappropriation of
funds in connection with the collapse of Franklin National Bank.
May 13, 1980: Michele Sindona attempts suicide in jail.
June 13, 1980: Michele Sindona sentenced to 25 years.
July 8, 1980: Roberto Calvi attempts suicide while in jail on charges of
fraud, etc. Later released on bail and reconfirmed as chairman of Banco
Ambrosiano.
September 1, 1981: The Vatican Bank, apparently at the request of Roberto
Calvi, issues "letters of comfort" acknowledging its controlling interest
in, and assuming responsibility for, a more than 1 billion dollar debt of a
number of banks controlled by Calvi.
January 12, 1981: A group of shareholders in Banco Ambrosiano send a
letter to John Paul II outlining the connections between the Vatican Bank,
Roberto Calvi and the P2 and the Mafia. The letter is never acknowledged.
April 27, 1982: Attempted murder of Roberto Rosone, general manager and
deputy chairman of Banco Ambrosiano, who was trying to "clean up" the bank's
operation.
June 17, 1982: Roberto Calvi found hanged to death from a bridge in London.
A few days later, a 1.3 billion dollar "hole" is discovered in Banco
Ambrosiano, Milan.
October 2, 1982: Guiseppe Dellacha, executive at Banco Ambrosiano, dead of a
fall from a window of Banco Ambrosiano, in Milan.
March 23, 1986: Michele Sindona found dead of poisoning in the Italian jail
to which he had been extradited on charges of ordering the murder of Giorgio
Ambrosioli. Albino Luciano, Pope John Paul I
List of Masons in the Italian Church and Vatican
The following is a Mason list reprinted from the Bulletin de l'Occident
Chretien Nr.12, July, 1976, (Directeur Pierre Fautrad a Fye - 72490 Bourg Le
Roi.)
If still alive, it should be noted with interest that all of the men on this
list, are subject to excommunication by Canon Law 2338. Each man's name is
followed by his position, if known; the date he was initiated into Masonry,
his code #; and his code name, if known:
Albondi, Alberto. Bishop of Livorno, (Leghorn). Initiated 8-5-58; I.D. #
7-2431.
Abrech, Pio. In the Sacred Congregation Bishops. 11-27-67; # 63-143.
Acquaviva, Sabino. Professor of Religion at the University of Padova,
(Padua). 12-3-69;# 275-69.
Alessandro, Father Gottardi. (Addressed as Doctor in Masonic meetings.)
President of Fratelli Maristi. 6-14-59.
Angelini Fiorenzo. Bishop of Messenel Greece. 10-14-57; # 14-005.
Argentieri, Benedetto. Patriarch to the Holy See. 3-11-70; # 298-A.
Bea, Augustin. Cardinal. Secretary of State (next to Pope) under Pope John
XXIII and Pope Paul VI.
Baggio, Sebastiano. Cardinal. Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of
Bishops. (This is a crucial Congregation since it appoints new Bishops.)
Secretary of State under Pope John Paul II from 1989 to 1992. 8-14-57; #
85-1640. Masonic code name "SEBA." He controls consecration of Bishops.
Balboni, Dante. Assistant to the Vatican Pontifical . Commission for
Biblical Studies. 7-23-68; # 79-14 "BALDA."
Baldassarri Salvatore. Bishop of Ravenna, Italy. 2-19-58; # 4315-19.
"BALSA."
Balducci, Ernesto. Religious sculpture artist. 5-16-66; # 1452-3.
Basadonna, Ernesto. Prelate of Milan, 9-14-63; # 9-243. "BASE."
Batelli, Guilio. Lay member of many scientific academies. 8-24-59; # 29-A.
"GIBA."
Bedeschi, Lorenzo. 2-19-59; # 24-041. "BELO."
Belloli, Luigi. Rector of Seminar; Lombardy, Ita- ly. 4-6-58; # 22-04.
"BELLU."
Belluchi, Cleto. Coadjutor Bishop of Fermo, Italy. 6-4-68; # 12-217.
Bettazzi, Luigi. Bishop of Ivera, Italy. 5-11-66; # 1347-45. "LUBE."
Bianchi, Ciovanni. 10-23-69; # 2215-11. "BIGI."
Biffi, Franco, Msgr. Rector of Church of St. John Lateran Pontifical
University. He is head of this University and controls what is being taught.
He heard confessions of Pope Paul VI. 8-15-59. "BIFRA."
Bicarella, Mario. Prelate of Vicenza, Italy. 9-23-64; # 21-014. "BIMA."
Bonicelli, Gaetano. Bishop of Albano, Italy. 5-12-59; # 63-1428, "BOGA."
Boretti, Giancarlo. 3-21-65; # 0-241. "BORGI."
Bovone, Alberto. Substitute Secretary of the Sacred Office. 3-30-67; #
254-3. "ALBO."
Brini, Mario. Archbishop. Secretary of Chinese, Oriental, and Pagans. Member
of Pontifical Commission to Russia. Has control of rewriting Canon Law.
7-7-68; # 15670. "MABRI."
Bugnini, Annibale. Archbishop.Wrote Novus Ordo Mass. Envoy to Iran, 4-23-63;
# 1365-75. "BUAN."
Buro, Michele. Bishop. Prelate of Pontifical Commission to Latin America,
3-21-69; # 140-2. "BUMI."
Cacciavillan, Agostino. Secretariat of State. 11-6-60; # 13-154.
Cameli, Umberto. Director in Office of the Ecclesiastical Affairs of Italy
in regard to education in Catholic doctrine. 11-17-60; # 9-1436.
Caprile, Giovanni. Director of Catholic Civil Affairs. 9-5-57; # 21-014.
"GICA."
Caputo, Giuseppe. 11-15-71; # 6125-63. "GICAP."
Casaroli, Agostino. Cardinal. Secretary of State (next to Pope) under Pope
John Paul II since July 1, 1979 until retired in 1989. 9-28-57; # 41-076.
"CASA."
Cerruti, Flaminio. Chief of the Office of the University of Congregation
Studies. 4-2-60; # 76-2154. "CEFLA."
Ciarrocchi, Mario. Bishop. 8-23-62; # 123-A. "CIMA."
Chiavacci, Enrico. Professor of Moral Theology, University of Florence,
Italy. 7-2-70; # 121-34. "CHIE."
Conte, Carmelo. 9-16-67; # 43-096. "CONCA."
Csele, Alessandro. 3-25-60; # 1354-09. "ALCSE."
Dadagio, Luigi. Papal Nuncio to Spain. Archbishop of Lero. 9-8-67. # 43-B.
"LUDA."
D'Antonio, Enzio. Archbishop of Trivento. 6-21-69; # 214-53.
De Bous, Donate. Bishop. 6-24-68; # 321-02. "DEBO."
Del Gallo Reoccagiovane, Luigi. Bishop.
Del Monte, Aldo. Bishop of Novara, Italy. 8-25-69; # 32-012. "ADELMO."
Faltin, Danielle. 6-4-70; # 9-1207. "FADA."
Ferraioli, Giuseppe. Member of Sacred Congregation for Public Affairs.
11-24-69; # 004-125. "GIFE."
Franzoni, Giovanni. 3-2-65; # 2246-47. "FRAGI."
Gemmiti, Vito. Sacred Congregation of Bishops. 3-25-68; # 54-13. "VIGE."
Girardi, Giulio. 9-8-70; # 1471-52. "GIG."
Fiorenzo, Angelinin. Bishop. Title of Commendator of the Holy Spirit. Vicar
General of Roman Hospitals. Controls hospital trust funds. Consecrated
Bishop 7-19-56; joined Masons 10-14-57.
Giustetti, Massimo. 4-12-70; # 13-065. "GIUMA."
Gottardi, Alessandro. Procurator and Postulator General of Fratelli
Maristi. Archbishop of Trent. 6-13-59; # 2437-14. "ALGO."
Gozzini, Mario. 5-14-70; # 31-11. "MAGO."
Grazinai, Carlo. Rector of the Vatican Minor Seminary. 7-23-61; # 156-3.
"GRACA."
Gregagnin, Antonio. Tribune of First Causes for Beatification. 10-19-67; #
8-45. "GREA."
Gualdrini, Franco. Rector of Capranica. 5-22-61; # 21-352. "GUFRA."
Ilari, Annibale. Abbot. 3-16-69; # 43-86. "ILA."
Laghi, Pio. Nunzio, Apostolic Delegate to Argentina, and then to U.S.A.
until 1995. 8-24-69; # 0-538. "LAPI."
Lajolo, Giovanni. Member of Council of Public Affairs of the Church.
7-27-70; # 21-1397. "LAGI."
Lanzoni, Angelo. Chief of the Office of Secretary of State. 9-24-56; #
6-324. "LANA."
Levi, Virgillio (alias Levine), Monsignor. Assistant Director of Official
Vatican Newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano. Manages Vatican Radio Station.
7-4-58; # 241-3. "VILE."
Lozza, Lino. Chancellor of Rome Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas of Catholic
Religion. 7-23-69; # 12-768. "LOLI."
Lienart, Achille. Cardinal. Grand Master top Mason. Bishop of Lille,
France. Recruits Masons. Was leader of progressive forces at Vatican II
Council.
Macchi, Pasquale. Cardinal. Pope Paul's Prelate of Honour and Private
Secretary until he was excommunicated for heresy by Pope Paul VI. Was
reinstated by Secretary of State Jean Villot, and made a Cardinal. 4-23-58;
# 5463-2. "MAPA."
Mancini, Italo. Director of Sua Santita. 3-18-68; # l551-142. "MANI."
Manfrini, Enrico. Lay Consultor of Pontifical Commission of Sacred Art.
2-21-68; # 968-c. "MANE."
Marchisano, Francesco. Prelate Honour of the Pope. Secretary Congregation
for Seminaries and Universities of Studies. 2-4-61; 4536-3. "FRAMA."
Marcinkus, Paul. American bodyguard for imposter Pope. From Cicero,
Illinois. Stands 6'4". President for Institute for Training Religious.
8-21-67; # 43-649. Called "GORILLA." Code name "MARPA."
Marsili, Saltvatore. Abbot of Order of St. Benedict of Finalpia near
Modena, Italy. 7-2-63; # 1278-49. "SALMA."
Mazza, Antonio. Titular Bishop of Velia. Secretary General of Holy Year,
1975. 4-14-71. # 054-329. "MANU."
Mazzi, Venerio. Member of Council of Public Affairs of the Church. 10-13-66;
# 052-s. "MAVE."
Mazzoni, Pier Luigi. Congregation of Bishops. 9-14-59; # 59-2. "PILUM."
Maverna, Luigi. Bishop of Chiavari, Genoa, Italy. Assistant General of
Italian Catholic Azione. 6-3-68; # 441-c. "LUMA."
Mensa, Albino. Archbishop of Vercelli, Piedmont, Italy. 7-23-59; # 53-23. "
MENA."
Messina, Carlo. 3-21-70; # 21-045. "MECA."
Messina, Zanon (Adele). 9-25-68; # 045-329. " AMEZ."
Monduzzi, Dino. Regent to the Prefect of the Pontifical House. 3-11 -67; #
190-2. "MONDI."
Mongillo, Daimazio. Professor of Dominican Moral Theology, Holy Angels
Institute of Roma. 2-16-69; # 2145-22. "MONDA."
Morgante, Marcello. Bishop of Ascoli Piceno in East Italy. 7-22-55; #
78-3601. MORMA."
Natalini, Teuzo. Vice President of the Archives of Secretariat of the
Vatican. 6-17-67; # 21-44d. "NATE."
Nigro, Carmelo. Rector of the Seminary, Pontifical of Major Studies.
12-21-70; # 23-154. "CARNI."
Noe, Virgillio. Head of the Sacred Congregation of Divine Worship. He and
Bugnini paid 5 Protestant Ministers and
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