Vatican
exorcist Amorth speaks on Satan's smoke
Spero News publishes
"The Smoke of Satan in the House of the Lord...and deliver us from the
evil one," an interview with the Vatican's chief excorcist, Father
Gabriele Amorth by Stefano Maria Paci
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Father Gabriele Amorth. Photo: 30Giorni
Thursday, March 16, 2006
by Stefano Maria Paci
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Twenty-nine
years have passed since that day, June 29 1972. It was the Feast of Saint
Peter, Prince of the Apostles. It was the Feast of Saint Paul who brought the
Gospel of Christ to the extreme corners of the West. On that day, June 29,
Feast of the Patron Saints of Rome, Peter’s successor who had taken the name of
Paul issued a dramatic warning. Paul VI spoke of God’s enemy supreme, that
enemy of man called Satan, enemy of the Church. “The smoke of Satan”, warned
Paul VI, “has found its way into the Church through the fissures”. It was an
anguished warning that caused great shock and scandal, even within the Catholic
world.
And what
of today, 29 years later? Has that smoke been dispersed or has it continued to
drift?
30DAYS
went to see the man who has to do with Satan and his cunning every day. It’s
his job, almost. He is the world’s most famous exorcist – Father Gabriele
Amorth, founder and honorary president of the International Association of
Exorcists.
We also
went to him because a few weeks ago, on May 15, the Italian Episcopal
Conference approved the Italian translation of the new Rite of Exorcism. All it
needs now for it to be used is the placet of the Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments. Is this a new weapon in the
Church’s battle with the Enemy? Will it dispel, if it still hasn’t been
dispelled, that smoke which has drifted into the temple of the Lord? Nothing of
the kind, according to Father Amorth. He will tell us that the war being waged
for millennia rages on more angrily than ever. That the battlefront has now
moved inside the house of the Lord. That the smoke … the smoke has drifted in
the most unsuspected directions.
At long
last, the Italian translation of the new Rite of Exorcism is ready …
GABRIELE
AMORTH: Yes, it is. Last year, the Italian Episcopal Conference could not
approve it because there were errors in the translation from the Latin. We
exorcists who would have to use it took advantage of this to point out yet
again that we were not in agreement with the new Rite on many points. The
original Latin text is unchanged in this translation. A Rite so long-awaited
has turned out to be a joke, an incredible cord that is tying us in knots in
our work against the Devil.
That’s a
serious allegation. What, exactly, are you referring to?
AMORTH:
I can give you two examples, two blatant examples. At Point 15, it talks of
evil in the sense of the ‘evil eye’ and how we should conduct ourselves. The
‘evil eye’ is an evil directed at a person through the Devil. This can be done
in various ways, in the form of spells, curses, by voodoo and macumba. The
Roman Rite explained how this had to be addressed. The new Rite, by contrast,
categorically states that it is prohibited to perform exorcisms in these cases.
That is just absurd. This evildoing is by far the most frequent cause of
demonic possession and other evils procured by the Devil – no fewer than 90 per
cent. It’s like telling exorcists to retire. Then, Point 16 solemnly states
that exorcisms must not be carried out unless the presence of the Devil is
ascertained. This is a masterpiece of incompetence because we can only
ascertain if the Devil is possessing a person by performing an exorcism.
Moreover, the editors did not realize that, on both points, they were
contradicting the Catechism of the Catholic Church which advises exorcism both
in the case of demonic possession and of evils caused by the Devil. It also
says this should be done in regard both to people and things. The Devil is
never present in things, just his influence. The statements contained in the
new Rite are very grave indeed and very harmful. They are the fruit of
ignorance and inexperience.
But
wasn’t it compiled by experts?
AMORTH:
By no means, no. In these past ten years, two commissions have worked on the
Rite – the Commission of Cardinals who edited the Prenotanda, or the initial
dispositions, and the Commission in charge of the prayers. I can say with
certainty that no member of either commission has ever performed an exorcism or
witnessed one. No member has even the faintest idea of what an exorcism is.
There lies the error, the original sin of this Rite. No one who assisted with
it was an expert on exorcism.
How can
that be?
AMORTH:
Don’t ask me. During the Second Ecumenical Vatican Council, every commission
was assisted by a group of experts who worked alongside the bishops. This
custom continued even after the Council every time parts of the Rite were
reworked. But not in this case. And if ever there was an area where experts
were needed it was this one.
So what
happened then?
AMORTH:
What happened was that we exorcists were never consulted. Furthermore, the
suggestions we gave were received with a certain irritation on the part of the
commissions. The whole thing really was paradoxical. Would you like me to tell
you about it?
Certainly
…
AMORTH:
As the various parts of the Roman Rite were gradually being reviewed in keeping
with the requests of the Second Vatican Council, we exorcists waited for Title
XII to come up, the Rite of Exorcism. But it was evidently not considered a
thing of relevance because years passed and nothing happened. Then suddenly, on
June 4 1990, the ad interim Rite appeared to be tried out. It was a real
surprise to us that we had not been consulted beforehand even though we had our
requests all prepared well in advance of the revision of the Rite. We asked,
for example, that the prayers be reviewed to include invocations to Our Lady
that were completely lacking, and we asked for more specific prayers for
exorcism. But we had been completely cut out. We were given no possibility of
making any kind of contribution. But we were not discouraged. After all, the
text had been produced for us. And we got down to work; this also considering
that in his letter of presentation the then Pre- fect of the Congregation for
Divine Worship, Cardinal Eduardo Martínez Somalo, asked Episcopal Conferences
to let him have, within two years, their ‘advice and suggestions from the
priests who will be using the Rite’. I convened 18 exorcists from among the
world’s most expert. We scrupulously examined the text and used it. We
immediately praised the first part reassuming the Gospel foundations for
exorcism. That was the biblicaltheological area certainly not lacking in
experts. It was a new addition to the 1614 Rite, which had been composed under
Pope Paul V. At that time, after all, it was not necessary to remind people of
these principles. Everyone was familiar with them and accepted them. Today,
this addition is vital. But when we got to the practical part in our scrutiny,
the part that requires specific expertise, it was blatantly obvious that the
editors had no experience at all. We made copious observations, article by
article, and we submitted them to all parties concerned – the Congregation for
Divine Worship, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the
Episcopal Conferences, A copy was also delivered directly into the hands of the
Pope.
How were
your observations received?
AMORTH:
The reception was very cool indeed, and their effect null. We had drawn our
inspiration from the Lumen gentium, which describes the Church as ‘People of
God’. At Number 28, it speaks of the collaboration between priests and bishops
and, at Number 37, it explicitly says – in relation to the laity, moreover –
that ‘by reason of the knowledge, competence or pre-eminence which they have,
the laity are empowered – indeed sometimes obliged – to manifest their opinion
on those things which pertain to the good of the Church’. That was our case
exactly. But we had been ingenuously laboring under the illusion that the
dispositions of Vatican II had reached the Roman Congregations. Instead, we
found ourselves in front of a brick wall of rejection and scorn. The secretary
of the Congregation for Divine Worship said in a report to the Commission of
Cardinals that their only interlocutors had been bishops, not priests or
exorcists. And he added in reference to our humble attempt to help as experts
expressing their opinion: ‘We had to take account of the phenomenon of a group
of exorcists and so-called demonologists who subsequently formed an
international association and who orchestrated a campaign against the Rite’.
This was an indecent accusation. We have never orchestrated any campaign. The
Rite was designed for us and yet no competent person had been invited to join
the commissions. Surely it was logical that we would have had a contribution to
make.
Are you
saying that the new Rite is useless in the struggle against the Devil?
AMORTH:
Yes. Their intention was to arm us with a blunt sword. Some effective prayers
were cancelled, prayers with 12 centuries of history. New ineffective prayers
were written in. But, luckily at the last minute, they threw us a lifeline.
What was
that?
AMORTH:
Cardinal Jorge Medina, the new Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship,
accompanied the Rite with a Notification. It states that exorcists are obliged
to use this Rite but may still use the old one if they wish, on lodging a prior
request with the bishop. Bishops must then ask the Congregation for
authorization, which the Congregation will ‘gladly provide’, the Cardinal
writes. Gladly provide? That’s a rather strange concession …
AMORTH:
Want to know how that came about? >From an attempt by Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and again
by Cardinal Medina to introduce an article to the Rite – Number 38 at the time
– authorizing exorcists to use the previous Rite. This was an undoubted
maneuver in extremis to insure us against the great errors contained in this
definitive Rite. But this attempt by the two cardinals was thrown out. At that
point Cardinal Medina, who had grasped what was at stake, decided to give us
this lifeline in any event in the form of a separate notification.
What
consideration does the Church have of you exorcists?
AMORTH:
We are very badly treated. Our fellow priests who are given this highly
problematical task are seen as crazed fanatics. In general, they are only just
tolerated by the very bishops who appointed them.
What has
been the most blatant manifestation of this hostility?
AMORTH:
We held an international convention of exorcists near Rome and we asked to be
received by the Pope. In order not to add yet another audience to his already
long list, we asked if we might simply be received in the public audience on
the Wednesday in Saint Peter’s Square. We did not even ask to be mentioned in
his special greetings. We made our request in the regular way, as Monsignor
Paolo De Nicolò of the Prefecture of the Pontifical Household will well
remember. He welcomed our request with open arms. But the day before the
audience, the same Mon- signor De Nicolò told us – and I have to say with such
embarrassment that it was obviously not his decision – that we could not go,
that we had not been admitted. It was incredibile. Here were 150 exorcists from
the five continents, all priests appointed by their bishops in conformity with
the norms of Canon Law which state that these priests must be prayerful,
knowledgeable and of good reputation, the cream of the clergy, in short … here
they were asking to take part in a public Papal Audience and being thrown out.
Monsignor De Nicolò told me that he would ‘of course’ explain the reasons in a
letter to me. That was five years ago and I’m still waiting for the letter. It
was certainly not John Paul II who excluded us. But, that 150 priests are barred
from taking part in a public Papal Audience in Saint Peter’s Square says much
of how the exorcists of their Church are obstructed in their ministry, how much
they are frowned upon by so many of the ecclesiastical authorities.
You are
locked in daily battle with the Devil. What do you see as Satan’s greatest
success?
AMORTH:
The fact that he has managed to convince people that he does not exist. He has
almost managed it, even within the Church. We have a clergy and an Episcopate
who no longer believe in the Devil, in exorcism, in the exceptional evil the
Devil can instill, or even in the power that Jesus bestowed to cast out demons.
For three centuries the Latin Church – in contrast to the Orthodox Church and
the various Protestant professions – has almost totally abandoned the ministry
of exorcism. So because they no longer perform exorcisms, or study them, and
never having seen them, the clergy no longer believe in them. And they no
longer believe in the Devil. We have entire Episcopates trying to counter
exorcism. We have countries completely devoid of exorcists, such as Germany,
Austria, Switzerland, Spain and Portugal. This is a shameful shortfall.
You
haven’t mentioned France so is the situation there any different?
AMORTH:
The most famous French exorcist, Isidore Froc, wrote a book entitled
‘Exorcists. Who they are and what they do’. It was translated into Italian by
the Piemme publishing house and had been commissioned by the French Episcopal
Conference. This book never once says that exorcisms are performed in certain
cases and the author has said on French television on several occasions that he
has never performed an exorcism and never will. Out of about 100 French
exorcists, only five of them believe in the Devil and perform exorcisms. All
the others send people who come to them to psychiatrists. The bishops are the
first victims of this situation in the Catholic Church, whose belief that the
Devil exists is fading. Before this new Rite came out, the German Episcopate
wrote in a letter to Cardinal Ratzinger that there was no point in a new Rite
in that exorcisms should no longer be performed.
So, it’s
up to bishops to appoint exorcists?
AMORTH:
Yes, when a priest is named a bishop, he finds that an article of the Code of
Canon Law gives him authority absolute in the appointment of exorcists. The
minimum one can ask of any bishop is that he at least witness an exorcism,
given that he has to make such an important decision. Unfortunately, this is
almost never the case. But if a bishop finds himself having to address a
serious request for exorcism – one, that is, that does not involve a mental
case – and he does not provide for it, he is committing a mortal sin. And he is
responsible for all the terrible suffering that the person endures, suffering that
sometimes lasts for years or all his or her life and which the bishop could
have prevented.
Are you
saying that most of the bishops of the Catholic Church are in a state of mortal
sin?
AMORTH:
When I was a child, my old parish priest taught me that there were eight
Sacraments, the eighth being ignorance. And the eighth sacrament saves more
people than the other seven put together. To commit mortal sin implies grave
matter but also full and deliberate consent. This failure by many bishops to
help is grave matter. However, the bishops are ignorant of this so there is no
full and deliberate consent.
But is a
person’s faith still intact, which is to say, is a person’s faith still
Catholic even if he or she does not believe that the Devil exists?
AMORTH:
No. Let me tell you a story. The first time I met Father Pellegrino Ernetti, a
famous exorcist who served for 40 years in Venice, I said to him: ‘If I could
meet the Pope, I would tell him that I encounter too many bishops who do not
believe in the Devil’. The next afternoon, Father Ernetti came back to me to
tell me that, that morning, he had been received by John Paul II. ‘Your
Holiness’, he said, ‘there is an exorcist here in Rome, Father Amorth, who
would tell you if he met you that he knows too many bishops who do not believe
in the Devil’. The Pope replied bluntly: ‘Anyone who does not believe in the
Devil does not believe in the Gospel’. That was what the Pope said and I say it
again.
Again,
are you saying that many bishops and priests are not, consequently, Catholic?
AMORTH:
Let us just say that they do not believe a Gospel truth. So, if anything, I
would stop them propagating a heresy. But, to be clear about this, a person is
officially a heretic if he or she is accused of something and persists in the
error. No one today, given the situation in the Church, is accusing a bishop of
not believing in the Devil, or in demonic possession or of failing to appoint
exorcists because he does not believe. And yet I could give you the names of so
many bishops and cardinals who, on their appointment to a diocese, stripped
exorcists of their faculty to perform the rite. Or there are bishops who openly
say they don’t believe, that these are things of the past. Why is that?
Unfortunately, we have had the insidious influence of certain biblists and I
could mention some illustrious names. We who are in daily physical contact with
the ‘other world’ know that this influence is evident in numerous liturgical
reforms.
For
example?
AMORTH:
The Second Vatican Council asked that some texts be revised. Disobeying this
command, they set about re-writing them completely with no thought for the
danger of making things worse instead of better. So many rites came off badly
from this mania to throw out the old and start from scratch, as if the Church
to date had always conned us and as if only now the time had at last come of
the great geniuses, the supertheologians, the super-biblists and the
super-liturgists who know what the right thing is for the Church. This is a
lie: the last Council simply asked that the texts be revised, not destroyed.
The Rite of Exorcism, for example, should have been corrected, not re-written.
It contained prayers born of 12 centuries of experience. Before cancelling
prayers which are so old and which proved for centuries to be so effective, we
should think long and hard. But they did not. All of us exorcists in trying out
the prayers of the new ad interim Rite have proved that they are totally
ineffective. But then again, the Rite of Baptism of children came off worse,
too. It was totally re-worked so that exorcism against Satan has been all but
eliminated. Yet, this always had such great importance for the Church that it
was called the exorcism minor. Paul VI also publicly protested against this new
Rite. The new Rite of Benediction is not as good now. I read every line of it,
all of its 1,200 pages and every reference has been removed to the fact that
the Lord must protect us from Satan and the angels must protect us from attack
by the Devil. They removed all the prayers for the benediction of homes and
schools. Everything used to be blessed and protected but, today, we have no
further protection from the Devil. We no longer have any defences or even
prayers against him. Jesus himself taught us a prayer of deliverance in the Our
Father: ‘Deliver us from the Evil One’, ‘Deliver us from Satan’. This has been
erroneously translated so that we pray: ‘Deliver us from evil’. The inference
is generic evil whose origin we know nothing about. Yet, the evil we were taught
how to fight by Our Lord Jesus Christ is a real person – Satan.
You
speak from a vantage point. Do you feel that Satanism is on the rise?
AMORTH:
Yes, very much so. When faith falls away, superstition increases. To use
biblical language, I would say that one abandons God and turns to idolatry. In
modern terms I would say that one abandons God and turns to the occult. The
fearsome decline of the faith throughout Catholic Europe implies that the
people turn to occultists and clairvoyants and, meanwhile, the Satanic sects
prosper. The cult of the Devil is proclaimed to entire peoples through the
Satanic rock music of individuals like Marilyn Manson. Even children are not
immune from this assault – their comics teach them magic and Satanism. Seances
are very common, in which the dead are summoned in search of answers. Today,
people can hold seances by computer, telephone, television and recorders.
Spiritist writing is popular. They don’t even need mediums any more. This is
‘do-it-yourself’ spiritism. Surveys have found that 37 per cent of students
have played with a ouija board at least once. This is a seance proper. At a
school where I was invited to speak, the pupils told me that they even did this
during their religious instruction period with the teacher’s encouragement.
Do these
things work?
AMORTH:
There is no distinction between white and black magic. When magic works, it is
al- ways the work of the Devil. All the forms of occultism, such as mass
recourse to Eastern religious with all their esoteric connotations, are an open
door for the Devil. And so he comes in. Immediately. I had no hesitation in
saying that there was direct intervention by the Devil in the case of the nun
murdered in Chiavenna (for which three teenage girls have been charged) and in
the case of Erika and Omar, the teenagers of Novi Ligure, North Italy (Erika,
16, is currently being held in a Milan detention center on suspicion of
murdering her mother and 10-year-old brother, with the complicity of her
boyfriend, Omar, 17). Those kids were devoted to Satanism. Police in their
enquiries found that, in both these cases, these youngsters were followers of
Satan. They had Satanic books.
How does
the Devil go about seducing men and women?
AMORTH:
His strategy is monotonous. I have told him so and he admits it … He convinces
people that there is no hell, that there is no sin, just one more experience to
live. Lust, success and power are the three great passions on which the Devil
insists.
How many
cases of demonic possession have you come across?
AMORTH:
After the first hundred, I stopped counting them.
A
hundred? But that’s a lot. In your books you say that cases of possession are
rare …
AMORTH:
And they are. Many exorcists have come across cases of diabolical evil only. I,
however, inherited the ‘clientele’ of the famous exorcist, Father Candido, the
cases he had not yet resolved. Moreover, the other exorcists send the most
resistant cases to me.
And the
most difficult case you have come across?
AMORTH:
I’m dealing with it now and have been for two years. It is the case of that
girl who was blessed – though it was not a proper exorcism – by the Pope last
October in the Vatican and which made headlines. She is under attack
around-the-clock. Her torments are indescribable. Doctors and psychiatrists are
baffled by this case. The girl herself is completely lucid and very
intelligent. It is a very difficult case.
How does
one fall victim to the Devil?
AMORTH:
We can fall foul of the exceptional evils sent by the Devil for four reasons:
if it works to the good of the person (in the case of many saints); persisting
irreversibly in sin; because of a curse via the Devil; or by practising
occultism.
What
kind of phenomena are manifest during exorcisms?
AMORTH:
I remember one illiterate farmer who spoke to me only in English. I had to have
an interpreter. Some manifest superhuman strength. Some elevate so that even
several people cannot hold them down on a chair. But we refer to demonic
presence only in certain contexts.
Has the
Devil ever hurt you?
AMORTH:
When Cardinal Poletti asked me to become an exorcist I prayed to Our Lady:
‘Wrap me in your mantel and I will be safe’. I have had numerous threats from
the Devil but he has never done me any harm.
Are you
ever afraid of the Devil?
AMORTH:
Afraid of that beast? He’s the one who should be afraid of me because I work in
the name of the Lord of the world. He is only an ape of God.
Satanism
is spreading more and more. The new Rite makes it difficult to perform an exorcism.
Exorcists are prohibited from participating in a Papal Audience in Saint
Peter’s Square. What exactly is happening here?
AMORTH:
The smoke of Satan gets in everywhere, everywhere. Perhaps we were kept out of
the Papal audience because they were afraid that all those exorcists might have
cast out the legions of demons that have installed themselves in the Vatican.
You’re
joking, aren’t you?
AMORTH:
It might sound like it but I don’t think it is a joke. I have no doubt whatever
that the Devil is tempting the upper levels of the Church, above all, just as
he tempts every upper level – political and industrial.
Are you
saying that here, too, as in every war, Satan’s aim is to capture the enemy
leaders?
AMORTH:
That’s the best strategy. It has always been so and especially when the
defences of the enemy are down. Satan tries to apply this, too. But thank
heaven the Church is upheld by the Holy Spirit: ‘The gates of hell will not
stand’; this, despite the defections and despite the betrayals which should
come as no surprise to us. The first traitor was one of the apostles closest to
Jesus – Judas Iscariot. In spite of it all, the Church presses along its path.
It is upheld by the Holy Spirit and so all of the battles Satan wages can only
bring partial results. The Devil may, of course, win the battles, even
important battles, but he will never win the war.
Originally
published June 2001 30DAYS, No. 6 - 2001.
Background and further
information:
Spero
News published "The Smoke of Satan in the House of the Lord"
interview with Rome's chief exorcist, Father Gabriele Amorth written by Stefano
Maria Paci for 30Giorni, since there are various English translations of the
article floating on the internet -- and the majority of them are unapproved.
The
Spero News article is an official translation of that interview as provided by
30Giorni.
Described
as the Vatican's chief exorcist, Father Amorth has said that he has held over
50,000 exorcisms - some of those cases, he says, took only minutes, others much
longer.
Despite
Father Amorth's high number of excorcisms, most readers may be more familier
with his name in conjunction to past criticisms of Pottermania.
"Behind
Harry Potter hides the signature of the king of the darkness, the devil,"
Father Amorth has been quoted as saying. According to Father Amorth, J.K.
Rowling's books make a false distinction between black and white magic. Amorth
says that distinction "does not exist, because magic is always a turn to
the devil."
Father
Amorth has written two books: An Exorcist Tells His Story, and An Exorcist:
More Stories.
Some
readers may remember reports of Pope John Paul II in the autumn of 2000
holding an impromptu exorcism upon a 19-year old Italian woman who had flown
into a rage after an audience in St Peter's. At the time, Father Amorth
explained to the press that the young woman - who has been possessed
since she was 12 years old - had been in the front row. At the close
of the act she had begun to shout in a "cavernous" voice. Pope John
Paul II, who performed three exorcims while Pope, prayed over the
woman for a half hour, and ordered the demon to leave.
Father
Amorth, the president of the International Association of Exorcists,
said the demon refused.
Incidentally,
while Father Amorth was not present at the papal exorcism, he too had failed to
cast out the demon on the previous day with the very same girl.
According
to a Beliefnet article, Pope John Paul II was alerted to the situation as
"security personnel struggled to restrain her 'superhuman' efforts to
break free." Father Amorth is quoted in that same article as explaining
that Pope John Paul "hugged this poor little girl, tried to console her,
and promised that the next day, Thursday morning, he would celebrate his Mass
for her," Father Amorth said. Father Amorth said that after the girl
met with the pope, Bishop Danzi and he performed another exorcism that lasted
for two hours," the article noted, adding that Father Amorth said that
during that exocism the demon mocked the pope, saying, "Not even your
[church] head can send me away."
What
some people may not know, however, is that young woman continued to be seen
afterward by Father Amorth.
When
asked what was the most difficult case that he had ever come across in the 2001
interview by Stefano Maria Paci, Father Amorth answered: "I’m dealing with
it now and have been for two years. It is the case of that girl who was blessed
– though it was not a proper exorcism – by the Pope last October in the Vatican
and which made headlines. She is under attack around-the-clock. Her torments
are indescribable. Doctors and psychiatrists are baffled by this case. The girl
herself is completely lucid and very intelligent. It is a very difficult
case."
Some
readers may not be aware that following World War II, Amorth was a member of
the new Christian Democrat party. In fact, he was a a deputy in that party,
with Giulo Andreotti its leader. Andreotti went on to become seven times prime
minister of Italy, while Father Amorth turned to the church.
In an interview Gyles Brandreth of The Sunday
Telegraph, Amorth said that from the age of 15 he had known that the Church was his true
vocation. "My speciality was the Madonna. For many years I edited the
magazine Madre di Deo (Mother of God). When I hear people say, 'You Catholics
honour Mary too much,' I reply, 'We are never able to honour her enough,'"
Amorth says in that interview, before explaining how he became the Vatican's
lead exorcist.
"I knew nothing of exorcism - I had given it no thought -
until June 6, 1986 when Cardinal Poletti, the then Vicar of Rome, asked to see
me. There was a famous exorcist in Rome then, the only one, Father Candido, but
he was not well, and Cardinal Poletti told me I was to be his assistant. I
learnt everything from Father Candido. He was my great master. Quickly I
realised how much work there was to be done and how few exorcists there were to
do it. From that day, I dropped everything and dedicated myself entirely to
exorcism."
Interestingly,
Father Amorth says it is possible to sort out fakes and neurotics, from real
cases of possession.
"By their aversion to the sacrament and all things sacred. If
blessed they become furious. If confronted with the crucifix, they are
subdued." "But couldn't an hysteric imitate the symptoms?," says
in the Telegraph interview. "We can sort out the phoney ones. We look into
their eyes. As part of the exorcism, at specific times during the prayers,
holding two fingers on the patient's eyes we raise the eyelids. Almost always,
in cases of evil presence, the eyes look completely white. Even with the help
of both hands, we can barely discern whether the pupils are towards the top or
the bottom of the eye. If the pupils are looking up, the demons in possession
are scorpions. If looking down, they are serpents."
"Demons are wary of talking and must be forced to speak. When
demons are voluntarily chatty it's a trick to distract the exorcist. We must
never ask useless questions out of curiosity. We but must interrogate with
care. We always begin by asking for the demon's name."
"And does he answer?" I ask. Father Amorth nods.
"Yes, through the patient, but in a strange, unnatural voice. If it is the
Devil himself, he says 'I am Satan, or Lucifer, or Beelzebub. We ask if he is
alone or if there are others with him. Usually there are two or five, 20 or 30.
We must quantify the number. We ask when and how they entered that particular
body. We find out whether their presence is due to a spell and the specifics of
that spell.
"During the exorcism the evil may emerge in slow stages or
with sudden explosions. He does not want show himself. He will be angry and he
is strong. During one exorcism I saw a child of 11 held down by four strong
men. The child threw the men aside with ease. I was there when a boy of 10
lifted a huge, heavy table.
"Afterwards I felt the muscles in the boy's arms. He could
not have done it on his own. He had the strength of the Devil inside him.