What happens when someone has
believed in Medjugorje for many years, has read and digested most of the books that
support it, made pilgrimages there, and then suddenly sees the apparitions in a new light
and begins to doubt the entire phenomenon? Little by little he realizes that he is
no longer as certain as he once was that the apparition itself is really the Blessed
Virgin Mary. The monthly messages that he once eagerly awaited are no longer absorbed as
if they were truly of heavenly origin. He begins to worry about hurting the feelings of
the people he knew and met on pilgrimage, true believers as he once was, if he makes known
his doubts.
But how could such a change occur? In the case of this reviewer,
it took only one sentence from an online preview of a chapter in Donal Foleys new
book Understanding Medjugorje: Heavenly Visions or Religious Illusion? The sentence
reads: "Similarly, the loss of a sense of the sacred which followed the changes in
the liturgy has left many Catholics looking for spiritual solace elsewhere" (p. 257).
Medjugorje had been an opportune outlet for expressing a Marian devotion that, especially
in the 1980s and early 1990s, had been almost completely abandoned by the
Church. A de-emphasis on piety, personal prayer, confession, Eucharistic devotion, and
basically the lack of a sense of the sacred, created a spiritual hunger that looked for
fulfillment. It was Medjugorje: the place, the messages, the visionaries, the apparitions
the entire movement that it had become which seemed to satisfy a deep
spiritual hunger that the late twentieth-century Catholic Church seemed unable to nourish.
In one of the few books available today offering a critical look
at Medjugorje, Donal Foley performs an excellent service in unraveling the many threads
that comprise the genesis and history of the phenomenon. He discusses the significant role
of the charismatic movement and tourism industry in propagating the visions, and shows how
Medjugorje compares unfavorably to approved apparitions, especially Fatima. He presents an
excellent overview of the complex historical backdrop preceding the apparitions to the six
visionaries, three of whom still experience daily visions. He shows that the event
actually has roots extending well before its onset twenty-five years ago, on a remote
hilltop in what is now Bosnia-Herzegovina. Medjugorje was a hamlet in Communist
Yugoslavia, when the Gospa, as she is called in Croatian, first appeared on June 24, 1981,
only a few miles from a World War II atrocity in which hundreds of Serbs were massacred by
Croat militia. The region has a long history of periodical clan bloodshed and vendettas.
It has also been involved in a long-standing dispute between the local Church hierarchy
and the Franciscan Order, in which the Franciscans have refused to turn over local
parishes to diocese control, even after the Vatican ordered their obedience in 1975.
Foley analyzes the effect of these events, as well as the
Communist milieu, the presence of Islam, and the remnants of ancient religious practices,
ancestor veneration, and local superstition, on the mind-set of the inhabitants. "We
are not dealing with a normal Catholic culture here, but one . . . comprised of heretical
sects, pagan religion, seemingly endless violence, and a long running dispute between
official Church authority and local Franciscans." (p. 24).
Foley proceeds to discuss the psychosocial background of the
visionaries, who, with one exception, were worldly teenagers and not "children"
as they have been commonly described, when the events began. He points out that in
approved apparitions, the seers are almost invariably very young (average age 11) and
innocent. The six Medjugorje seers came from generally difficult family circumstances, and
often did not enjoy a strong parental presence. They were not part of the charismatic
prayer group meetings that the parish priest, Fr. Jozo Zovko, had been holding. In a sense
they were outsiders and not particularly religious. "These are indications that the
visionaries were to a greater or lesser extent emotionally vulnerable in some
way
" (p. 38). In fact, on the first evening of the apparitions, two of the
seers were present only because they had gone out to listen to rock music on the hillside
while smoking cigarettes pilfered from their fathers.
Foley then looks at what he terms the "primary source
material" of the visions. This consists of a series of seventeen tape recordings that
were made in the very first week of the apparitions. He points out that most standard
accounts supporting Medjugorje begin by citing interviews made over a year later,
completely ignoring the existence of the tapes. This is understandable, since they reveal
very disturbing facts. For example, sixteen-year-old seer Ivan Dragicevic said that the
hands of the vision were "trembling," not a characteristic of the calm and
serene Virgin Mary. Another visionary, Marija Pavlovic, also sixteen at the time, is
recorded as saying, " . . . when I saw her for the first time my hands were cold like
ice." Three of the visionaries say on tape that they saw the Gospa with
"something like a baby," but she then covered it. Foley remarks that it is hard
to imagine that the Blessed Virgin would want to hide the Baby Jesus.
Part of the Medjugorje mythos is that during the first week, seer
Vicka Ivankovic sprinkled holy water on the apparition to insure it was not the devil.
However, the tapes reveal that it was actually a mixture of ordinary tap water with
blessed salt, and that at the moment of the sprinkling, three of the visionaries
temporarily lost consciousness. During these first days, the vision was not saying
anything particularly significant, and by the fourth day the parish priest, Fr. Jozo
Zovko, became concerned about this. By the fifth day, he was asking the visionaries why
there was no definite message, and why she did not appear in the Church. On the next day
he again acknowledged that there was no public message. The tapes present quite clear
evidence that, according to the visionaries, the "Lady" indicated that the last
apparition would occur on Friday, July 3, 1981. Instead, the vision soon began delivering
messages with regularity, which have persisted for the past twenty-five years, magically
resolving Fr. Jozos concern about the lack of public messages.
Following is an example of how Medjugorje supporters attempt to
smooth out the uncomfortable wrinkles. At one point a lady doctor asked if she could touch
the vision, and the Gospa replied, "There are always unbelieving Judases. Let her
come near." Fr. Jozo was puzzled why it was Judas who was accused of having no faith.
Later, the visions statement was conveniently altered in Medjugorje promoter Fr.
Rene Laurentins chronology of the messages to: "There have always been doubting
Thomases. Let her come."
What has been presented above is just a small sampling of the
facts presented by the author that relate to the beginning of the apparitions. Facts which
lead him to question the authenticity of the visions. He develops the thesis in the book
that a major "fruit" of Medjugorje is that it draws Catholics away from approved
apparition sites, and most especially draws attention away from Fatima, which he considers
the most critical appearance of the Virgin Mary for our time. The authors tone is
too gentlemanly and positive for him to come out and openly state that Medjugorje is
Satans counterfeit of Fatima, complete with sun miracles and special secrets, but
one can clearly read this possibility between the lines.
Foley points out that legitimate visionaries generally shun the
limelight and lead quiet lives. On the other hand, the six Medjugorje seers engage in
"apostolic journeys," and in one eight year period in the nineties, made an
incredible 102 international speaking tours among them! However, he is actually quite
benevolent in his treatment of the visionaries. For example, he provides a link to a web
page for visionary Ivan Dragicevics speaking schedule (www.medjugorje.org/ivanse.htm) and
mentions in passing that visitors to the web site are invited to "Click for
details." The details, unreported by Foley, reveal that Mr. Dragicevic has built
enough extra rooms on his house in Medjugorje to accommodate twenty-eight pilgrims!
"Air Conditioned Accommodations (double & triple occupancy, Private baths)."
They are invited to spend a week there, which includes visits to his home chapel as well
as private meetings with the visionary. Prices including air fare from New York range from
$1600 to $1900 depending on the season. Nowhere is it mentioned (as of this writing) that
the proceeds will be donated to charity. This certainly gives the appearance that the seer
is financially exploiting the apparitions by renting out rooms to the pilgrims! It is
unheard of in approved apparitions that seers would ever attempt to make money from the
Virgin Marys appearances.
There is so much valuable information packed into this 310-page
book that this review would have to be ten times longer to even summarize it. Other main
issues covered include the strong official opposition to the visions by successive bishops
who oversee the Medjugorje parish, serious doctrinal problems with the content of some of
the messages themselves, evidence that the vision encouraged disobedience to the local
bishop, and the secret messages that have yet to be revealed or fulfilled. The book is
extremely well written, employing a clear, captivating, and engaging style. It contains
neither rancor nor bitter accusations, but rather presents an unrelenting examination of
the vast set of problems that encompass Medjugorje. Well researched, it contains 450
footnotes, a comprehensive index, and a very detailed table of contents. This is required
reading for anyone who wants to understand the profound difference between Medjugorje and
Church-approved apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary. |