Marco Bisceglia
Marco Bisceglia was an Italian priest, among the first Catholic activists to plead the cause of homosexuals.
Biography
Political commitment
Bisceglia was a parish priest of the Church of the Sacred Heart of Lavello, in the province of Potenza. Bisceglia had publicly adhered to liberal theology, clashing with the Catholic hierarchy for having publicly supported the law on divorce. It was not well seen by the Church and the Christian Democrats due to its non-conformism and sympathies expressed for the Italian Communist Party.Homosexual himself and favourable to the liberation of homosexual people, Bisceglia was suspended a divinis after the scandal following a deception carried out by two journalists of the right-wing weekly Il Borghese, Franco Jappelli and Bartolomeo Baldi. They passed themselves off as homosexual Catholics asking for a conscientious marriage. Bisceglia, relying on the private aspect of the rite consented and privately blessed the union, thus falling into deception.
In reality, the real objective of the two journalists, as years later declared in an interview with Piergiorgio Paterlini in his book Matrimoni, was to find a pretext to involve him in a scandal and to have the "communist priest" suspended in divinis. Bisceglia reacted to the deception by suing the two journalists, but they were acquitted, invoking the right to report.