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Leonardo Morizio Domínguez

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Leonardo Morizio Domínguez
Founder, Archbishop and Primate of Argentine Catholic Apostolic Church
ChurchArgentine Catholic Apostolic Church
Elected1971
PredecessorPosition created
Other post(s)Roman Catholic priest and military chaplain
Orders
Consecration1972
by Luigi Mascolo
Personal details
Born
DenominationIndependent Catholic, formerly Judaism and Roman Catholicism

Leonardo Morizio Domínguez was an Argentine former Roman Catholic priest who was the first archbishop and primate of the Argentine Catholic Apostolic Church (ICAA), an independent Catholic Church in Argentina.

Biography

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Morizio was born in Argentina, converted to Catholicism from Judaism, and was ordained a Roman Catholic priest. He was a military chaplain during the 1960s but came to disagree with the positions of the Vatican, and sought consecration from Bishops of the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church (ICAB), setting up a similar organization in Argentina.[1]

Morizio separated from the Catholic Church and founded ICAA in Buenos Aires in 1971.[2] He was consecrated as archbishop and primate in 1972 by Luigi Mascolo, an ICAB bishop.[3] Morizio later consecrated the author and polemicist Pedro Ruiz Badanelli as bishop in 1973 and José Eugenio Tenca Rusconi as bishop in 1983.[4]

Morizio was associated with the right wing of Peronism and José López Rega's attempt to create a national church of Argentina.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Rodríguez, José Carlos García [in Spanish] (2008). Pedro Badanelli, la sotana española de Perón (in Spanish). Jose Carlos Garcia Rodrigue. p. 154. ISBN 9788493629304. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
  2. ^ Jarvis, Edward (2018). God, Land & Freedom: the true story of ICAB. Apocryphile Press. p. 159. ISBN 9781947826908. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  3. ^ Jarvis, Edward (2018). God, Land & Freedom: the true story of ICAB. Apocryphile Press. p. 160. ISBN 9781947826908. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  4. ^ Rodríguez, José Carlos García [in Spanish] (2008). Pedro Badanelli, la sotana española de Perón (in Spanish). Jose Carlos Garcia Rodrigue. p. 154. ISBN 9788493629304. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
  5. ^ Mendoza, Ariel Lede; Bilbao, Lucas (2016). Profeta del genocidio: El Vicariato castrense y los diarios del obispo Bonamín en la última dictadura (in Spanish). Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial Argentina. p. 434. ISBN 9789500755115. Retrieved 31 July 2017.