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Turtle conservancy. Its hard to generalize. In the case of the plow share tortoise it comes from a tiny geography, theres maybe a few hundred left in the world. Its rarer than a panda bear. And these animals tend to slip through the cracks and so what im trying to do is protect it in the wild and weve hired guards and done a number of things. I dont know if its working. We also work on breeding in the madagascar. Rose is that working . That is working. Rose we conclude with garry wills, he is the author of a new book called why priests . A failed tradition. He also talks about the Roman Catholic church today and the election of a new pope. Nt i would not say get rid of priests because theyre very Good Community brothers in christ let them teach, let them study bible, let laymen do it, too. But dont say they are the exclusive channels of grace. Dont say well theres no sense coming to church if a priest isnt there to consecrate. Dont say im the only person who can forgive your sin, i, the priest. The priesthood in that sense is very divisive, very often punitive. Rose Madeleine Albright, eric goode and garry wills when we continue. Captioning sponsored by Rose Communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. Rose Madeleine Albright is here. She was secretary of state from 1997 to 2001. Her approach to American Foreign policy was marked by a muscular commitment to the ideal of democracy. Her story began in far away lands, she was born in czechoslovakia before the start of world war ii. She looks back at her childhood in her latest book called prague winter a personal story of remembrance and war. The paper back version is just out. I am pleased to have her on this program. Welcome. Wonderful to visit you. Thank you. Rose you told me about this wonderful organization that you have started which is called which is all about the former Foreign Ministers around the world. Its sponsored by aspin, its the aspin Foreign Ministers forum we its unofficial name is madeleine and her exes. Rose laughs and we meet a couple times a year talk and share a lot of experience. I have a business, i have a Global Consulting firm and i teach at georgetown and im chairman of the board of the National Democratic institute which is something that was started in the 80s by ronald reagan. Rose tell me what you think the test in syria is. I think the test is ultimately what happens for the syrian people. Whether they will be able to live a way that they can have freedom, their Economic Life improves and that they its really about the syrian people, so thats one test. The other, frankly, charlie, is what happens in the region because partially the syria story is also a story that affects jordan and turkey and lebanon and the region generally. And its a complicated story of sectarian fighting and also a fight between the sunnis and shias so theres an awful lot of things going on there. Rose so what should the world do . I think that the world does have to have an influence on what happens. And i think that what we should all be doing is trying to figure out how to help the syrian people. How to deal with the problems of the refugees. How to make sure that this does not spread into a region thats already very complicated and i think operate multilaterally. Either with the United Nations or also with some kind of Ad Hoc Coalition and support those opposition groups that are working together to try to bring an end to what assad has been doing to them. Rose as you remember from the balkans, people used to say that history would judge the worlds outside powers badly if they did not do something. That there was a moral imperative. Is this similar . I feel that way. I think the question is what, however. And i do think that the International Powers are doing quite a lot in terms of humanitarian assistance. The United States, for instance, has provided Something Like 50 million in humanitarian assistance. Has been supporting the various groups to unite and give them recognize them, frankly. And then also try to be helpful in finding some kind of a diplomatic solution to this. I think the real issue comes down to what kind of military action and not every place is amenable to having some kind of military action. Rose is syria . In syria i think that we have to keep examining trying to figure out what can be done. I think its hard, charlie, i really do. Rose secretary of state clinton, who you worked with, panetta petraeus, all recommended we do something. And the president said no, and you say the president was right to say no and other people can ask this question how many syrians have to die before the west does something . Well, i think this has to constantly be reexamined. As i understand it, the president is looking at things again. Trying to figure out i talk about something called i made this up the doability doctrine. Rose right. Can we really make a difference . And i know some people have compared it to the we did something military in libya with nato. Very different kind of situation because the libyan army basically didnt exit. The question is whether theres value in creating a nofly zone. Whether it would really do something useful. Whether the questions i would ask is whether the Assad Military regime has been weakened so that in fact there can be a functional nofly zone. The other question i would ask is how many arms are needed there . As i understand it, there have been a provision of arms by other countries and i think it isnt just a matter of adding arms but doing something that will make it possible for the opposition groups to take power and to recognize that its over. Rose people are asking the longer you delay the more the people who are part of the rebels who do not necessarily act in american interest. Well, i think that there is the question as to whether the rebels have been penetrated by some group that is not friendly to the United States. Rose well, clearly there are people fighting on their side. I would like to see us do more. Thats im an activist, i believed it, i did hit in the balkans. I dont have access to all the material of people that are in office. I also dont quite know what it is that the secretaries and the general petraeus suggested. I do have a lot of confidence in the president and i think that he ultimately has to make a decision. What i think what is important is that they are relooking, as i understand it, as what can be done, what needs to be done. Exactly so as not to arrive at the position youre talking about. I think theyre very much aware of that. I think also secretary kerry is very interested in what is going on. Hes going generally into the region. I think he understands the issue and i think that this is an evolving situation. Rose benghazi. What happened . I think that what happened was that this was a dangerous place to be that, in fact, theres been an awful lot of testimony on this. Secretary clinton testified, secretary panetta testified that what happened was that they thought and i believe this that they thought it was a spontaneous kind of thing that then actually there were aspects of it that had been planned. I think that they have done everything they can to sort out what happened and let me just tell you, Everybody Knows me knows i loved being secretary of state except on august 7, 199. Rose exactly. When our you are embassies in kenya and tanzania were blown up. Same questions, what happened, did we know somewhat . What could we have known earlier and the truth is that i believe that everybodys instincts were try to figure out how to have safe places for our ambassadors to be. But this was not an embassy. It wasnt even a full consulate and i think that the state department and this review board has done an incredible amount to figure out what happened and it should not be i fully believe this, charlie this cannot go on being a political football. Its not a matter of the administration not turning over huge amounts of documents or being available to answer questions from the secretary on down. Rose you have the president announcing that he was going to pivot his administration toward the east and towards china and asia people including dick cheney who was sitting for an interview with me saying he worries about that because of the attention he thinks the middle east needs. Is there something risk of pivoting to china . Pivot was an unfortunate word. Rebalancing in some ways. We are an atlantic to pacific power. This might have been a joke but somebody said to me what are you going to do about west asia . I thought what is west asia . Its the middle east. So the fact that the president is now going to israel and as i understand it he may go to ramallah. So i think its not going to be any lack of attention on the middle east. Certainly secretary kerry is going and so i think we are capable of doing both. Rose what should the president hope to achieve in his visit to israel . Well, i think that what he wants to hes not going with a plan as i understand it. Rose he will have an agenda in his mind. Well, i think his agenda is obviously some Israeli Palestinian discussions but also kind of looking at what this situation is with syria, what this situation is with iran to have a facetoface discussion with our close ally the israelis and look at the area as a region and i think kind of maybe take the temperature a little bit in terms of what is doable. But as i understand it hes not going who w a plan or an american initiative. But obviously getting things going in a way where he can be listening. Rose some say they need an american plan. Well, i think theres a real problem having been there, done that, in terms of ultimately the americans could put down plans, but unless the parties buy into it nothing is going to happen. And so there has to be a way that it is in the best interests of the israelis and the palestinians to make a deal. I so believe in a twostate solution. I rose and do you think its at risk now because of demographic change and because of settlements and lots ofor things . Well, i think the demographic change actually works more towards a twostate solution because the demographic change if they were one state of israel with the the demographics dont work in favor of there being a jewish states which what the israelis are dedicated to having. So i dont think that particularly works. I do think that there is the settlements as has been said over and over again obviously makes it more complicated. Rose lets do some history, too. Okay. Rose here it is, paper back. Why did you call it prague winter . Because the story is basically about my choke slovak background and prague as the center of a lot of events that took place before and during the war. And the winter because obviously opposite of spring which is what people now think about prague in terms of the prague spring and the velvet revolution. But there were two very bad winter, very specifically. Kind of the winter of 3839 when the munich agreement took place and the nazis marched in to prague in march, 39. And the winter of 4748 when, in fact, the communist coup happened in february 48. And there were lots of attacks and various events that took place that in period and then so they were two pretty tough and cold times in the history of czechoslovakia. Rose and what would have made a difference . Well, i think in the first case what would have made a difference is czechoslovakia was a brand new country created in 1918 as a result of woodrow wilson, basically, and world war i and a country that was a functioning democracy. At the same time it was an ethnically mixed country. There werent just checks and slovaks but there were a lot of germans that lived in the northwest part and they in many ways were, i think, kind of propagandized by some people to think that they should be a part of the german rooik. And at the same time as we know hitler began to move out and saarland joined austria and czechoslovakia was the subject of discussion between the british and french and then with the germans and italians. And what should have happened is that it shouldnt have been sold down the river. Rose exactly. But do you also believe that if the west had listened to Winston Churchill earlier they could have stopped hitler in his tracks . I do. I think that Winston Churchill had said a number of very important parts about hitler. But the part that i finally understood better i mean, i grew up with munich as a continent was how tired the british and french were after world war i. They had lost a lot of people and Neville Chamberlain that i put into the category of among the most odious people did anything he could. And he also said why should we care about people in far away places with unpronounceable names. So this was some small country and they thought lets just give it away and see if we can kind of quench the appetite of hitler. And yet they basically gave away a country and it was the opening of world war ii. Rose we do have people here today in the United States after too long wars saying we have a lot of problems at home, we should fix those problems, first i obviously disagree with the end the conclusion of that but i do agree we have very Serious Problems at home. I happen to think as an internationalist we cant solve our problems at home unless we have an International Outlook because of the interconnectedness of our economies, competition and so for us to all of a sudden pull up the gangplanks and worry about ourselves alone i think will bring the kind of problems that we saw before. Nothing is a complete analogy, but i do think that there are some Lessons Learned from this. I do also believe that Many Americans do understand that we have a stake in what is happening in other countries. The part that i think we need to understand now is i believe in the strength of america. I think that we have a huge role to play in the world but i dont see why we have to do everything alone and so i very much agree with the approach of having partners where we can, in fact, help in other parts of the world together. That would be my shortest version of what i believe in and that i really do think while i understand the pain of people in this country i think only solution to resolving it is for us to be active internationally with others. Rose one question is whether thats what the rest of the world wants. Many people come here and say yes, in fact, when they talk to foreign leaders, they do not want the United States whether its asia or europe or the middle east or latin america to pull back from exercising an important role. I think the rest of the world wants to see the United States. We dont want to be the policemen of the world but there are intermediate aspects of this. We countries want us. I can tell you, charlie, from having sat around tables where people want to know what the United States will do and how we behave with others. Rose at the same time, many people also say they want to have confidence that the United States will do what it says it will do as well. I have to say what i find very sad now and this wont surprise you is the fact that we seem dysfunctional and that we are not fulfilling what we say we will do and i think that weakens america and certainly creates problems internationally for the rest of the world and for us. Rose its not only a question about our leadership but also about the Political Leadership . The country, isnt it . I think very much so. What troubles me a lot is that at this stage theres not a lot of confidence in any institutions. Its true in this country and its true internationally. So one of the things we started talking about the former Foreign Ministers, what we talk about is what can be done to restore confidence in a variety of international institutions, whether its the United Nations or nato or the European Union or asean or whatever, its going on everywhere. And we need to be more creative about working together. Rose let me ask. What influence did Zbigniew Brezezinski of v on you . A lot. He was my professor at columbia. In 196 when everybody was talking about the monolithic communism, we actually had a course on it was diverse communism. What were the different communist systems doing . Fascinating course. Completely brilliant man. Then he was my boss when i went to the National Security council. So hes had a big influence on me. We dont agree on everything but i think hes one of the truly remarkable thinkers. Rose who else is in that group of truly remarkable thinkers . I think do obviously Henry Kissinger is. Hes unique. Rose why is he unique . Because i think by the way he was very funny. He called me when i first became secretary of state and he said madeleine, you have taken away my one unique aspect which is being a refugee in the secretary of state. And i said no, henry, i dont have an accent. Rose laughs but i think he has a great kind of world view and he expresses it well and i think he has rose thats a different world view from brzezinski. Very different but i have enjoyed reading and talking to both of them. And i think that there are people out there there that have good interesting ideas. Rose but the world is changing very rapidly. Take the arab spring, whats happening in asia in terms of shifting paradigms of economic power in the last ten years. So do their ideas that were formed at an earlier time to the world we live in today . I think some of them do. Not all of them. I think some of the aspects doing kind of balancing interests and trying to figure out how to have winwin situations, i think those things do apply. Rose is that what you really want . Winwin . Dont you want i mean we win and you win and we find a solution . Exactly. And i think being involved in zero sum things is dangerous. Rose if we win you lose. Right. Obviously think some of us were raised in a completely different era but the bottom line is how do you balance historical knowledge with what is necessary now. Rose how do you find the principles that stand the test of time period. Absolutely. Rose with freedom and values and Democratic Values and that kinds of thing. I think that there are always these issues about whos a realist and whos an idealist which ive thought is a false die commie mainly because i never could decide what i was. I had said i was a realistic idealist or an idealist realist and you need both. Rose heres the headline. For a second term, idealistic obama returns. Well, what i believe is this, Foreign Policy is like a hot air balloon. You need the helium of ideal schismtoget it up and you need the ballast of realism to give it a direction. I thats why i think its a false dichotomy, you need both. Rose we may face sequester, what will it do to americas ability to conduct a wise Foreign Policy and defense policy . I think it will hurt us immensely. Clearly in defense there are already questions as to, as i understand it, general dempsey spoke about in in terms of moving an Aircraft Carrier from one part of the world to another or how we have readiness. In Foreign Policy i can tell you the Foreign Policy budget of the United States is Something Like 50 billion, not that much in the overall comparison. Yet it is needed not only to run ourm be sis and pay our ambassadors but also for program is be insfwauns paw eyre policy which other countries behave. Foreign policy is about trying to get people to change their behavior and sometimes you need a variety of assistance programs public dip loamlysy, being able to listen. So i think it will be heard. Aside from the fact as i said earlier it makes us look incompetent. I am such im a naturalized american. Nothing makes me prouder than being american but at the moment we are not presenting the right image to the world in terms of what can be done when democratic and republican when leaders that have been elected are able to come to a solution. We are looking dysfunctional. Rose this is a sharp criticism of your president. No, i think the president is doing everything he can. Up . Oh, so its just congress. I think that at this stage i truly do believe that. There is an awful lot of game playing and i think the president has offered a variety of solutions. I think he gave a great great deal speech and a state of the union and he has laid out a program and he wants to work with congress and instead there are a lot of arguments going on that i think are not moving the process forward. Rose this is easy. Who is your favorite czechoslovakian hero . Well, i have to say vaclav havel. Rose i knew you were going to say that. Theres no question. Hes Thomas Gehrig masterson was obviously but i didnt know him. Did i think i would become friends with vaclav havel . We became very, very goods friends and there had been a whole period when people were looking at what was going on in central and Eastern Europe and the hung gehrings would have revolutions and the poles would have revolutions and the checks had only a small things in 1968 and then vaclav havel appears on the scene and he is somebody that kind of restored the moral authority of the country and made people feel proud of their background. He really was kind of the philosopher king and at the same time he was such a good friend. He wrote those crazy plays and we spent a lot of time together and various things in life i was one of three people that gave the eulogy in prague. The president of the czech republic, the foreign minister and i. And i gave in the czech and i just wish it hadnt been that he was dead because there was something so morally uplifting about him and such a remarkable figure. Absolutely my favorite check slovak hero. Rose thank you. This book is called prague winter my personal story of remembrance and war from 1937 to 1948. The author, Madeleine Albright, former secretary of state. Thank you, indeed. Thank you very much. Rose e. M. Forester once said one person with passion is better than 40 people merely interested. Eric goode is a man with a passion. Many know him as the owner of new York City Hotels and restaurants like the bowery hotel and the waiverly inn but he leads another life as a protector of endangered turtles and tortoises. In 2005 he opened the turtle conservancy which is devoted to the care and breeding of these threatened animals. In a recent interview on 60 minutes leslie stahl accompanied him on a trip to madagascar where the plow share tortoise is the fastest disappearing animal. This tortoise is one of the worlds most indangered animals. Its the worlds most endangered tortoise and it has an incredibly high price on its head. Asian countries love gold and this is a gold tortoise. So literally these are like good bricks that one can pick up and sell. We were following the path of t poachers take landing on a deserted beach off we went on a long hike. We walked through scrub brush in blazing heat for almost an hour. The sun starts to go up tie too high they just disapierce. Reporter the once plentiful plow share population here, he says, could be down to as few as 300 adults. This is where the guards are based. Goode has helped hire around 40 locals to go out and find the tortoises before the poachers do we have to be on the team of many people line 30s feet apart. All right, lets go. We lined up the way police do when they search for a missing person and by midday with a lot of help we got lucky. They found one. Look at that how did you ever find it . Wow, beautiful female. So this is a just a perfect perfect female. This tortoise is a crown jewel. This is a beautiful animal. Look at her you can see this incredible domed shell thats unique with this tortoise. Nothing has no turtle has this shell, like an army helmet. This is very, very valuable tortoise. Based on his own research, goode says a tortoise like this could sell for 60,000 in asia. Rose so where did this begin . My parents gave me a tortoise at the age of six. Be careful what you give your kids. I had a love affair. Rose right then. Wanted to collect more, see more. Yeah and the Natural World in general. I just had a real affinity to it and turtles and tortoises is what i gravitate to. And it just continues . It was a secret life what i led in my 30 plus years in new york city always sort of had that interest and it never disappeared. Rose what did you do . In the early 80s when i first made some money after opening a nightclub i bought some tortoises and i rose bought some . I bought them and i had them in new york city and i every chance i got to travel i would go and see them in the wild and drive girlfriends crazy. So it was always there. It never went away. Rose and today you spend a considerable part of time just trying to save them . Yeah because part of my life i think i was part of the problem because i would keep them and love to be around them and at a certain point i realized that these animals need to be in the wild and not for me to really keep them. I still struggle with that. Now im trying to make a difference. Its very difficult. Rose because . Theyve become valuable and therefore theres a premium on their head . Its case by case. In the case of the plow share tortoise, because of its longevity, because of its scarcity its extremely valuable and in asian cultures particular n particular people love it because its gold and they pay big money for this animal. Rose so what are you going to do to save it . Other than promote the idea that this is a serious issue. Extinction in general is a serious issue and i think its one that we are facing as a our world is facing it in such a massive way for a variety of reasons but one is population and one is socioeconomic reasons. But its very each species its hard to generalize. In the case of the plow share tortoise is comes from a tiny geography. Theres maybe a few hundred left in the world. Its rarer than a panda bear and these kind of animals tend to slip through the cracks and im trying to protect hit in the wild and weve hired guards and weve done a number of things. I dont know if its working and we also work on breeding it in madagascar. Rose is that working . That is working and i work alongside an Organization Called Durell Wildlife trust named after Gerald Durell and theyve done a great job of the last quarter century with that species. But its still fragile. There was a fast 1996 where they lost half of the plow share tortoises. Rose one just came in. In the middle of the night there was a theft. In europe and possibly japan in the u. S. These animals can go for many tens of thousands of dollars. Rose now the plow share tortoise was once thought to be extinct . It was once thought to be extinct as are the case with many species of turtles and tortoises. Rose then they find something that says no, theyre not all gone. They were rediscovered in 1971 but prior to 97 71 only a handful had reached the western world. The species e. E. G. I dont gofy had been contracted to a tiny range and a remote part of madagascar so it was unclear if there were any left. So so if you had unlimited resources and you may as far as i know i dont, trust me. Rose if you had more money could you do more . Absolutely, sure. When you choose to protect a species its almost like going into a war. You have to choose your battles and you have to figure out its a horrible thing to say but you have to figure out where can you make a measurable difference . In the case of the plow share tortoise i thought i could make a difference. I thought the range was so small i could get my arms around it, i could get guards, ied that resources to make it work. Theres other species where its really complicated, birds that fly and how do you protect birds of prey or other things that are so complicated. Rose give me your agenda. Good question. I at this point in my life im thrilled to be doing this and im blessed that i have the resources to do this. And i think im unique because i dont come out of the scientific world or academic world and so in some ways thats good and in some ways not so good. But in some ways its good because i approach in the a different way, a practical way, in a very resultsdriven way and an unorthodox way. And my agenda is to really make a difference and try to do a few things, not a ton of things, and try to maybe focus on a few species and turn them around. One of them is a plow share tortoise. Rose it must be i mean, the idea that what youve done for them if one of them died in your protection rose its a huge responsibility. We have some in the United States that weve brought in and thats my biggest fear. Were trying to breed them. We work in different fronts. In Southeast Asia on the trades, we work in madagascar and we work also in the u. S. In sort of a in a sense having an assurance sort of an insurance policy, i guess. Rose would this not be a problem if there were not people if they did not have value to people in terribles of commercial value . In this case, yes. By and large. Theres always other pressures. This species at this given time, thats the main threat. In the past there were fires, habitat loss, etc. , etc. But in this particular case the exotic wildlife trade is taking this species to extinction. Rose and the turtle conservancy. Yeah. Rose its all about saving the turtles conserving the turtles. Rose i think thats a lot. People ask me sometimes why dont you have a wider net, say birds, marsupials, other creatures. Rose and they all need you. Yeah, but i always go back to people like dian fossey. Not that im dian fossey, but she dedicated her life to gorillas. And you can dedicate your life to one species and it takes a lifetime so this idea that we should do multiple groups of animals is just not practical so turtles, theres 330 species of tufrts; thats a lot. So were trying to do just a few turtles. Rose you can name all of them . laughs by and large. Theres a few species probably yet to be described but yeah. Rose where are most of the turtles in the world . Many in in the u. S. , actually. People dont know that. Rose southwest . Southeast primarily. Rose really . Florida, louisiana. We have north america has a lot of turtles. But Southeast Asia is what they call a hot spot. Myanmar theres many different species, colombia in south america where you have a lot of are those governments responsive . You know, thats really a good question. Theyre in these countries myanmar, madagascar, media, the lack of political will with these kinds of lower forms of wildlife, lower forms of animals is its pervasive. I mean, you know, a tiger maybe they care about in certain cases. Or panda bear certainly in china. But when you Start Talking about birds or smaller vertebrates its very hard to get a country to care about them. Rose is there any way that they could use all those people who trade in tortoises because they have commercial value that somehow theres something that you could do some kind of legalization thing that would rose well, thats a great question because that is really thinking outside the box and its a very controversial idea to open up trade with certain species. I think its something that has to be looked at because i think there are many methods and i think its very important to keep an open mind, the idea of cutting off a rhinos horn with a chain saw. No one wants to do that, but that may save the rhino. And that sounds so horrific. The idea of having a legal trade we saw a bit of that in lesleys film, too, cutting off something, didnt we . Well, we were engraving, which is a similar defacing the tortoise so they can rose in order to be able to well, in order to hopefully reduce their value so if someone came upon one they might say, hey, we want to take this because its marked. But also rose do you think that works . We dont know, we dont know. We hope so. We hope to mark all of these animals in the wild. Rose mark them so they can survive . Mark them so they can survive. Its tragic. Youre marking an animal that might be 150 years old, this beautiful shell. This is the longestlived animal or one of the longestlived animals on the planet. The plow share tortoise. Rose how long . I would no one really knows but i would suspect at least 200 years. So to get to that size and then to come and engrave that beautiful shell, 150 year animal 2,00 years, its hardtor do. Rose how do you measure success . I would like to believe that we can preserve these things in the wild for the most part. In some cases we cant but with the plow share tortoise i think that would be the case. Rose youre doing goods work. Were trying, one step at a time. Lets see what happens. Its so important for people to get away. Rose and if they want to know more about this where do they go . Www. The turtle conservancy. Org. Rose thank you. Pope benedict xvi resigned from his post as head of the Roman Catholic church last week. He is the first phone do so in almost 600 years. Benedict stated that due to his age and health he could no longer fulfill his duty. As the vatican searches for answer and a successor, a debate over the future of the Catholic Church has resurfaced. Pope Benedict Xvis conservative approach was at odds with a church that sought to modernize. The vatican must move or in ward when many believe the religion to be in crisis. Here is cbs news correspondent allen pizzey reporting from rome. Reporter with his brief announcement in latin, benedict set a modern peres sent that ensures his successor cans take the same path. As one cardinal put it he broke a taboo. Catholics around the world reacted with surprise, some sadness but overall there was a sense that benedict had done the right thing for himself and the church. Its quite an act of humility for the pope to realize he can no longer physically and mentally discharge the duties of his author. Even as benedicts legacy is being debated, the struggle for succession has begun behind the scenes. Latin americans feel their time has come and there are several strong candidates, including Cardinal Leonardo sandri of argentina. The region is home to 42 of the worlds catholics and the church needs a bulwark against gains made by evangelical christians. Africa has the fastestgrowing catholic population. Ghanaian Cardinal Peter turkson, whos only 64, tops many lists to be the first black pope. The strongest european candidate may be italian cardinal anglo scola. North america has a potential frontrunner in the form of canadian Cardinal Mark ouillette. An american pope is seen as an extreme long shot, although Cardinal Timothy dolan of new york would be a popular choice. Benedicts last public appearance, major public appearance, to be to preside over the Ash Wednesday ceremonies. He cannot take part in a conclave to choose his successor but his influence will be felt in what is being seen as a battle between liberals and conservatives to chart the future of the church a loot sooner than any of them expected to have to do. Rose joining me now, garry wills, a life long scholar of religion and catholicism and author of a new book called why priests . A failed tradition. Im pleased to have garry wills back at this table. So what do you think . This everybody is fascinated by this story. Look how big this is in the new york times. Oh, yes. Well, changing a change in the church is kind of an exciting rose changing a changeless church . Yes. And everybody is very hopeful in these things that oh now well catch up on business thats long been stifled. We never do, by the way. And why would we . Hes going to be chosen by people he has chosen to be very, very loyal. Rose chosen by the cardinal he is has elevated. Yeah, and bishops, too. I mean, they wont choose him but the whole structure from the pope on down is meant to enforce all of his doctrinal and authoritarian precepts. So the idea that those people will vote to disown him, to disown what they think of as the church is really kind of quixotic ideal it always happens when a cope comes along they say now well finally get some change. Rose that was supposed to be with him, wasnt it . He was a fluke. They didnt know much about him. They didnt expect that. He was very old. They thought hed be a caretaker and he was neck in neck with i forget who now. He said we bounced around on the pen like chichi beans. They were up and down and up and down and they chose him. Of course he was also very conservative in some ways although he started out a counsel and the counsel changed. The pope didnt change, the counsel did the changes and when paul vi inherited the council he tried to put the brakes on. So the idea that a pope will be a kind of savior of the church is like hoping lucely is finally hold the football and charmly brown can kick it this time. Rose heres how people outline the debate. Number one, it is a conflict between those who want the church to narrow and stick to its traditional doctrine and those who want the church to have some kind of outreach and grew, unleash the chains of growth. Thats one debate. Yeah. Missionary and apostolic work while not changing anything doctrinally is always popular and theres no reason to think that there wont be much Energy Behind that. But the idea that once you get people the pope is supposed to teach eternal truths. Well, you cant turn eternal truths back. Its like the midas touch. You can turn it into gold but you cant reverse that. Rose right. And and so take, for instance, contraception. Catholics in general have long abandoned that. In fact, they did back in paul vi time. He had a commission of catholics that said the natural law argument makes no sense. Alfredo otobiani the head of the holy office said we cant change that. Pyus i i said that that was an eternal truth. If you use contraceptives youd sin and go to hell and if you didnt youd get seven or eleven children. But we cant go back now and say decades after, oh, we were wrong, youre not in hell, come back out. You didnt have to have those children, cancel them. So he added to the encyclical of piousxi his own. Theyre very hard to back off of so even though catholics pay no attention to that in this last election the bishops in america used contraception to oppose obama saying he was going to ensure the funding of contraceptives and youll notice more catholics voted for obama than didnt. So they were not paying attention to the bishops as they were not paying attention to the pope. But the popes not paying any attention to them, they are. And thats a long standing problem and i dont think if they have elected somebody who wanted to change that he would be attacking the entire structure around him and under him. Rose so among the people that allen pizzey has referenced from argentina, from africa, from canada from the United States from italy, are you suggesting that who is most likely to be selected . I dont care. Rose you dont care . Because of hes not going to change the structure. Rose so theres no hope for the Catholic Church . No, the Catholic Church is the people of god, not point. Thats the point of my new book. The idea that catholic cans only get grace through the papacy and the priesthood is something that goes against the gospel, that goes against church history. There were no priests in jesus time. Peter was not a priest, he was not a pope, certainly. There were no priests the word for priest is never used except once in a very weird anonymous pis to hebrews at the end of the First Century which says jesus was a priest. And there was a problem with that because he was not a he the ayes have it and only a he the ayes have it could be a priest. And he said, well, you know there was this priest named mel kiz deck, he was a priest of a canaanite god, not of the jewish god. And abraham paid tithes to mel kiz deck and aaron paid ties through the loins of his grandfather abraham and therefore that set up a line of the priesthood and jesus . S in that line. Now, thats what that letter said. It didnt say any other priests would be in that line. It said just jesus. Rose they also said yes u. S. Is was layman, didnt he . Oh, of course he was. Rose so how did the priesthood get established in the church . Well, the people who were the audience for the pis of hebrews missed the priesthood. Remember, the early christians had priests, they went to the temple. When paul comes back from travels, the head of the church . Jerusalem says you have to go to the temple and be purified. So they were all temple goers as was jesus at the outsaid. Only in seven when the temple was destroyed did the priesthood end for jews and for christians. And some christians didnt want it to end. They wanted to have priests and they wanted to have offerings, sacrifices. So the epistle to the he brews said we have a better sacrifice than the jews. They sacrificed animals, jesus sacrificed humans. Human sacrifice is not normally considered a very advanced idea in cultural history but they liked it but the idea that jesus introduced the priesthood at the last supper when he said take this and eat it, its my body and the priest now reenacts that and says this is my body, even though its a priest speaking, not jesus. But when he said that he was offering them bread and his own body was there while he was offering it. He didnt say come, eat my body. This symbol of union. But they began to argue ninth, tenth, 11th centuries well, does that mean this really is the body and blood of jesus, this host and this chalice and there are people who took all kinds of sides but the authorities declared he rhett cal every view but the one that its really there. And then aquinas came along and said we can understand this because aristotle separated substance and accidents. Theyre different. So you can have the substance of jesus and the accidents of bread and wine. Theyre different but theyre both there. The trouble is aristotle never separated them. He said you can be a white, black, big or small, a dog, but you can you cant be a dog without accidents and you cant have a whiteness without a dog so the whole thing was kind of a shell game. Rose if you could change the Catholic Church, how would you change it . Well, i would not say get rid of priests because theyre very Good Community brothers in christ let them teach, let them study the bible, let laymen do it, too, but dont say they are the exclusive channels of grace dont say theres no sense coming to church if a priest isnt there to consecrate. Dont say im the only person who can forgive your sin, i, the priest. The priesthood in that sense is very divisive, very often punitive. We saw that when some bishops said they would refuse communion to american candidates if they didnt accept church doctrine. Well, the pope used to do that. When he had political arguments with regimes he would impose interdicts and say priests cant celebrate any of the sacraments so people had to die unslichb and all of that kind of thing. Its a weapon. Rose would you allow anybody who wanted to celebrate communion in the Catholic Church celebrate communion . Sure. As long as they well, i think the really important text is in the gospel of luke. When jesus sends his december siples out on their First Mission alone and they came back and they said it went really well but we came across someone who is casting out devils in your name but he wasnt one of us and we told him to stop. He said, why did you do that . If hes doing in the my name, hes not against me. So if theyre doing it in his name, come in. Be part of the body of christ. Im looking at the last number here. What the gospels meant, what paul meant, what jesus meant, why im a catholic, saint augustines confession, papal sin, st. August city, the words that remade america. Is this your primary focus of curiosity . Well, its the yeah, its my Spiritual Life which should be peoples focus. At various times in my past when i was teaching greek or teaching American History it wasnt but it is you know this, youve made fun of me for this. I cant budge very far without quoting augustine. Rose yes, i know. He is rose and hes back in this, too. Hes my favorite thinker. Hes the one who put me down this path because he denied transsubstantiation. He said we dont eat god. We are the body of christ. It will church is. And thats why when i started looking at that i started investigating these other things. Rose have you changed in terms of spiritualism . Yeah, im much less interested in the external structures of any of the churches and more interested in the identification with christ . Yeah. And with the and with ones fellow, which is the same. With ones brothers and sisters. In the body of christ. Rose youre, what, 70 something now . 78. Rose do you think about mortality . Of course. Rose does spiritualism play a role in that . I suppose but im not thats not why i have thought of that more. Rose the book is called why priest . A failed tradition gar garry wills is a an author of many books and professor of history at northeastern. Thank you. Always a pleasure. Captioning sponsored by Rose Communications captioned by Media Access Group at wgbh access. 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