ROME â One of the first women who accused a once-exalted Jesuit artist of spiritual, psychological and sexual abuse went public Wednesday to demand transparency from the Vatican and a full accounting of the hierarchs who covered for him for 30 years.
Gloria Branciani, 59, appeared at a news conference with one of the most prominent Vatican-accredited lawyers in Rome, Laura Sgro, to tell her story in public for the first time. She detailed the alleged abuses of the Rev. Marko Rupnik, including his fondness for three-way sex âin the image of the Trinityâ which, if confirmed, could constitute a grave perversion of Catholic doctrine known as false mysticism.
Lawyer Laura Sgro, left, listens to Gloria Branciani during a news conference Wednesday in Rome. Branciani, 59, is accused Jesuit Rev. Marko Rupnik of spiritual, psychological and sexual abuse and is demanding transparency from the Vatican.
Rupnik has not commented publicly about the allegations, but his Rome art studio has said the allegations were unproven and media reports about the case a defamatory âlynching.â
Rupnikâs mosaics decorate churches and basilicas around the world, including at the Catholic shrine in Lourdes, France, the forthcoming cathedral in Aparecida, Brazil, and the Redemptoris Mater chapel of the Apostolic Palace.
The Jesuits kicked him out of the order last year after he refused to respond to allegations of spiritual, psychological and sexual abuses by about 20 women, most of whom, like Branciani, were members of a Jesuit-inspired religious community he co-founded in his native Slovenia that has since been suppressed.
The Rupnik scandal has grabbed headlines for more than a year over speculation that he received preferential treatment from a Vatican dominated by Jesuits: From Pope Francis to the Jesuits who headed the Vatican office responsible for sex crimes and sacramental crimes that twice essentially let him off the hook.
Under pressure as the scandal grew, Francis in October decided to reopen the case and Branciani is due to soon testify before the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. Sgro said that she didnât know what the possible lines of investigation are since the Dicasteryâs proceedings are secret even to victims and their lawyers.
Branciani, who first denounced Rupnik in 1993 and then left the Slovene community, called for the full story of the Rupnik scandal and cover-up to come out in public, including the documentation. She said that she believed that the pope was still in the dark about the details and that even he would be served by the truth.
âHe (Rupnik) was always protected by everyone, and everything that you could accuse him of was either minimized or denied,â she said. âWe hope that our testimony ... will stimulate a greater transparency and a consciousness by everyone, and also maybe the pope, who wasnât really aware of the facts that occurred.â
Francis, in a 2023 interview with The Associated Press, said he had intervened in the case only on procedural grounds and didn't know the details.
Rupnikâs former Jesuit superior, the Rev. Johan Verschueren, said he had no contact for a lawyer for Rupnik. There was no immediate response to an email seeking comment from his Centro Aletti art studio and ecumenical center in Rome, which has strongly defended him. The Koper, Slovenia diocese, which welcomed Rupnik after he was expelled from the Jesuits, referred to an October statement saying he hadn't been convicted by any tribunal and was presumed innocent.
The Vatican press office offered an update on the investigation after Brancianiâs news conference, saying the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith had âjust received the latest elementsâ of documentation from several institutions, including some not previously heard from.
In the news conference, Branciani described a textbook case of manipulation of conscience, sexual abuse and false mysticism, which the doctrine office has a tradition of prosecuting. After saying she underwent years of psychological manipulation, grooming and sexual advances, including while Rupnik painted the face of Jesus, she said she eventually lost her virginity to him.
Lawyer Laura Sgro, left, hugs Gloria Branciani at the end of a news conference Wednesday in Rome. Branciani is telling her story in public for the first time, detailing alleged abuses of the Rev. Marko Rupnik, including his fondness for three-way sex âin the image of the Trinity.â
At one point, she said that according to Rupnik, âOur relationship wasnât exclusive but had to be a relation in the image of the Trinity.â
The Vatican dicastery handles crimes of sexual abuse of minors as well as sacramental crimes. The office actually took the first, and only, Vatican action against Rupnik in 2020, when it declared him excommunicated for having committed one of the most serious crimes in church law, using the confessional to absolve a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual relations.
The excommunication was lifted two weeks later and Rupnik paid an indemnization to the woman. The following year, after nine members of the Slovene community accused him of other abuses, the dicastery chose not to prosecute him on the grounds that the alleged abuses occurred too long ago. The office routinely waives the statute of limitations for old cases involving abuse of minors.
The outcome underscored how the Catholic hierarchy routinely refuses to consider spiritual and sexual abuse of adult women as a crime that must be punished, but rather a lapse of priestly chastity that can be forgiven.
Today in history: Feb. 21
1885: Washington Monument
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In 1885, the Washington Monument was dedicated.
1964: U.S. Wheat
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In 1964, the first shipment of U.S. wheat purchased by the Soviet Union arrived in the port of Odessa.
1965: Malcolm X
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In 1965, minister and civil rights activist Malcolm X, 39, was shot to death inside Harlemâs Audubon Ballroom in New York.
1972: Richard M. Nixon
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In 1972, President Richard M. Nixon began his historic visit to China as he and his wife, Pat, arrived in Beijing.
1975: Watergate
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On Feb. 21, 1975, former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former White House aides H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman were sentenced to 2 1/2 to 8 years in prison for their roles in the Watergate cover-up (each ended up serving 1 1/2 years).
1992: Kristi Yamaguchi
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In 1992, Kristi Yamaguchi (yah-mah-GOOâ-chee) of the United States won the gold medal in ladiesâ figure skating at the Albertville Olympics.Â
1995: Steve Fossett
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In 1995, Chicago adventurer Steve Fossett became the first person to fly solo across the Pacific Ocean by balloon, landing in Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada.Â
2017: Milo Yiannopoulos
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Conservative writer Milo Yiannopoulos (MYâ-loh yuh-NAHâ-poh-lihs) resigned as an editor for Breitbart News, apologizing for comments heâd made in video clips in which he appeared to defend sexual relationships between men and boys as young as 13.
2018: Rev. Billy Graham
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In 2018, the Rev. Billy Graham, a confidant of presidents and the most widely heard Christian evangelist in history, died at his North Carolina home; he was 99.
2019: Oakland Teacher Strike
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In 2019, teachers in Oakland, California, went on strike in the latest in a wave of teacher activism that had included walkouts in Denver, Los Angeles and West Virginia.
2020: Taliban
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In 2020, a temporary truce between the United States and the Taliban in Afghanistan took effect, setting the stage for the two sides to sign a peace deal the following week.
2021: Novak Djokovic
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Novak Djokovic beat Daniil Medvedev in three sets to win his ninth Australian Open championship and 18th Grand Slam title.



