Who ordered the assassination of John Paul II in 1981, for what reasons, and how did the Pope act secretly afterwards?
Welcome dear brothers!
To those who follow the work of this team daily and to those who are joining now.
Today we want to talk about the real reason why the assassination of John Paul II took place on May 13, 1981, in St. Peter’s Square.
There are elements that seem to indicate that it was an attack by the KGB, because Ali Agca had been recruited by one of its satellites in Bulgaria.
And it is possible that the KGB collaborated.
But the order came from within the Vatican, from those who wanted to cover up their schemes and were also infiltrating the Church to change it.
Benedict XVI clearly said that the main problem of the Church was the sin within it.
And this was the trigger.
Here we will make a surprising revelation about what has been hidden in the attack on John Paul II, and how the Polish pontiff dealt with it.
A plot whose beginning must be sought in the infiltration of the Church in the last century.
The Catholic Church is holy and sinful, because it is divine and human.
He is carrying out God’s Plan, although not in every single thing he does, but in the broad outlines.
Nothing bad that his vicars can do on Earth can forever distort the good fruits that he must bear.
It is a mystery how God takes events that seem bad and turns them into good.
That is why it is said that God writes straight on crooked lines.
And there is no doubt that the Church has been infiltrated.
The nature of infiltrators changed over time.
In the 19th century, there was a predominant Masonic infiltration, then a pro-communist infiltration was added, and more recently, a non-heterosexual infiltration.
The infiltration of the Second Vatican Council was so evident that in 1972, Paul VI went so far as to say that “the smoke of Satan had entered the Church.”
And one of the most significant measures he took was to get rid of Bishop Anníbale Bugnini, the architect of the liturgical reform that emerged from the Council.
It was an open secret that Bugnini was a Freemason.
Cardinal Dino Staffa took the evidence gathered by Interpol to Paul VI and told him that if he did not immediately dismiss Bugnini, he would be forced in conscience to make the news public.
Then in 1976, journalist Mino Pecorelli published a list of 116 Masons holding high positions in the Vatican after the Second Vatican Council.
He gave the name and surname of each one, the date on which he entered the lodge and his code name in it.
Paul VI had already entrusted the task of investigating Masonic infiltration in the Roman Curia to Archbishop Eduard Gagnon, who was seconded by Father Charles Murr.
But then he did not want to take action because he was sick.
And Gagnon’s dossier was passed on to his successor.
Then John Paul I declared that he wanted to carry out a purge of the Masonic prelates, but he did not go through with it because he died mysteriously 33 days into his pontificate.
That month he had advance notice.
He met with the Russian Archbishop Nikodim in the Vatican, who was to reveal to him the Illuminati plan that was already in motion, through KGB agents infiltrated in the Vatican leadership.
At the meeting, both were served coffee from the same pot.
Archbishop Nikodim took the first sip of coffee and fell dead instantly.
The official version is that Nikodim died of emotion at meeting John Paul I.
A leading figure in this infiltration was Cardinal Sebastiano Baggio, prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Bishops, who during his tenure appointed approximately 80% of the bishops at that time.
Baggio had imposed a retirement age of 75 for the episcopate, which allowed him to appoint modernist bishops around the world more quickly.
And he was the last one to see John Paul I alive.
The official version is that John Paul I died in his bed of a heart attack.
But there are those who think that the terrible argument he had with Baggio, when he wanted to dismiss him that night, may have provoked it.
Although mobster Anthony Raimondi wrote in his book When the Bullet Hits the Bone that he and Bishop Paul Marcinkus, who then headed the Vatican Bank, poisoned him.
Because the Vatican Bank had sold fake stock certificates of large American companies worth US$ 1 billion, in collusion with some lodges, and John Paul I wanted to expose it.
Gagnon’s dossier was then passed on to John Paul II, who appeared ready to take action against the fraudsters.
But in the end he decided not to act in the same way because he knew he would suffer the same fate.
He then surrounded himself with Polish priests and set about setting up an intelligence network within the Vatican.
And to return the money from the Vatican Bank scam he had the help of Opus Dei, for which he was named a Personal Prelature in gratitude.
But on May 13, 1981, an attempt was made on his life at 5:17 p.m.
All very symbolic numbers related to Fatima.
And then the Interpol services discovered that the order to Ali Agca came from the Secretariat of State, headed by Cardinal Jean Marie Villot, who was one of those who appeared as a Freemason on the Peccorelli List.
The order was: “it’s now or never.”
John Paul II did not die with the help of Our Lady of Fatima.
It is known that one nun bilocated and deflected the bullet, and another, miles away, took on the Pope’s stomach hemorrhage.
But when they went to replace his blood on the operating table, a new attack occurred.
He was given a blood transfusion with hepatitis, which caused him problems for the rest of his life.
And when John Paul II regained consciousness, those close to him say he said: “Call Monsignor Gagnon for me.”
He was in Canada and they told him: “Your tickets have been issued. Come immediately, you have to leave for Rome today.”
And when he arrived, the Pope told him: “We are going to face this.”
All this is told by parents Wander de Jesús and Charles Murr.
It is said that one of the first measures was to call Cardinal Sebastiano Baggio to relieve him of his post.
And he said to him: “Your Eminence, you are tired, but I am going to give you a little work to do.
“I want you to take charge of the stamp division of the Vatican publishing library.”
Monsignor Gagnon questioned this move: “But Holy Father, he will be here in Rome, inside the city.”
And the Pope replied: “Exactly. I want my enemies to be close, under my eyes. That way I can control them.”
He told Gagnon that a team would be completely on top of him, watching his every move.
“If it is necessary to listen to your phone calls, we will do so,” he said.
At that time, there were priests specifically trained to detect spy devices within the Vatican.
They did constant sweeps to make sure there were no eavesdroppers.
John Paul II also confronted Marcinkus and other actors involved.
And he made sure to dismantle operations and networks that were draining resources, damaging the Church’s reputation and infiltrating it with ideologies.
However, while he managed to stop some things, he did not stop others.
This is the story of the assassination attempt on John Paul II.
Well, that’s all we wanted to tell you about the hidden reason for the assassination of John Paul II, whose roots go back a long way, and how the Polish pontiff tried to straighten out the Church afterwards.
And I would like to ask you if you think that John Paul II was able to cleanse the Church of what led to the attempt on his life or not.