They Said the Virgin Mary Appeared. The Vatican Is Finally Weighing In.

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Europe|They Said the Virgin Mary Appeared. The Vatican Is Finally Weighing In.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/19/world/europe/medjugorje-virgin-mary-vatican.html

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After decades, and controversy, the Vatican has authorized public worship at a shrine in Bosnia, where a once tranquil village has become a major pilgrimage site.

Roughly 30 people in casual clothes standing or kneeling around an outdoor statue of the Virgin Mary that overlooks a green area and the town in the distance.
Catholic pilgrims gathered in 2015 above the Bosnian village of Medjugorje to pray to the Virgin Mary.Credit...Ziyah Gafic for The New York Times

Sept. 19, 2024Updated 6:19 a.m. ET

In June 1981, six children between the ages of 10 and 16 claimed that the Virgin Mary had appeared to them on a stony hilltop near the village of Medjugorje, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The children said she had shared messages of peace and prayer with them.

The visionaries, as the group became known, say that the Virgin has been returning to Medjugorje (pronounced mehd-JOO-gor-ee-yeh) ever since. Their claim has drawn millions of the faithful from around the world, transforming the once tranquil farming village into a major pilgrimage site.

From the outset, though, the alleged apparitions have polarized Roman Catholic opinion. Millions of believers say they have found spiritual solace in Medjugorje, with dozens of reports of miraculous healings, conversions and religious callings. Others dismiss the sightings as a hoax, in part because they have continued so long and occurred with clockwork regularity.

After years of commissions, analyses and pronouncements from the Vatican and local officials, the Vatican issued a document on Thursday “to conclude a long and complex history that has surrounded the spiritual phenomena of Medjugorje.”

Acknowledging the “positive encouragement for their Christian life” that many pilgrims receive at Medjugorje, the Vatican has decided to authorize public worship there.

But the document, signed by Víctor Manuel Fernández, the head of the Vatican’s doctrine office, stressed that its decision was not meant to verify the presence of a supernatural phenomenon at the site.


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