Third secret of Tunguska?

This one is fairly simple, may have been posted before.
I've seen a few posts regarding ATLs where the Tunguska meteor hit St. Petersburg or London, and the resultant chaos. What if another slammed into the crowd at Fatima? The children had been praying to the Virgin, prayers that had convinced the faithful and unsettled the local clergy and even government. Whatever the three children had seen or heard, and they never would recant, what if this last gathering was answered by the ghastly coincidence of, not so much a dancing sun, but a real fireball falling out of the sky, right onto the crowd?
The press and authorities had been alerted, many would have been curious to see what, if anything, was going to happen. Would this be considered the Wrath of God? Remember, WW1 was going on at the time, and the children had already been noted for their prayers and prophecy.
 
Devout Catholics would put a supernatural spin on it. Maybe something like Satan attacking the crowd for their devotion to God.

Militantly anti-Catholic protestants would also go for a supernatural spin, but with God punishing the crowd for their pagan idolatry.

Rationalists and anti-clerics would just see it as a coincidence, but one that proves the futility of religion. Because the peasants' devotion to God obviously didn't save them from celestial carnage.

Everyone else would just see it as a coincidence, of no philosophical import.

It might, though, give a more urgent kick to Marian devotion already underway among Catholics, and some people might try to exploit it for right-wing political ends. I'm not sure when the message about "Russia spreading her errors throughout the world" was conveyed, but the dramatic events might give that a more inflammable connotation.

But I think the church hierarchy would realize it was just a ill-placed meteor, and try to stifle any wild-eyed political exploitation of the incident. An emotionally-charged movement like that could easily get out of hand, and lead to populist challenges to central church authority.
 
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