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Roman Catholic Church

 

Clergy sex abuse > Ireland

 

 

Pope: Catholic church is shamed

by ‘repugnant’ Irish child abuse

The Guardian    25 August 2018

 

 

 

 

Pope: Catholic church is shamed by ‘repugnant’ Irish child abuse

Video        The Guardian        25 August 2018

 

The Irish prime minister, Leo Varadkar,

says clerical abuse is a stain on the state

while Pope Francis says

the outrage against the church's failures is justified.

 

Both made the speeches in Dublin Castle,

as the pope made his first visit to Ireland on Saturday

 

Irish PM calls for new relationship

between church and state during pope's visit

 

YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=53&v=VRkS6VYwj64

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ireland's forgotten mixed-race child abuse victims

G    24 February 2017

 

 

 

 

Ireland's forgotten mixed-race child abuse victims

Video    The Guardian    24 February 2017

 

Rosemary Adaser

was one of many mixed-race children considered illegitimate

who was brought up in institutions run by the Catholic church

in Ireland between the 1950s and 1970s.

 

YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC_CpnwZPYM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Clergy sex abuse > Ireland        UK / USA

 

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/sep/26/
britain-reckoning-past-systemic-child-abuse-ireland-uk

 

 

 

 

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/aug/28/
religion-ireland-catholicism-abusers

 

https://www.npr.org/2018/08/27/
642187249/pope-ends-visit-to-a-disillusioned-ireland-
where-church-authority-has-declined

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/25/
world/europe/pope-francis-ireland.html

 

https://www.npr.org/2018/08/25/
640637790/the-pope-lands-in-ireland-overshadowed-by-church-scandals

 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2018/aug/25/
first-day-of-pope-francis-irish-visit-in-pictures

 

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/aug/25/
what-will-the-pope-say-now-irelands-dirty-secrets-are-out

 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/aug/25/
arrival-of-pope-francis-in-ireland-brings-mixed-emotions

 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2018/aug/25/
pope-catholic-church-is-shamed-by-repugnant-irish-child-abuse-video

 

https://www.youtube.com/
watch?time_continue=53&v=VRkS6VYwj64 - G - 25 august 2018

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/25/
world/europe/pope-francis-ireland-visit-live.html

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/23/
world/europe/francis-ireland-sexual-abuse-catholic-church.html

 

https://www.npr.org/2018/08/23/
640895815/pope-francis-to-visit-ireland-amid-church-scandals-across-the-world

 

 

 

 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2017/feb/24/irelands-
forgotten-mixed-race-child-abuse-victims-video

 

 

 

 

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/belief/2011/jul/29/
vatican-child-abuse-row-ireland

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/18/world/europe/ireland-
recalibrates-ties-to-roman-catholic-church.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pope Accepts Irish Bishop’s Resignation

in Abuse Scandal        USA        March 2010

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/world/europe/25ireland.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

bishop John Magee

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/world/europe/25ireland.html

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/mar/24/
irish-catholic-bishop-resignation-vatican

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pope’s Letter Does Little

to Assuage Irish Anger        USA        March 2010

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/22/world/europe/22ireland.html

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/21/
world/europe/21pope.html 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pope Offers Apology, Not Penalty,

for Sex Abuse Scandal        USA        March 2010

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/21/world/europe/
21pope.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pope Urges Irish Bishops to Confront Sex Abuse        USA        January 2010

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/17/world/europe/
17pope.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.mun.ca/film/image/2003f/magdalene-sisters.jpg - broken link

added 10 May 2005

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In post-independence Ireland,

thousands of women found themselves

incarcerated in church-run laundries.

 

(...)

 


These women were a diverse group:

former prostitutes, unwed mothers,

orphans, homeless women,

convicts and industrial school transfers

put in the care of the Catholic Church.

 

Nuns ran the facilities,

known as Magdalene Laundries,

on a commercial basis, doing laundry

for the state, private companies and individuals.

 

But the inmates were never paid for the work,

and all profit went to the church.

 

The first of such places opened in the 1930s,

and the last laundry in Ireland closed in 1996.

https://www.npr.org/2013/02/24/
172740950/irish-women-emerge-from-shadows-of-national-shame

 

 

https://www.npr.org/2013/02/24/
172740950/irish-women-emerge-from-shadows-of-national-shame

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Founded in the 19th century,

the Gloucester Street laundry

was one of around a dozen such businesses

run by Roman Catholic nuns

and staffed by unpaid inmate

— mostly orphan girls

or young women

who had become

pregnant outside marriage

or whose families could not

or would not support them —

who were given to the nuns

to hide them away.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/15/
world/europe/magdalene-laundries-ireland.html

 

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/15/
world/europe/magdalene-laundries-ireland.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Artane industrial school in north Dublin > victim        UK

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/nov/26/
child-abuse-ireland-catholic-church

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2020

A judicial commission of investigation

into Ireland’s mother and baby homes

has documented shocking death rates and callousness

in institutions that doubled

as orphanages and adoption agencies.    UK

 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jan/12/
report-scale-abuse-ireland-mother-baby-homes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013

 

Northern Ireland child abuse inquiry

 

Formally established by law

in January this year,

the historical inquiry

is tasked with examining

if there were "systemic failings"

by state and church

in children's homes

between 1922 and 1995

– a period spanning

more than 70 years.


Earlier this month,

the inquiry held

its third public hearing in Belfast,

where its chairman,

the former high court judge

Sir Anthony Hart,

named, for the first time,

some of the institutions under investigation,

including former children's homes

run by the Catholic church.

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/sep/25/northern-ireland-child-abuse-inquiry

 

http://www.hiainquiry.org/

 

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/sep/25/
northern-ireland-child-abuse-inquiry

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cloyne report into clerical child abuse in Ireland        July 2011

Cloyne report:

Church failed to report all abuse cases

 

http://www.justice.ie/en/JELR/Pages/Cloyne_Rpt

http://www.justice.ie/en/JELR/Cloyne_Rpt.pdf/Files/Cloyne_Rpt.pdf

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/07/14/world/europe/
14church-report.html

 

 

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jul/13/cloyne-report-child-abuse-ireland

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jul/13/irish-report-child-sex-abuse-vatican

http://www.rte.ie/news/2011/0713/303635-cloynetracker/

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-14136923

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-14143822

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14138250

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-14123730

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Report Details Abuses in Irish Reformatories        May 2009

 

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/world/2009/CICA-ExecutiveSummary.pdf

http://www.childabusecommission.ie/rpt/pdfs/

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/21/
world/europe/21ireland.html

http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/05/20/
abuse-in-ireland-one-victim-responds/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

child abuse scandals

 

Roman Catholic church in Ireland

abuse of children by clergy

from 1975 to 2004

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/04/
world/europe/04vatican.html

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/belief/2011/jul/29/
vatican-child-abuse-row-ireland

 

 

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/22/
world/europe/22ireland.html

 

 

 

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/
nov/26/ireland-church-sex-abuse

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/
dublin-archbishops-colluded-over-abuse-1828768.html

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/
irish-church-has-suffered-dramatic-fall-from-grace-1828349.html

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/nov/26/
child-abuse-ireland-catholic-church

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jh4l_CB238I - Sky News

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/27/world/europe/27ireland.html

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ireland/6663517/
Irelands-Roman-Catholic-archbishops-covered-up-abuse-to-protect-churchs-reputation.html

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/
sex-scandals-have-decimated-the-catholic-church-1828349.html

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/
church-had-immunity-to-conceal-sex-abuse-says-report-1828168.html

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/26/ireland-church-sex-abuse

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2009/may/21/catholic-abuse-ireland-ryan

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/21/world/europe/21ireland.html

 

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/world/2009/CICA-ExecutiveSummary.pdf

 

http://www.childabusecommission.ie/

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ireland/5356587/
Church-failed-to-act-on-child-sex-abuse---report.html

 

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2009/05/20/
world/international-us-ireland-church-abuse.html

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/
thousands-were-raped-in-irish-reform-schools-1687907.html

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/
timeline-of-irelands-catholic-abuse-scandals-1688363.html

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2009/may/20/ireland-catholic-schools-abuse-report

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/may/20/irish-catholic-schools-child-abuse-claims

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/may/20/irish-catholic-church-child-abuse1

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/may/20/irish-catholic-church-child-abuse

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2009/may/20/catholic-abuse-ireland

 

 

 

 

http://www.usatoday.com/news/religion/2006-10-28-pope_x.htm

 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2006/mar/09/religion.ireland

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Corpus of news articles

 

Religions, Faith > Christians >

 

Roman Catholic Church >

 

Clergy sex abuse > Ireland

 

 

 

Mary Raftery, 54, Dies;

Irish Journalist

Documented Child Abuse

 

January 12, 2012
The New York Times
By BRUCE WEBER

 

Mary Raftery, a journalist whose television documentaries exposed decades of abuse of needy children in state-sponsored, church-run schools in Ireland, prompting an apology by the prime minister and a government investigation, died on Tuesday in Dublin. She was 54.

The cause was cancer, her niece Isolde Raftery said.

Ms. Raftery uncovered the child abuse as a producer for Ireland’s national broadcasting service, RTE, and brought it to national attention in “States of Fear,” a three-part documentary series broadcast in April and May 1999. In examining the state child-care system in Ireland, the series brought to light a Dickensian network of reformatories and residential schools for poor, neglected and abandoned children known as industrial schools.

The schools, which were financed and supervised by the government and managed largely by religious orders, mainly Roman Catholic, served about 30,000 children from the 1930s to the 1990s, according to a government report in 2009.

The films, making poignant use of interviews with victims, focused on the system in midcentury and presented a horrifying litany of torments the young people suffered at the schools: beatings, semi-starvation, insufficient clothing, filthy living conditions, overwork, emotional abuse and sexual assault.

Ms. Raftery was not the first to report on the abuse. In 1970, in what was known as the Kennedy Report, a government commission deplored the mistreatment and recommended that the schools be closed. (Some of the more egregious ones were.)

Later, memoirs like “The God Squad” by Paddy Doyle and “Fear of the Collar” by Patrick Touher, as well as “Dear Daughter,” a television documentary about a woman named Christine Buckley, all bore vivid witness to the savagery visited upon children by the school authorities, including priests and nuns. In 1998, the Christian Brothers, a Catholic order that ran many of the most notorious schools in Ireland, issued a public apology to those who had been abused in their care.

The widely seen “States of Fear” was not only painstakingly researched but also comprehensive, making the powerful case that the abuse had been widespread and systemic.

“What television can do, if you get it right, is it can concentrate and focus a story at a particular time, and make people face it and make people furious,” Ms. Raftery said in a television interview in 2010. “So it was a question of constructing a series of programs that wouldn’t allow people to go back into denial again, in other words that the body of evidence would be so overwhelming that it could not be denied anymore.”

Ms. Raftery and a co-author, Eoin O’Sullivan, followed the series with a book-length adaptation of the material, “Suffer the Little Children: The Inside Story of Ireland’s Industrial Schools.”

The documentary series and the public outcry it engendered prompted the Irish prime minister, Bertie Ahern, to apologize publicly. “The government wishes to make a sincere and long overdue apology to the victims of childhood abuse for our collective failure to intervene, to detect their pain, to come to their rescue,” he said, speaking before the Irish Parliament on May 11, 1999.

His government also established the Commission to Inquire Into Child Abuse, which, after an investigation of nearly a decade, released a withering report in 2009, describing the schools’ treatment of young people in agonizing detail. Thousands of victims received compensation, though the report was criticized by victims’ advocates for not naming the abusers.

After “States of Fear,” Ms. Raftery further jolted Irish society with investigative programs like “Cardinal Secrets,” about the sexual abuse of children in the Dublin Archdiocese, and “Behind the Walls,” about Ireland’s psychiatric hospitals and the large number of people committed there by their families.

“Bringing the truth out is always a positive thing, even though it may be a painful truth,” Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of the Dublin Archdiocese said in a tribute to Ms. Raftery this week. “I believe that through her exposition of sins of the past and of the moment, that the church is a better place for children and a place which has learned many lessons.”

Mary Frances Thérèse Raftery was born in Dublin on Dec. 21, 1957. Her father, Adrian, was in the Irish foreign service, and she spent much of her childhood abroad. Though she entered the University College of Dublin to study engineering, she was derailed by an interest in journalism and never finished her degree.

Ms. Raftery was a reporter for a local weekly in Dublin and a radio critic for another newspaper before she began writing investigative pieces for Magill, a current affairs magazine. A prescient article that forecast the collapse of a powerful developer’s empire propelled her career. She worked for RTE from 1984 to 2002.

Ms. Raftery is survived by her mother, Ita; her husband, David Waddell; a son, Ben; two brothers, Adrian and Iain; and a sister, Iseult.

“She demanded attention to the stories she told,” Colm O’Gorman, executive director of Amnesty International in Ireland and the founder of One in Four, an organization that supports victims of sexual abuse, said in an interview on RTE after Ms. Raftery’s death. “And they changed Ireland. They changed our society.”

Mary Raftery, 54, Dies; Irish Journalist Documented Child Abuse,
NYT, 12.1.2012,
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/13/world/europe/
    mary-raftery-54-dies-documented-child-abuse-in-ireland.html

 

 

 

 

 

Irish Rupture With Vatican

Sets Off a Transformation

 

September 17, 2011
The New York Times
By SARAH LYALL

 

DUBLIN — Even as it remains preoccupied with its struggling economy, Ireland is in the midst of a profound transformation, as rapid as it is revolutionary: it is recalibrating its relationship to the Roman Catholic Church, an institution that has permeated almost every aspect of life here for generations.

This is still a country where abortion is against the law, where divorce became legal only in 1995, where the church runs more than 90 percent of the primary schools and where 87 percent of the population identifies itself as Catholic. But the awe, respect and fear the Vatican once commanded have given way to something new — rage, disgust and defiance — after a long series of horrific revelations about decades of abuse of children entrusted to the church’s care by a reverential populace.

While similar disclosures have tarnished the Vatican’s image in other countries, perhaps nowhere have they shaken a whole society so thoroughly or so intensely as in Ireland. And so when the normally mild-mannered prime minister, Enda Kenny, unexpectedly took the floor in Parliament this summer to criticize the church, he was giving voice not just to his own pent-up feelings, but to those of a nation.

His remarks were a ringing declaration of the supremacy of state over church, in words of outrage and indignation that had never before been used publicly by an Irish leader.

“For the first time in Ireland, a report into child sexual abuse exposed an attempt by the Holy See to frustrate an inquiry into a sovereign, democratic republic as little as three years ago, not three decades ago,” Mr. Kenny said, referring to the Cloyne Report, which detailed abuse and cover-ups by church officials in southern Ireland through 2009.

Reiterating the report’s claim that the church had encouraged bishops to ignore child-protection guidelines the bishops themselves had adopted, the prime minister attacked “the dysfunction, the disconnection, the elitism” that he said “dominate the culture of the Vatican.”

He continued: “The rape and torture of children were downplayed, or ‘managed,’ to uphold instead the primacy of the institution — its power, its standing and its reputation.” Instead of listening with humility to the heartbreaking evidence of “humiliation and betrayal,” he said, “the Vatican’s response was to parse and analyze it with the gimlet eye of a canon lawyer.”

The effect of his speech was instant and electric.

“It was a seminal moment,” said Patsy McGarry, the religious affairs correspondent for The Irish Times. “No Irish prime minister has ever talked to the Catholic Church before in this fashion. The obsequiousness of the Irish state toward the Vatican is gone. The deference is gone.”

While both sides are talking in more emollient terms now, there is no question that Mr. Kenny’s declaration deeply angered the Vatican. It immediately withdrew its ambassador from Dublin, ostensibly to help fashion the Vatican’s formal response. (The ambassador has since been reassigned to the Czech Republic.)

The position of Irish ambassador to the Vatican is currently vacant, too, and there is talk here of merging it with the ambassadorship to Italy. While government officials say the question is part of a general re-examination of the diplomatic budget, such a move would be seen as a pointed snub to the Holy See, a sovereign state to which countries generally dedicate separate embassies.

Meanwhile, in what has developed into a tit-for-tat war of words, the church’s latest formal communication with Dublin — 24 pages of densely argued prose — took issue with both the Cloyne Report and Mr. Kenny’s remarks, saying that a crucial document had been “misrepresented” by the inquiry and calling “unsubstantiated” Mr. Kenny’s assertion that the Vatican had tried to “frustrate an inquiry” into the abuse scandal.

Sympathizers with the church’s position say the Vatican made valid and nuanced points. And they say Mr. Kenny went too far. “Personally, I think it was excessive,” David Quinn, founder of the Iona Institute, a right-leaning religious advocacy group, said of the prime minister’s speech.

In an interview, Mr. Quinn said that the relationship between the Vatican and the Irish government was “at a very low ebb.” The state of affairs had not been helped by the fact that newspapers in China, he said, had written editorials using Mr. Kenny’s remarks as an argument for “why the church should be under government control.”

Mr. Kenny, who took office in March after the long-dominant Fianna Fail party imploded over the financial crisis, has been accused of opportunism by some critics. But his position as a practicing Catholic from a conservative area helped give moral weight to his speech. And his government’s feisty new tone has been met with widespread approval in a place that feels doubly betrayed: first by the abuse itself, and second by what many see as a cover-up by the church, compounded by the often opaque, legalistic language with which it defends itself.

“You can talk about the finesse of diplomatic ties and maneuverings, but what Kenny was actually saying was that you have to prioritize the victims of abuse, and you have to assert very loudly that this is a republic and civil law has to take precedence over canon law,” said Diarmaid Ferriter, professor of modern Irish history at University College Dublin.

While most people have not abandoned their religion, many seem to have abandoned the habit of practicing it. The archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin, recently estimated that only 18 percent of the Catholics in his archdiocese attended Mass every week.

The government has announced that it will introduce a package of new legislation to protect children from abuse and neglect, including a law — considered but rejected as too contentious by previous governments — that would make it mandatory to report evidence of crimes to the authorities. It has also established a group to examine how to remove half of the country’s Catholic primary schools from church control.

In a recent interview, Eamon Gilmore, Ireland’s deputy prime minister, said that Ireland had asserted its role as a “modern democracy.”

No longer would the church enjoy its previous privileges and powers as in times past, when it, with the government’s collusion, “effectively dictated the social policy of the state,” he said.

“Historically, there was a view within the Catholic Church that there was a parallel law, that they had their own system of law, and that was the law to which they were accountable,” Mr. Gilmore said. “At a minimum, that blurred the understanding of the necessity for full compliance with the law of the state.”

He added: “The Catholic Church is perfectly entitled to have its own view and its one rule and to view matters according to its own light. But this is a republic. And there is one law.”

When it comes to protecting children, Mr. Gilmore said, “Everybody in the state — irrespective of whether they’re ordinary citizens doing everyday work, or a priest or a bishop — has to comply with the law.”

 

Douglas Dalby contributed reporting.

    Irish Rupture With Vatican Sets Off a Transformation, NYT, 17.9.2011,
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/18/world/europe/
    ireland-recalibrates-ties-to-roman-catholic-church.html

 

 

 

 

 

Vatican Rebukes Ireland

Over Abuse Cases

 

September 3, 2011
The New York Times
By RACHEL DONADIO

 

VATICAN CITY — In a strong rebuke to the Irish government, the Vatican said Saturday that it had never discouraged Irish bishops from reporting the sexual abuse of minors to the police and dismissed claims that it had undermined efforts to investigate abuse as “unfounded.”

The Vatican’s statement was the latest salvo in a tense diplomatic standoff since the Irish government released a report in July accusing the Vatican of encouraging bishops to ignore guidelines requiring them to report abuse cases to civil authorities.

Days later, Prime Minister Enda Kenny assailed the Vatican as trying to block an inquiry into sexual abuse by priests and placing its interests ahead of protecting children, prompting the Vatican to recall its ambassador.

In its first public statement on the issue since then, the Vatican said Saturday that it “understands and shares the depth of public anger and frustration at the findings” of the July report, “which found expression in the speech” by Mr. Kenny. But it said both the report and the speech hinged on a “misinterpretation” of a key letter.

The Vatican also dismissed as “unfounded” a statement by the Irish Parliament that the Vatican’s intervention “contributed to the undermining of the child protection framework and guidelines of the Irish state and Irish bishops.”

The July report, the fourth in a series of scathing Irish government reports into sexual abuse by priests and evidence of a widespread cover-up, found that clergy members in the rural diocese of Cloyne had not acted on complaints against 19 priests from 1996 to as recently as 2009. The guidelines adopted by Irish bishops in 1996 required that abuse cases be reported to the police.

The report pointed a finger at Rome for encouraging bishops to ignore the reporting guidelines.

The report cited a confidential letter to the bishops of Ireland from the Vatican ambassador in 1997, in which he said that he had “serious reservations” about the child-protection guidelines, and that they violated canon law.

The Cloyne Report said that letter “effectively gave individual Irish bishops the freedom to ignore the procedures” and “gave comfort and support” to priests who “dissented from the stated Irish church policy.”

The Vatican said Saturday that the letter had been misinterpreted. Taken out of context, the Vatican statement said, the letter could generate “understandable criticism.” But the Vatican said the bishops had defined the child-protection policies as an “advisory document” and had never sought to make them legally binding by asking the Vatican to incorporate them into canon law, as bishops in the United States had done.

The Vatican added that in Ireland, bishops were “free to apply the penal measures of canon law to offending priests,” and that they had “never been impeded under canon law from reporting cases of abuse to the civil authorities.”

The Vatican also dismissed as “unsubstantiated” Mr. Kenny’s assertions that the Vatican had tried to “frustrate an inquiry” into the sexual abuse scandal. The Vatican said the Cloyne Report “contains no evidence to suggest that the Holy See meddled in the internal affairs of the Irish State, or, for that matter, was involved in the day-to-day management of Irish dioceses or religious congregations with respect to sexual abuse issues.”

Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore, who also is foreign minister, described the Vatican response as “legalistic and technical,” and said he held firm to the view that the Vatican had interfered in the affairs of a sovereign, democratic state. The 1997 letter, he said in a statement, “provided a pretext for some to avoid full cooperation with the Irish civil authorities.”

Terrance McKiernan, the president of Bishop Accountability, which monitors sexual abuse cases in the Catholic Church, said that the Vatican’s response “shows that the Vatican is still in denial.”

Irish government investigations have found that thousands of children were abused in state-run Catholic boarding schools from the 1930s to the 1990s. But dioceses often moved predatory priests to new posts where they continued to abuse children, the government found, rather than turn them over to the police.

For years, bishops worldwide have cited widespread confusion about how to discipline errant priests. In the past, some high-ranking Vatican officials said that bishops should protect priests, not police them, while others sought a balance between respect for canon law and protecting children. Only with the explosion of a new sexual abuse scandal in Europe last year has the Vatican stepped up its efforts to clarify its procedures.

The Vatican statement on Saturday also suggested that the Irish government should share the blame for the sexual abuse cases. The statement noted that Irish law still did not require mandatory reporting of suspected abuse by clergy members to the police, even though the issue was debated in the mid-1990s.

“Given that the Irish government of the day decided not to legislate on the matter, it is difficult to see how” the Vatican’s “letter to the Irish bishops, which was issued subsequently, could possibly be constructed as having somehow subverted Irish law or undermined the Irish state in its efforts to deal with the problem in question,” the Vatican said.

The Irish Parliament is now debating a controversial law that would make failure to report allegations of abuse to civil authorities punishable with jail time.

There was one part of the Vatican statement on Saturday that the Irish government did welcome.

“The Holy See is sorry and ashamed for the terrible sufferings which the victims of abuse and their families have had to endure within the Church of Jesus Christ,” the statement said, “a place where this should never happen.”

 

Douglas Dalby contributed reporting from Dublin.

    Vatican Rebukes Ireland Over Abuse Cases, NYT, 3.9.2011,
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/04/world/europe/04vatican.html

 

 

 

 

 

Amid Church Abuse Scandal,

an Office That Failed to Act

 

July 1, 2010
The New York Times
By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
and DAVID M. HALBFINGER

 

In its long struggle to grapple with sexual abuse, the Vatican often cites as a major turning point the decision in 2001 to give the office led by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger the authority to cut through a morass of bureaucracy and handle abuse cases directly.

The decision, in an apostolic letter from Pope John Paul II, earned Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, a reputation as the Vatican insider who most clearly recognized the threat the spreading sexual abuse scandals posed to the Roman Catholic Church.

But church documents and interviews with canon lawyers and bishops cast that 2001 decision and the future pope’s track record in a new and less flattering light.

The Vatican took action only after bishops from English-speaking nations became so concerned about resistance from top church officials that the Vatican convened a secret meeting to hear their complaints — an extraordinary example of prelates from across the globe collectively pressing their superiors for reform, and one that had not previously been revealed.

And the policy that resulted from that meeting, in contrast to the way it has been described by the Vatican, was not a sharp break with past practices. It was mainly a belated reaffirmation of longstanding church procedures that at least one bishop attending the meeting argued had been ignored for too long, according to church documents and interviews.

The office led by Cardinal Ratzinger, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, had actually been given authority over sexual abuse cases nearly 80 years earlier, in 1922, documents show and canon lawyers confirm. But for the two decades he was in charge of that office, the future pope never asserted that authority, failing to act even as the cases undermined the church’s credibility in the United States, Australia, Ireland and elsewhere.

Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, an outspoken auxiliary bishop emeritus from Sydney, Australia, who attended the secret meeting in 2000, said that despite numerous warnings, top Vatican officials, including Benedict, took far longer to wake up to the abuse problems than many local bishops did.

“Why did the Vatican end up so far behind the bishops out on the front line, who with all their faults, did change — they did develop,” he said. “Why was the Vatican so many years behind?”

Cardinal Ratzinger, of course, had not yet become pope, a divinely ordained office not accustomed to direction from below. John Paul, his longtime superior, often dismissed allegations of pedophilia by priests as an attack on the church by its enemies. Supporters say that Cardinal Ratzinger would have preferred to take steps earlier to stanch the damage in certain cases.

But the future pope, it is now clear, was also part of a culture of nonresponsibility, denial, legalistic foot-dragging and outright obstruction. More than any top Vatican official other than John Paul, it was Cardinal Ratzinger who might have taken decisive action in the 1990s to prevent the scandal from metastasizing in country after country, growing to such proportions that it now threatens to consume his own papacy.

As pope, Benedict has met with victims of sexual abuse three times. He belatedly reopened an investigation into the Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionaries of Christ, a powerful religious order — and a protégé of John Paul’s — and ultimately removed him from ministry. He gave American bishops greater leeway to take a tough line on abuse in the United States, and recently accepted the resignations of several bishops elsewhere. And on June 11, at an event in St. Peter’s Square meant to celebrate priests, he begged “forgiveness from God and from the persons involved” and promised to do “everything possible” to prevent future abuse.

But today the abuse crisis is still raging in the Catholic heartland of Europe: civil investigators in Belgium last week took the rare step of raiding church headquarters and the home of a former archbishop. The Vatican under Benedict is still responding to abuse by priests at its own pace, and it is being besieged by an outside world that wants it to move faster and more decisively.

Vatican officials, who declined to answer detailed questions related to Benedict’s history, say that the church will announce another round of changes to its canon laws, as it did in 2001, so that the church can improve its response to the abuse problem.

But the suggestion that more reforms are ahead is a nod to the fact that there is still widespread confusion among many bishops about how to handle allegations of abuse, and that their approaches are remarkably uneven from country to country.

National bishops’ conferences in some countries have adopted their own norms and standards. But several decades after sexual abuse by priests became a problem, Benedict has not yet instituted a universal set of rules.

 

Scandal and Confusion

The sexual abuse scandal first caught much of the world’s attention in 2002, with reports that the Boston archdiocese had been covering up for molesters for years. But the alarm bells had already been sounding for nearly two decades in many countries. In Lafayette, La., in 1984, the Rev. Gilbert Gauthé admitted to molesting 37 youngsters. In 1989, a sensational case erupted at an orphanage in the Canadian province of Newfoundland. By the mid-1990s, about 40 priests and brothers in Australia faced abuse allegations. In 1994, the Irish government was brought down when it botched the extradition of a notorious pedophile priest.

Bishops had a variety of disciplinary tools at their disposal — including the power to remove accused priests from contact with children and to suspend them from ministry altogether — that they could use without the Vatican’s direct approval.

Some used this authority to sideline abusive priests, minimizing the damage inflicted on their victims. Other bishops clearly made things worse, by shuffling abusers from one assignment to the next, never telling parishioners or reporting priests to the police.

But as court cases, financial settlements and media coverage mounted, many prelates looked to the Vatican for leadership and clarity on how to prosecute abusers under canon law and when to bring cases to the attention of the civil authorities. In the worst cases, involving serial offenders who denied culpability and resisted discipline, some bishops sought the Vatican’s guidance on how to dismiss them from the priesthood.

For this, bishops needed the Vatican’s help. Dismissing a priest is not like disbarring a lawyer or stripping a doctor of his medical license. In Catholic theology, ordaining a priest creates an indelible mark; to return him to the lay state required the approval of the pope.

Yet throughout the ’80s and ’90s, bishops who sought to penalize and dismiss abusive priests were daunted by a bewildering bureaucratic and canonical legal process, with contradicting laws and overlapping jurisdictions in Rome, according to church documents and interviews with bishops and canon lawyers.

Besides Cardinal Ratzinger’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, bishops were sending off their files on abuse cases to the Congregations for the Clergy, for Bishops, for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, and for the Evangelization of Peoples — plus the Vatican’s Secretariat of State; its appeals court, the Apostolic Signatura; and the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts.

“There was confusion everywhere,” said Archbishop Philip Edward Wilson of Adelaide, Australia.

A new Code of Canon Law issued in 1983 only muddied things further, among other things by setting a five-year statute of limitations within which abuse cases could be prosecuted.

During this period, the three dozen staff members working for Cardinal Ratzinger at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith were busy pursuing other problems. These included examining supernatural phenomena, like apparitions of the Virgin Mary, so that hoaxes did not “corrupt the faith,” according to the Rev. Brian Mulcahy, a former member of the staff. Other sections weighed requests by divorced Catholics to remarry and vetted the applications of former priests who wanted to be reinstated.

The heart of the office, though, was its doctrinal section. Cardinal Ratzinger, a German theologian appointed prefect of the congregation in 1981, aimed his renowned intellectual firepower at what he saw as “a fundamental threat to the faith of the church” — the liberation theology movement sweeping across Latin America.

As Father Gauthé was being prosecuted in Louisiana, Cardinal Ratzinger was publicly disciplining priests in Brazil and Peru for preaching that the church should work to empower the poor and oppressed, which the cardinal saw as a Marxist-inspired distortion of church doctrine. Later, he also reined in a Dutch theologian who thought lay people should be able to perform priestly functions, and an American who taught that Catholics could dissent from church teachings about abortion, birth control, divorce and homosexuality.

 

Different Focus for Cardinal

Cardinal Ratzinger also focused on reining in national bishops’ conferences, several of which, independent of Rome, had begun confronting the sexual abuse crisis and devising policies to address it in their countries. He declared that such conferences had “no theological basis” and “do not belong to the structure of the church.” Individual bishops, he reaffirmed, reigned supreme in their dioceses and reported only to the authority of the pope in Rome.

Another hint of his priorities came at a synod in 1990, when a bishop from Calgary gingerly mentioned the growing sexual abuse problem in Canada. When Cardinal Ratzinger rose to speak, however, it was of a different crisis: the diminishing image of the priesthood since the Second Vatican Council, and the “huge drop” in the numbers of priests as many resigned.

That concern — that the irrevocable commitment to the priesthood was being undermined by the exodus of priests leaving to marry or because they were simply disenchanted — had already led Cardinal Ratzinger to block the dismissal of at least one priest convicted of molestation, documents show.

“Look at it from the perspective of priestly commitment,” said the Rev. Joseph Fessio, a former student of Cardinal Ratzinger’s and founder of the conservative publishing house Ignatius Press. “You want to get married? You’re still a priest. You’re a sex offender? Well, you’re still a priest. Rome is looking at it from the objective reality of the priesthood.”

After another abuse scandal in 1992 in Fall River, Mass., bishops in the United States pressed the Vatican for an alternative to the slow and arcane canonical justice system. Without a full canonical trial, clerics accused of abuse could not be dismissed from the priesthood against their will (although a bishop could impose some restrictions short of that). In 1993, John Paul said he had heard the American bishops’ pleas and convened a joint commission of American and Vatican canonists to propose improvements.

John Paul rejected its proposal to let bishops dismiss priests using administrative procedures, without canonical trials. But he agreed to raise the age of majority to 18 from 16 for child-molestation cases. More important, he extended the statute of limitations to 10 years after the victim’s 18th birthday.

It is not known whether Cardinal Ratzinger spoke up in the internal deliberations that led to the two changes, which applied only to the United States.

But those changes clearly did not go far enough. And as the crisis steadily spread in other countries, bishops and church administrators from across the English-speaking world began meeting to compare notes on how to respond to it. After gathering on their own in 1996 and 1998, they demanded that the Curia, the Vatican’s administration, meet with them in Rome in 2000.

 

Frustrations Boil Over

The visiting bishops had reached the boiling point. After flailing about for 20 years, with little guidance from Rome, as stories about pedophile priests embroiled the church in lawsuits, shame and scandal, they had flown in to Rome from Australia, Canada, England and Wales, Ireland, New Zealand, Scotland, South Africa, the United States and the West Indies.

Many came out of frustration: the Vatican had too often thwarted bishops’ attempts to oust pedophile priests in their jurisdictions. Yet they had high hopes that they would make the case for reform. Nearly every major Vatican office was represented in the gathering, held in the same Vatican hotel that was built to house cardinals electing a new pope.

“The message we wanted to get across was: if individuals are to hide behind church law and use that law to impede the ability of bishops to discipline priests, then we have to have a new way of moving forward,” said Eamonn Walsh, auxiliary bishop of Dublin, one of 17 bishops who attended from overseas. (He was one of several Irish bishops who offered the pope their resignations last year because of the abuse scandal, but his has not been accepted.)

Yet many at the meeting grew dismayed as, over four long days in early April 2000, they heard senior Vatican officials dismiss clergy sexual abuse as a problem confined to the English-speaking world, and emphasize the need to protect the rights of accused priests over ensuring the safety of children, according to interviews with 10 church officials who attended the meeting.

Cardinal Darío Castrillón Hoyos, then the head of the Congregation for the Clergy, set the tone, playing down sexual abuse as an unavoidable fact of life, and complaining that lawyers and the media were unfairly focused on it, according to a copy of his prepared remarks. What is more, he asked, is it not contradictory for people to be so outraged by sexual abuse when society also promotes sexual liberation?

Another Vatican participant even observed that many pedophile priests had Irish surnames, a remark that offended delegates from Ireland.

“Prejudices came out,” said Bishop Robinson of Australia. “There were some very silly things said at times.”

Though disappointed, the visiting bishops were not entirely surprised.

“It wasn’t that there was bad will in Rome,” Bishop Walsh said. “They just didn’t have the firsthand experience that the dioceses were having around the world — experience with the manipulative, devious ways of the perpetrators. If the perpetrator said, ‘I didn’t do it,’ they would say, ‘He wouldn’t be telling a lie, he has to be telling the truth, and he’s innocent until proven guilty.’ ”

An exception to the prevailing attitude, several participants recalled, was Cardinal Ratzinger. He attended the sessions only intermittently and seldom spoke up. But in his only extended remarks, he made clear that he saw things differently from others in the Curia.

“The speech he gave was an analysis of the situation, the horrible nature of the crime, and that it had to be responded to promptly,” recalled Archbishop Wilson of Australia, who was at the meeting in 2000. “I felt, this guy gets it, he’s understanding the situation we’re facing. At long last, we’ll be able to move forward.”

 

Clarity Comes in a Letter

Even so, the meeting served as much to expose Cardinal Ratzinger’s inattention to the problem as it did to showcase his new attitude.

Archbishop Wilson said in an interview that during the session he had to call Vatican officials’ attention to long-ignored papal instructions, dating from 1922, and reissued in 1962, that gave Cardinal Ratzinger’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, previously known as the Holy Office, sole responsibility for deciding cases of priests accused of particularly heinous offenses: solicitation of sex during confession, homosexuality, pedophilia and bestiality.

Archbishop Wilson said he had stumbled across the old instructions as a canon law student in the early 1990s. And he eventually learned that canonists were deeply divided on whether the old instructions or the 1983 canon law — which were at odds on major points — should hold sway.

If the old instructions had prevailed, then there would be no cause for confusion among bishops across the globe: all sexual abuse cases would fall under Cardinal Ratzinger’s jurisdiction.

(The Vatican has recently insisted that Cardinal Ratzinger’s office was responsible only for cases related to priests who solicited sex in the confessional, but the 1922 instructions plainly gave his office jurisdiction over sexual abuse cases involving “youths of either sex” that did not involve violating the sacrament of confession.)

Few people in the room had any idea what Archbishop Wilson was talking about, other participants recalled. But Archbishop Wilson said he had discussed the old papal instructions with Cardinal Ratzinger’s office in the late 1990s and had been told that they indeed were the prevailing law in pedophilia cases.

Just over a year later, in May 2001, John Paul issued a confidential apostolic letter instructing that all cases of sexual abuse by priests were thenceforth to be handled by Cardinal Ratzinger’s office. The letter was called “Sacramentorum Sanctitatis Tutela,” Latin for “Safeguarding the Sanctity of the Sacraments.”

In an accompanying cover letter, Cardinal Ratzinger, who is said to have been heavily involved in drafting the main document, wrote that the 1922 and 1962 instructions that gave his office authority over sexual abuse by priests cases were “in force until now.”

The upshot of that phrase, experts say, is that Catholic bishops around the world, who had been so confused for so long about what to do about molestation cases, could and should have simply directed them to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith all along.

Bishops and canon law experts said in interviews that they could only speculate as to why the future pope had not made this clear many years earlier.

“It makes no sense to me that they were sitting on this document,” said the Rev. John P. Beal, a canon law professor at the Catholic University of America. “Why didn’t they just say, ‘Here are the norms. If you need a copy we’ll send them to you?’ ”

Nicholas P. Cafardi, a Catholic expert in canon law who is dean emeritus and professor of law at Duquesne University School of Law, said, “When it came to handling child sexual abuse by priests, our legal system fell apart.”

There was additional confusion over the statute of limitations for sexual abuse cases — or whether there even was one, given the Vatican’s reaffirmation of the 1922 and 1962 papal instructions. Many bishops had believed that they could not prosecute cases against priests because they exceeded the five-year statute of limitations enacted in 1983, effectively shielding many molesters since victims of child abuse rarely came forward until they were well into adulthood.

Mr. Cafardi, who is also the author of “Before Dallas: The U.S. Bishops’ Response to Clergy Sexual Abuse of Children,” argued that another effect of the 2001 apostolic letter was to impose a 10-year statute of limitations on pedophilia cases where, under a careful reading of canon law, none had previously applied.

“When you think how much pain could’ve been prevented, if we only had a clear understanding of our own law,” he said. “It really is a terrible irony. This did not have to happen.”

Though the apostolic letter was praised for bringing clarity to the subject, it also reaffirmed a requirement that such cases be handled with the utmost confidentiality, under the “pontifical secret” — drawing criticism from many who argued that the church remained unwilling to report abusers to civil law enforcement.

 

Reforms, but Limited Reach

After the new procedures were adopted, Cardinal Ratzinger’s office became more responsive to requests to discipline priests, said bishops who sought help from his office. But when the sexual abuse scandal erupted again, in Boston in 2002, it immediately became clear to American bishops that the new procedures were inadequate.

Meeting in Dallas in the summer of 2002, the American bishops adopted a stronger set of canonical norms requiring bishops to report all criminal allegations to the secular authorities, and to permanently remove from ministry priests facing even one credible accusation of abuse. They also sought from the Vatican a streamlined way to discipline priests that would not require a drawn-out canonical trial.

The Vatican initially rejected the American bishops’ proposed norms. A committee of American bishops and Vatican officials, including Cardinal Ratzinger’s deputy, watered down the American mandatory-reporting requirement to say only that bishops must comply with civil laws on reporting crimes, which vary widely from place to place.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith reserved for itself the power to dismiss a man from the priesthood without a full canonical trial — the kind of administrative remedy that American bishops had long been begging the Vatican to delegate to them.

Even so, the American bishops got most of what they asked for, and Cardinal Ratzinger was their advocate, said Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory, then the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

The Americans were allowed to keep their zero-tolerance provision for abusive priests, making the rules for the church in the United States far more stringent than in most of the rest of the world. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith also said it would waive the statute of limitations on a case-by-case basis if bishops asked.

Archbishop Gregory said he made 13 trips to Rome in three years, almost always meeting with Cardinal Ratzinger.

“He was extraordinarily supportive of what we were doing,” Archbishop Gregory said in an interview.

Other reforms enacted by American bishops included requiring background checks for church personnel working with children, improved screening of seminarians, training in recognizing abuse, annual compliance audits in each diocese and lay review boards to advise bishops on how to deal with abuse cases.

Those measures seem to be having an impact. Last year, according to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 513 people made allegations of sexual abuse against 346 priests or other church officials, roughly a third fewer cases than in 2008.

Yet the Vatican did not proactively apply those policies to other countries, and it is only now grappling with abuse problems elsewhere. Reports have surfaced of bishops in Chile, Brazil, India and Italy who quietly kept accused priests in ministry without informing local parishioners or prosecutors.

Benedict, now five years into his papacy, has yet to make clear if he intends to demand of bishops throughout the world — and of his own Curia — that all priests who committed abuse and bishops who abetted it must be punished.

As the crisis has mushroomed internationally this year, some cardinals in the Vatican have continued to blame the news media and label the criticism anti-Catholic persecution. Benedict himself has veered from defensiveness to contrition, saying in March that the faithful should not be intimidated by “the petty gossip of dominant opinion” — and then in May telling reporters that “the greatest persecution of the church does not come from the enemies outside, but is born from the sin in the church.”

The Vatican, moreover, has never made it mandatory for bishops around the world to report molesters to the civil authorities, or to alert parishes and communities where the abusive priests worked — information that often propels more victims to step forward. (Vatican officials caution that a reporting requirement could be dangerous in dictatorships and countries where the church is already subject to persecution.)

It was only in April that the Vatican posted “guidelines” on its Web site saying that church officials should comply with civil laws on reporting abuse. But those are recommendations, not requirements.

Today, a debate is roiling the Vatican, pitting those who see the American zero-tolerance norms as problematic because they lack due process for accused priests, against those who want to change canon law to make it easier to penalize and dismiss priests.

Where Benedict lies on this spectrum, even after nearly three decades of handling abuse cases, is still an open question.


Rachel Donadio contributed reporting from Rome.

    Amid Church Abuse Scandal, an Office That Failed to Act, NYT, 1.7.2010,
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/02/world/europe/02pope.html

 

 

 

 

 

Irish State

'colluded with religious authorities

to hide child abuse',

report says

 

May 20, 2009

From Times Online

David Sharrock,

Ireland Correspondent

 

The Irish State colluded with the religious authorities to cover up child abuse that was "endemic" in Catholic-run schools and care homes for 70 years, a devastating report concluded today.

The Child Abuse Commission catalogued sexual, physical and emotional abuse inflicted on 35,000 disadvantaged, neglected and abandoned children by both religious and lay staff over the last 70 years.

The long-awaited report of the decade-long inquiry was launched today amid controversy and recrimination, when victims were barred from a Dublin venue and police were called.

Angry exchanges took place between Commission staff and victims of abuse, who complain that no abusers will be prosecuted as a result of the inquiry.

The inquiry chairman, Justice Sean Ryan, read a short statement and refused to take questions at a press conference. His predecessor, Justice Mary Laffoy, resigned in 2003 in protest at the lack of co-operation from some state bodies.

John Walsh, an abuse victim, called the report a hatchet job that left open wounds gaping.

“The little comfort we have is the knowledge that it vindicated the victims who were raped and sexually abused,” said Mr Walsh, of the leading campaign group Irish Survivors of Child Abuse (Soca).

“I’m very angry, very bitter, and feel cheated and deceived. I would have never opened my wounds if I’d known this was going to be the end result.

“It has devastated me and will devastate most victims because there is no criminal proceedings and no accountability whatsoever.”

Judge Ryan concluded that when confronted with evidence of sex abuse, religious authorities responded by transferring the sex offenders to another location, where in many instances they were free to abuse again.

The report found: "The risk (to children) was seen by the congregations in terms of the potential scandal and bad publicity should the abuse be disclosed...

"There was evidence that such men took up teaching positions sometimes within days of receiving dispensations because of serious allegations or admissions of sexual abuse. The safety of children in general was not a consideration."

Institutions run by religious orders, including industrial and reform schools, institutions for the disabled, orphanages and ordinary day schools have been examined by the Commission over the past nine years.

Sexual abuse was endemic in boys’ schools, while in girls’ schools children were subjected to predatory abuse by male employees, visitors and while on outside placements.

Abuse was rarely reported to the State authorities but on the rare occasion the Department of Education was informed, it colluded with the religious orders in the culture of silence.

The Department generally dismissed or ignored sexual abuse complaints and never brought them to the attention of the Garda.

"At best, the abusers were moved but nothing was done about the harm done to the child. At worst, the child was blamed and seen as corrupted by the sexual activity, and was punished severely," the report stated.

Children were so badly neglected, survivors spoke of scavenging for food from waste bins and animal feed.

Unsupervised bullying in boys’ schools often left smaller, weaker children without food.

Accommodation was cold, spartan and bleak while children were often left in soiled, wet work clothes after being forced to toil for long hours outdoors in farms, the report found.

While the names of alleged individual perpetrators have not been published - except for those already convicted by the court - the inquiry produced specific findings against 216 facilities.

The Sisters of Mercy and Christian Brothers, which ran the largest number of children’s institutions, were among the long list of orders investigated.

While the chairman emphasised the willingness of some religious orders to co-operate, the 3,500-page report, running to five volumes, makes for relentlessly grim reading, chronicling the shocking conditions under which the children were held, many from infancy until reaching adulthood.

One victims' group said that it hoped the report would validate the long campaign for many to have their stories believed, and would highlight "an absolutely disgraceful episode in Irish history – we should all hang our heads in shame".

    Irish State 'colluded with religious authorities to hide child abuse', report says,
    Ts, 20.5.2009,
    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6328015.ece

 

 

 

 

 

Children suffered abuse of many types,

both physical and emotional

 

May 20, 2009
From The Times
Case study:
David Sharrock,
Ireland Correspondent

 

The life into which Patrick Walsh was born seems unimaginable in modern Ireland. “Hunger was a constant companion, we were child slaves,” he told The Times.

Mr Walsh’s story would seem straight out of a Dickens novel, yet it began as recently as 1955. “It was a different age then – you would have to compare it to Iran. Ireland was a theocratic state.”

He was two years old when he was taken to court with his two elder brothers aged 3 and 4 and a sister of six months. Their crime: their mother was in an unhappy marriage and had left her husband.

“My father denounced her because she wanted a divorce, which was illegal. We were put in the dock, charged and sentenced for ‘having a parent who does not exercise proper guardianship’.”

It was legislation introduced by Eamon de Valera in 1941 that trapped Mr Walsh and his siblings in a nightmare system until he turned 16. In law, either parent could have a child locked up but, to recover them, both parents had to make joint petition - a task made impossible by his parents’ irrevocable break.

In fact, to make matters worse, that notorious clause was struck out by the Supreme Court in Ireland in 1955. Mr Walsh has only discovered in recent years, through the Freedom of Information Act, that his mother was lied to by the Government of the day.

“For years we wouldn’t believe that she had tried to get us out, but she made numerous attempts and was told it was impossible. She had to go back to her husband if she wanted her children. “She was viewed as the guilty party by Church and State.”

Throughout his incarceration he saw his mother just once, in 1959. The next time was in 1966 when, as a clarinettist in the famous Artane Boys Band, she came to see him play in Blackpool.

“Because we were abroad, the rules were relaxed. I remember seeing this woman staring up at me from the audience, smiling. It sent a cold shiver up my spine and I asked my brother, who was also in the band, who was the woman who stared so intensely at us. After the concert we were introduced backstage.”

Contact remained highly restricted once back in Ireland. “She sent me a watch and I remember a Christian Brother coming up to me and handing me a package that had been opened and just saying, ‘This is for you’. “All post was opened and read.”

Mr Walsh’s memories of his 14 years in the “industrial school” system are grim. “There was abuse of many different types, physical and emotional. The constant hunger was par for the course but the worst was the physical aspect, the gratuitous violence of the Christian Brothers.

“They were men of real violence. When I arrived in Artane in 1963 there were 450 boys and it had a stench of violence about it. The home was also used as a detention centre for young offenders, so we were preyed upon not just by the Brothers but by feral gangs.

“The Government criminalised us, mixing innocents with some really hardened criminal types.”

With reluctance he revealed that he had also been sexually abused twice by a specific individual Christian Brother.

Mr Walsh described the system as a “marriage of convenience between Church and State: “The Church received capitation grants, which were the life-blood of the religious orders, and the children were used as the means to fill their pockets with cash. I learnt in later years that Artane would get a cheque, say for £10,000, every month from the Government.

“Of that Artane would send £8,000 to Rome. As a consequence we were badly fed and we worked 12-hour days in the fields and workshops. I was put to work in the shoe shop.”

At the age of 16, he was finally free to leave. “The system was being wound down by then and I remember, just before I left, talking to a man in the shoe shop who had worked there for 44 years and had just been made redundant.

“He said to me, ‘Listen son, we’ve just been told that all this belongs to the past, that we’re joining the Common Market and none of this is part of that bright future’. I was given ten shillings and told to go on my way.”

He left immediately for England. “It was the route for many of us, because in the eyes of people in Ireland we were tainted by where we had been. For others the memories were just too painful to endure.”

Mr Walsh built a new life in London, working in the City. “I made my way but many hundreds more fell along the way.”

Tom Hayes was committed at the age of 2 because he was born out of wedlock. He said: “I was told my mother had died when I was born but in fact she went to England and made a new life. I didn’t discover the truth until 2003.

“In my first institution, run by the Sisters of Mercy, it wasn’t too bad, apart from the hunger, cold and fear of punishment.

“But it was when I was moved to Glin, in Limerick, that I joined a system where most of the children came from a background of petty crime, and they made life for those of us who were orphans a living hell.

“Sexual abuse took place on a large scale, operated by gangs who had the protection of the Christian Brothers. After I complained to a priest outside the school about it, I was threatened with being sent to a reformatory school in Letterfrack which had an even more notorious reputation.

“It was a particularly vicious place without any sense of accountability.”

Both men said they hoped that the report would bring out the whole truth. Mr Walsh added: “We’ve had apologies from the State and some of the religious Orders but never from the hierarchy, the leaders of the Catholic Church.

“Ultimately the bishops, the Government and the cardinals in the Vatican knew what was going on. It’s an opportunity for the hierarchy to make a fulsome apology for their failure to put an end to the suffering of the children.”

Children suffered abuse of many types, both physical and emotional,
Ts, 20.5.2009,
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/
news/world/ireland/article6326754.ece

 

 

 

 

 

Pope Accepts

Irish Bishop’s Resignation

in Abuse Scandal

 

March 24, 2010
The New York Times
By RACHEL DONADIO and EAMON QUINN

 

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI on Wednesday accepted the resignation of an Irish bishop accused of mishandling allegations of sexual abuse by priests, adding to the fallout of a scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church in Ireland and throughout Europe.

The bishop, John Magee, who served as private secretary to three popes, stepped down earlier this month as head of the diocese of Cloyne, in southern Ireland, following allegations that he had not disciplined priests known to have abused children.

“As I depart, I want to offer once again my sincere apologies to any person who has been abused by any priest of the Diocese of Cloyne during my time as bishop or at any time,” Bishop Magee said in a statement on Wednesday. “To those whom I have failed in any way, or through any omission of mine have made suffer, I beg forgiveness and pardon.”

Bishop Magee’s was the first resignation since the pope last weekend released a long-awaited letter to Irish Catholics apologizing to victims of sexual abuse and expressing “shame and remorse.”

Yet Benedict’s letter did not call for any church leaders to be disciplined, feeding a growing sense of anger in Ireland, where many Catholics are calling on the country’s chief bishop, Sean Brady, to resign over his role as a young priest in the 1970s urging two children to sign secrecy agreements not to report abuse.

Benedict’s letter came after two scathing Irish government reports released last year revealed decades of systematic sex abuse of hundreds of thousands of Irish children and a widespread cover-up of the problem. The revelations have shaken the Irish church to its core; some fear it has lost a generation to the crisis.

Bishop Magee’s resignation was not unexpected, coming amid a steady drumbeat among Irish Catholics for more church leaders to step down.

Beyond Bishop Magee, four other Irish bishops named in the government reports have offered to resign, but Benedict has accepted only one of their requests.

Colm O’Gorman, founder of One In Four, a campaign group against clerical abuse, said that Bishop Magee’s resignation was “a reminder that just because the church has policies that address child protection in Ireland does not mean that it is following its own guidelines.”

Mr. O’Gorman, a survivor of sex abuse who is also an executive director of Amnesty International in Ireland, added that the bishop had resigned only after much pressure from victims groups. Mr. O’Gorman has called on the Irish government to extend its investigation to all 26 Irish dioceses.

As new revelations of sex abuse by priests continued to emerge in Benedict’s native Germany, as well as Austria and the Netherlands, Mr. O’Gorman said that the Irish crisis “has lessons for other countries confronting clerical abuse.”

In December 2008, an investigation by a church panel into abuse allegations in Cloyne found that Bishop Magee had failed to respond to charges of abuse by two priests and said that policies to protect children were severely lacking. The report set off a storm of calls for Bishop Magee’s resignation.

Bishop Magee, 73, relinquished his administrative duties last March, but had retained his title.

On Wednesday, a spokesman for the Cloyne diocese, Father Jim Killeen, said that Bishop Magee had “taken personal responsibility” for the findings of the investigative panel, the National Body for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church.

Bishop Magee has since been assisting a separate, government-sponsored investigation into Cloyne being conducted by Justice Yvonne Murphy, which last November published a damning account of priestly abuse and widespread cover-up in the Archdiocese of Dublin.

Bishop Magee will likely continue to perform pastoral work, the Cloyne diocese spokesman said.

At the Vatican, Bishop Magee was best known as the personal secretary who was among the first to find the body of Pope John Paul I, who died after a month in office in 1978. John Paul II named him bishop of Cloyne in 1987.


Rachel Donadio reported from Vatican City

and Eamon Quinn from Dublin.

Jack Healy contributed reporting from New York.

    Pope Accepts Irish Bishop’s Resignation in Abuse Scandal, NYT, 25.3.2010,
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/world/europe/25ireland.html

 

 

 

 

 

Church in Ireland

Said to Have Covered Up Abuse

 

November 26, 2009

Filed at 12:11 p.m. ET

The New York Times

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

 

DUBLIN (AP) -- Bishops of the Roman Catholic Church in Dublin covered up decades of child abuse by priests to protect the church's reputation, an expert commission reported Thursday after a three-year investigation.

Abuse victims welcomed the report on the Dublin Archdiocese's mishandling of abuse complaints against its parish priests from 1975 to 2004. It followed a parallel report published in May into five decades of rape, beatings and other cruelty committed by Catholic orders of nuns and brothers nationwide in church-run schools, children's workhouses and orphanages from the 1930s to mid-1990s.

The government said the Dublin investigation ''shows clearly that a systemic, calculated perversion of power and trust was visited on helpless and innocent children in the archdiocese.''

''The perpetrators must continue to be brought to justice, and the people of Ireland must know that this can never happen again,'' the government said, also apologizing for the state's failure to hold church authorities accountable to the law.

The 720-page report -- delivered to the government in July but released Thursday after extensive legal vetting -- analyzes the cases of 46 priests against whom 320 complaints were filed. The 46 were selected from more than 150 Dublin priests implicated in molesting or raping boys and girls since 1940.

Eleven priests convicted of child abuse are named in the report, but 33 are referred to by aliases and two have their names blacked out because their criminal cases are about to begin in Dublin courts.

The report rejected past bishops' key claim that they were ignorant of both the scale and criminality of priests' abuse of children. It documented how the Dublin Archdiocese negotiated a 1987 insurance policy for future legal costs of defending lawsuits and compensation claims.

At the time, bishops knew of at least 17 priests linked to abuse cases, the report said, and ''the taking out of insurance was an act proving knowledge of child sexual abuse as a potential major cost to the archdiocese.''

Victims appealed to the government not to let bishops retain the right to decide whether to refer abuse complaints to police.

''Never again should the Catholic Church in Ireland blame others for its own decision to reassign priests (to other parishes) who were clearly a danger to children,'' said one abuse victim, Marie Collins. She was raped by a Dublin priest as a 13-year-old hospital patient in 1960, but police and church officials declined to pursue her complaint.

Investigators spent three years poring over 60,000 previously secret Dublin church files. They were handed over by Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, a veteran Vatican diplomat appointed to Dublin in 2004 with a brief to confront the scandal. Among the files were more than 5,500 that Martin's predecessor, retired Cardinal Desmond Connell, had tried to keep locked in the archbishop's private vault.

The investigators, led by a judge and two lawyers, said that while it was not their job to confirm the scale of abuse cases, they had no doubt that the 46 priests abused many more than 320 children.

''One priest admitted to sexually abusing over 100 children, while another accepted that he had abused on a fortnightly basis during the currency of his ministry which lasted for over 25 years,'' they wrote.

Three Dublin archbishops -- John Charles McQuaid (1940-72), Dermot Ryan (1972-84) and Kevin McNamara (1985-87) -- did not tell police about clerical abuse cases, instead opting to avoid public scandals by shuttling offenders from parish to parish and even overseas to U.S. churches, the commission found.

It was not until 1995 that then-Archbishop Connell allowed police to see church files on 17 clerical abuse cases kept in a secret, locked vault, though at the time Connell had records of complaints against at least 29 priests, the report says.

Justice Minister Dermot Ahern said the state would renew efforts to prosecute more of the 46 priests in the report, as well as police officers that the investigation found colluded with church authorities to suppress complaints.

Ahern said, however, that the cover-ups reflected ''a different era where there was deference by state agencies to the church. I don't think that would happen today.''

The investigators lauded a handful of priests and mostly low-ranking police who pursued complaints and prosecutions, almost always unsuccessfully, from the 1960s to the 1980s.

Senior police officers ''clearly regarded priests as being outside their remit'' and handed ''complaints to the archdiocese instead of investigating them,'' the report said.

''A few (priests) were courageous and brought complaints to the attention of their superiors. The vast majority simply chose to turn a blind eye,'' it said.

------

On the Net:

Report, http://www.justice.ie/en/JELR/Pages/PB09000504

Church in Ireland Said to Have Covered Up Abuse,
NYT,
26.11.2009,
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/11/26
/world/AP-EU-Ireland-Catholic-Abuse.html - broken link

 

 

 

 

 

Victory for sex-abuse killer

who exposed Catholic school's

dark past

 

January 31, 2008

From The Times

David Sharrock,

Ireland Correspondent

 

Paul Gordon has waited 30 long years for justice. This week the former “pasty-faced and weak” schoolboy, who was sexually abused by a religious order who paid off his father, finally saw his tormentors sent to jail.

The sex abuse case is the latest to hit the Catholic Church in Ireland, whose moral authority has been destroyed. A government-funded compensation process has been established, involving up to 15,000 claimants at a cost of more than a billion euros.

From the mid-1960s, St John’s National School in Sligo, northwest Ireland, was a dangerous place for children. Police believe that at least 50 boys, and probably many more, were abused by religious and lay teachers.

The chairman of St John’s board of management said that he thoroughly regretted the school’s dark past. “What has occurred was terrible and the school acknowledges these terrible happenings,” Father Hever said. “We are making every effort since then, in terms of child protection, to ensure that such incidents would never happen again.”

Victim support groups demanded government action. “The question has to be asked, who was managing this school during this reign of abuse?” asked Deirdre Fitzpatrick, advocacy director of One in Four, a charity and support group for victims of sex abuse.

“As the law stands the boards of management have ultimate responsibility for child welfare, and if something goes wrong they are accountable. This loophole was highlighted two years ago and we have been calling on the Department of Education to step in and take responsibility since then.”

Martin Meaney, a former member of the Marist order, who was known as Brother Gregory during his time at St John’s, was jailed this week for two years on five sample abuse charges. Meaney, who has already served nine years of an 18-year sentence for indecent assault and rape at another school, denied that there was a paedophile ring at St John’s. When asked by police whether he was acting alone, he said: “I thought I was the only one.”

He admitted preying upon Mr Gordon. “He was a pasty-faced, weak little lad, pale and sickly and I felt sorry for him. I did feel for boys who were deprived. I did pick the weakest lad in Paul Gordon,” he said.

Mr Gordon, 44, told the trial that Meaney was one of three Marist brothers who abused him. His alcoholic and violent father would receive cash in envelopes in return for the abuse.

A fifth Marist brother and former teacher at St John’s is facing a retrial this year after his conviction was quashed on appeal.

The abuse drove Mr Gordon to kill his father in 1983 and he was jailed for eight years for manslaughter. His claims of sex abuse at St John’s were ignored. “I was basically told by a garda [police officer] that I had brought enough disgrace on my family and that my complaints would go nowhere,” he said.

Mr Gordon persisted and in 1999 a police investigation team was established and eventually uncovered the scale of sex abuse at St John’s.

In 1999 and again in 2001, the retired teacher Michael Cunnane received suspended sentences for indecently assaulting eight boys at the school. In 2005 Peter White, 74, formerly Brother Agnellus, was sentenced to three years after pleading guilty to eight sample charges of indecent assault on two boys. In the same year Patrick Curran was found guilty of indecently assaulting nine boys.

He denied 237 counts of indecent assault between 1966 and 1984, but the judge sentenced him to 12 years in prison and described him as “a determined paedophile”. He was dismissed from St John’s in 1999 after the allegations emerged.

Sentencing Meaney, the judge expressed shock that so many teachers could be “debauching their pupils” in the same school.

Victory for sex-abuse killer who exposed Catholic school's dark past,
Ts,
31.1.2008,
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/
news/world/europe/article3279349.ece

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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