Brazilian nun is removed and generates stamped in monastery: ‘Nothing was real’
In December 2022, they launched a prosecco -a type of sparkling wine -with a monastery label. A month later, the first anonymous complaint came to the Vatican and, for Aline, was no coincidence. “The Abbot criticized the media exhibition, but being against it does not make something illegal,” he argues.
In addition to wine, Aline also introduced products linked to the Amazon rainforest, leading Brazil to the center of the mission and creating bridges with the outside world. All this, she says, without violating the rules of enclosure.
After two years and four months in 2024, the monastery underwent eight inspections by the Vatican to investigate the young Abbess, accused of manipulating his subordinates and decisive disability. However, no report was shared with her, who also claims to have no access to the right of defense. The commissioning was decided by the dicursium of consecrated life. The Vatican, however, does not detail these decisions.
Unlike the information released by Lepori himself, who stated in a press release that the monastery had been commissioned since January 2023, the first commissioning occurred only in January 2024. At the time, the Friar himself was appointed as a commissioner. Subsequently, he was taken from office, leading Aline to believe that the complaints had been filed.
Months later, after a new apostolic visit led by a psychologist, Aline, then weakened by other health issues, heard that her pain was “psychological.” “I cried in pain, and she (psychologist) said I cried because I didn’t want to be abbess anymore,” he said. For the nun, however, this episode was another attempt to invalidate his leadership with personal arguments, without discussing the concrete transformations he promoted in the monastery.
