WARSAW, Poland — A prominent Polish cardinal who was recently sanctioned by the Vatican over sexual abuse allegations has been hospitalized since last week and remains unconscious, Polish media reported Tuesday.
Retired Archbishop Henryk Gulbinowicz was sanctioned by the Vatican last week after the 97-year-old was accused of sexually abusing a seminarian and of covering up abuse in another case.
Private Polish broadcaster TVN24 on Monday night aired a documentary suggesting that another well-respected churchman, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, covered up sex abuse by priests in Poland and elsewhere, including abuse of minors by the Mexican priest Marcial Meciel Degollado.
The head of Poland's Catholic episcopate, Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki, said in a statement Tuesday he hopes that "all doubts" presented in the documentary "Don Stanislao. The other face of Cardinal Dziwisz" will be "clarified by the appropriate commission of the Holy See."
Dziwisz, the retired archbishop of Krakow who served as secretary to beloved Polish pope St. John Paul II in 1978-2005, said he was ready to cooperate with a commission and wanted the matter to be "clarified in a transparent way."
Commentators in Poland described the allegations against Dziwisz as very serious and said they cast a negative light on a figure respected for his service and devotion to John Paul II, who remains a source of national pride.
A few hundred protesters marched before the Bishop's Palace in Krakow and then by Dziwisz's residence chanting against him. The demonstration was part of daily protests held across Poland since Oct.22, when a top court tightened the abortion law of this predominantly Catholic nation.
Reacting to the TV documentary on Dziwisz, a Polish representative in the European Parliament, Lukasz Kohut requested a probe by Krakow prosecutors into the cardinal's alleged backing of pedophile priests. A left-wing member of Poland's parliament, Maciej Gdula, said Dziwisz should be stripped of his honorary Krakow citizenship.