BY JOHN RICE
Associated Press
MEXICO CITY -- Attempts to canonize Juan Diego, the Indian who
reportedly saw
the Virgin of Guadalupe, have led to a public spat inside Mexico's
Roman Catholic
Church.
A letter to the Vatican objecting to sainthood caused an uproar
this week in
Mexico, where national identity is closely linked to veneration
of the olive-skinned
virgin who reportedly appeared to Juan Diego on Dec. 12, 1531,
at Tepeyac in
what is now northern Mexico City.
The newspaper Reforma revealed Thursday that the former abbot
of the Basilica of
Guadalupe, Guillermo Schulenburg, had written the letter, which
argued that
evidence for Juan Diego's existence was unclear.
The letter ``momentarily'' halted the process of canonization,
admitted the Rev.
Oscar Sanchez, the priest in charge of promoting Juan Diego's
cause before the
Vatican.
``It pains me to recognize that, but it's true,'' he said in an
interview broadcast
Friday by the Televisa television network.
Sanchez said he believed the process would soon resume, arguing
that
Schulenburg and two other priests who signed the letter have
``zero credibility.
. . . They have no authority.''
And the chief church spokesman in Mexico, Monsignor Onesimo Cepeda,
told
Televisa that Juan Diego's eventual canonization ``is a given.''
POPE'S SUPPORT
Mexican church leaders had hoped the declaration of sainthood
might occur
during millennium celebrations next year. Pope John Paul II has
strongly
promoted veneration of the Virgin of Guadalupe.
The new debate comes a week before celebrations in the broad plaza
in front of
the basilica that houses the image of the virgin on a cape of
cactus fibers that,
according to tradition, she gave to Juan Diego.
Millions gather at the shrine each Dec. 12 amid songs, fireworks,
prayer and
Indian dancing.
That dancing hints at one of the oldest objections to the cult
of the virgin: Some
clergymen at the time claimed that the story of her apparition
was a device
cooked up by local Indians to continue worshiping an Aztec goddess,
Tonantzin --
``Our Mother'' -- whose shrine was located at Tepeyac.
Critics note that church officials at the time virtually ignored
the apparition and the
first detailed historical accounts occurred about 120 years later.
Defenders say they have found hard evidence for Juan Diego's existence,
even
locating his house in what is now Ecatepec, north of Mexico City.
A TRADITION
Whatever the history, the story of the virgin's appearance to
Juan Diego has
become Mexico's most important religious tradition. It helped
the church convert
the country's Indian population and has been a focus of faith
for centuries.
Mexican rebels fighting for independence from Spain went into
battle behind
images of the virgin. Even this year, presidential candidate
Vicente Fox caused a
controversy by displaying portraits of the virgin during campaign
appearances,
breaking a modern taboo about mixing religion and politics.
Schulenburg, 83, has long been a thorn in the side of those promoting
a literal
belief in the Guadalupe story. For 30 years, he oversaw the shrine
to the virgin.
In a 1995 interview with the Jesuit magazine Ixtus, Schulenburg
said Juan Diego
``is a symbol, not a reality,'' and he called Juan Diego's 1990
beatification by
Pope John Paul II ``recognition of a cult. It is not recognition
of the physical, real
existence of a person.''
Copyright 1999 Miami Herald