Speaking to Irish reporter Colm Flynn in an interview aired on the BBC World Service in May last year, Cardinal Pell said he wasn’t keen to return to Rome but Pope Francis refused to let his apartment be packed up.
“I miss my family and friends, I’ve got a very good circle of friends in Sydney but I’m in contact with them regularly,” Cardinal Pell said.
“I wasn’t keen to come back [to Rome].
“When I was in jail I asked my secretary to pack up my belongings here, especially my books and send them home.
“The word came down from on high to leave the apartment here for me when I might return.”
Cardinal Pell said Pope Francis had always been “very supportive” of him, which he was “deeply grateful” for.
When asked about his experience while imprisoned in Australia, the former third in charge of the Vatican, said it was the “humiliating” strip searches he hated the most.
“Jail is undignified, you’re at the bottom of the pit, you’re humiliated, but by and large I was treated decently,” he said.
“The worst single thing I think were the strip searches, the brief humiliating, the ignominy of it is probably the worst of it.
“I wasn’t too uncomfortable, a firm base for a bed, a hot shower and that’s very important to Australians, the food, there was too much of it.”
Cardinal Pell admitted he was “pretty ordinary” spiritually and at times he thought he may have to wait until the afterlife to get justice and be vindicated of the allegations.
“If you believe there is a God, if you believe that ultimately all things will be well, that ultimately in the afterlife there will be peace and harmony and justice, if you really believe that, [it doesn’t] matter what terrible thing might happen to you here,” he said.
“It is still terrible but it’s not like a Greek tragedy where for the Greeks there was no afterlife, there’s no possibility of fixing it up, that’s not a Christian perspective.
“I was always absolutely determined to fight [the allegations] because I was innocent … and to work hard to get the truth out.
“I think the good Lord realised spiritually I’m pretty ordinary so I wasn’t subjected, I wasn’t tempted to despair, I never felt I was on the edge of an abyss, I always realised that God was active.”
When acquitting Cardinal Pell of the charges in April last year, the bench of the High Court found there was “a significant possibility that an innocent person” had been convicted “because the evidence did not establish guilt to the requisite standard of proof”.
- With NCA NewsWire