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Austen Ivereigh (born 25 March 1966) is a UK-based Catholic journalist, author, commentator and biographer of Pope Francis. [1]
Ivereigh formerly served as deputy editor of The Tablet and later director for public affairs of the former Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor. Ivereigh travelled with the archbishop to Rome for the 2005 papal conclave.
In 2014, Ivereigh published The Great Reformer: Francis and the Making of a Radical Pope, a biography of Pope Francis. Hugh O'Shaughnessy wrote in The Observer, "Dr Ivereigh’s exhaustive book on the first pope from the New World follows Paul Vallely’s excellent Pope Francis: Untying the Knots, in making better known the life and thoughts of this son of Italian immigrants to Buenos Aires." [2] In The Washington Post, Elizabeth Tenety wrote, "In pushing the church forward, Francis today insists that 'God is not afraid of new things' and that the complexities of human life are not necessarily black and white. 'Jorge Bergoglio’s radicalism comes from his willingness to go to the essentials, to pare back to the Gospel,' Ivereigh writes. Francis found his way to the essentials while putting in place the post-Vatican II spiritual renewal in his Jesuit order by focusing on 'poverty, holiness, missionary focus, obedience to the pope and unity.' During his time as provincial superior of the Society of Jesus in Argentina, he attempted to reorient a politically charged church culture toward the spirituality of everyday holiness." [3]
Ivereigh followed up with a second biography in 2019, Wounded Shepherd: Pope Francis and His Struggle to Convert the Catholic Church.
Ivereigh frequently appears on radio and TV programmes to comment in stories involving the Church. He is Fellow in Contemporary Church History at Campion Hall, Oxford. [4]
On 18 July 2006, Ivereigh resigned as the cardinal's director of public affairs following allegations by the Daily Mail that he had steered multiple women toward abortions. The allegations were the subject of legal proceedings initiated by Ivereigh in the High Court of Justice against Associated Newspapers Ltd.. A trial in February 2008 was inconclusive, but at the retrial in January 2009 the jury unanimously found that Ivereigh had been libelled. [5] He was awarded £30,000 in damages, and all costs, estimated at £3 million. Ivereigh said his reputation had been "comprehensively vindicated". [5] [6]
Together with Jack Valero, Austen Ivereigh headed a media group, Catholic Voices, [7] set up to respond to opposition to the visit of the Pope to the UK in 2010. [8] The organization trains people to put the Catholic Church's case in the media.
Pope John Paul II was head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State from 1978 until his death in 2005.
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Catholic Voices is a communications project to train ordinary Catholic men and women to speak on television and radio about controversial issues related to the Catholic Church. The project started in Britain in 2010 but has now spread to over 20 other countries.