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PULPIT & POLITICS
Catholics
and child sexual abuse It’s been
a bad month for Pope Benedict XVI and the Catholic hierarchy, and by extension
a bad month for Catholics in general. The church has been rocked by more
allegations, many of them now proven, regarding past sexual assaults by
priests on young boys and adolescents, and by news of subsequent coverups
by bishops in Ireland and Germany. These revelations follow a torrent
of similar cases in the US in the past decade, others in Austria, Switzerland,
the Netherlands and France, and still others in Canada that surfaced mostly
during the 1980s and ’90s. There are now
allegations that Pope Benedict, when he was a powerful cardinal, refused
to take action against Rev. Lawrence Murphy, an American priest who had
sexually abused as many as 200 boys, many of them deaf, in Wisconsin over
a period of 25 years. Murphy died, never seriously challenged and still
a priest, in 1998. There are other allegations that Benedict, when he
was the Archbishop of Munich in 1980, refused to discipline a priest predator
under his authority but rather had him reassigned. The Vatican, along with some cardinals, archbishops and bishops, have gone into a mode of full damage control. On Good Friday, as the pope looked on during mass, a priest who is close to him compared recent criticisms of the church to the Holocaust perpetrated upon Jewish people. He later offered a half-hearted apology in the face of withering criticism. On Easter Sunday, again with the Benedict attending at the mass, a cardinal compared criticism of the pope to what he described as the malicious gossip of women. Recently two senior cardinals appeared on Vatican Radio to talk about an anti-Catholic “hate” campaign targeting the pope because of his opposition to abortion and same sex marriage. I worked for the bishops The broad outline of events is available to anyone who watches the news or reads newspapers. I do not intend to pronounce on what Pope Benedict knew, and when, about various sexual predators when he was either an archbishop or a cardinal. I am confident that the truth will emerge. I do wish to add, however, some personal observations based upon four years in the early 1990s when I worked in the communications department for the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB). I had been fully
engrossed in researching and writing a political book in 1989-90 and had
not been following the news as carefully as usual. In preparation for
my job interview with the CCCB in Ottawa, I spent a couple of days in
a library reading both Catholic and secular newspapers and magazines.
I encountered a variety of news stories regarding allegations of sexual
assaults against young boys by the Christian Brothers at the Mount Cashel
orphanage in Newfoundland. I found only scant coverage in Catholic papers
but there was much more of it in the mainstream media. It was later discovered
that when allegations began to surface in the late 1980s, the provincial
government, the police and the church had co-operated in a coverup. Eventually
nine lay brothers were convicted of sexually and physically abusing boys.
A commission of inquiry criticized the archbishop for not taking action
and he was later to resign. I remember wondering what it was about Newfoundland
that would allow a situation such as this to occur. A more insightful
question would have been, “What is it about the church that allows
this to occur?” I got the job with the bishops and was confronted almost immediately by a controversy involving allegations of past abuse at church schools in the town of Alfred near Ottawa, and at Uxbridge near Toronto. Some of the victims set up a picket in front of the CCCB offices in Ottawa and also engaged in a peaceful protest at an annual general assembly of the bishops. Eventually, 700 former students came forward to allege abuse. Most decided to seek mediation rather than pursuing legal options. Then allegations emerged that Aboriginal children had been physically and in many cases sexually abused at residential schools where they had been forced to attend over many decades. Catholic and Protestant churches operated the schools in partnership with the Canadian government, which saw in them a method of forcibly removing children from their homes and assimilating them into the mainstream of Canadian society. The Catholic schools were usually operated by orders such as the Oblates or Jesuits and various orders of religious sisters. Hierarchy in denial I found that the
bishops were in denial about the sexual crimes committed by clergy and
seemed incapable of making prompt and transparent decisions. The hierarchy
in Newfoundland refused for months to respond to media queries about Mount
Cashel, which is an eternity in media terms. The church stonewalled and
a public narrative was born from which it has never fully recovered. Many
of the bishops feared, and in some cases loathed, the media. They were
generally older men who had received a bookish classical education and
they were especially uncomfortable with television. They were much more
at home with their own Catholic publications, which in many cases were
house organs rather than anything resembling independent media. When we received
calls at the CCCB from journalists regarding allegations or actual criminal
charges related to sexual abuse, there was rarely anyone prepared to respond
to them. The rationale was that the CCCB was not a head office for the
Canadian church but rather an organization to help bishops do some of
the things that were difficult to accomplish at the local level —
such as writing and presenting briefs to government. Bishops, according
to this line of reasoning, are appointed by the pope and answerable to
him, not to other Canadian bishops. We were to refer calls back to the
diocese or archdiocese in question. In the case of residential schools,
we were to refer queries to the religious orders. Frustrated journalists
would soon call back to say they had been rebuffed or ignored when they
made those calls. I was frustrated, too, and since the buck appeared to
stop in Rome rather than anywhere in Canada, I began to provide journalists
with a telephone number for Pope John Paul’s press secretary, a
Spaniard named Joachim Navarro-Valls. I see certain parallels between the behaviour of the hierarchy in Canada then and that of the Vatican now. Among bishops and priests, loyalty to the institution is prized above all else, even the dictates of conscience. Canadian bishops,
for example, seldom if ever spoke out publicly even if they believed that
the Vatican was making a big mistake in its position on contraception,
or on its stubborn resistance to allow use of inclusive language in the
church. This unconditional loyalty to the institution made it difficult
for the hierarchy to acknowledge the innocent victims of sexual abuse
because it would have been perceived as an admission of weakness and guilt,
and as such a betrayal of the church. A new and dispiriting defence also began to take hold. According to this logic, it was only a small percentage of clerics who had engaged in sexual abuse — an argument that I believe to be true. Their number, it was said, was roughly comparable in percentage terms to that of people in other occupations, yet priests and the church were being singled out for much harsher criticism than those other people. I found this an unfortunate comparison for two reasons. It played into the easy tendency to see anti-Catholicism and persecution of the church in every criticism and question, another parallel to what has recently been emanating from Rome. Secondly, the church had, throughout history, claimed that its leaders were divinely inspired and that as an institution it was perfect and could not err. Indeed, that was old theology which did not square with a much more modest tone adopted by the world’s bishops at Vatican II in the 1960s. Most Catholics today are likely more comfortable with a church which is prepared to be humbler and to admit to its weaknesses. From Pain to Hope To its credit, the CCCB did overcome resistance and a variety of barriers to appoint a task force investigating a wide range of issues and problems related to sexual abuse by clergy. The subsequent report, called From Pain to Hope, was issued in 1992. It provided guidelines to assist dioceses in dealing with allegations and cases of abuse, looked at better methods of screening candidates to the priesthood for sexual maturity, and recommended better training and formation in seminaries. Significantly,
the task force called upon church officials to respect civil laws and
collaborate fully with civil authorities in sexual abuse inquiries. This
is precisely what the church had not done in virtually all circumstances
previously, whether in Canada, the US, Ireland or Germany — and
what the Vatican still seems unprepared to do even now. The CCCB, in partnership with religious orders that had been involved with residential schools, struck another task force on that issue. There was an agonizing reluctance on the part of bishops and religious orders to admit that the church had been engaged systematically in a culturally destructive project, not to mention the sexual abuse of vulnerable children. There was also a resistance to offering apologies, although they did come eventually. Yet when it came time to provide compensation to victims, Catholics dragged the process out long after other churches were ready to agree to terms. More shoes to drop? I left the CCCB
in 1994 and do not know how faithful the Canadian church has been in following
up on its protocols and promises. In observing subsequent scandals in
the US and Ireland, and now at the highest levels of the church in Rome,
I am struck by how little has been learned by the international church
from the earlier experience in Canada. I am surprised, as well, at how
little real repentance there appears to in Rome for crimes that were committed
against defenceless children. It is true that most of the assaults that we are hearing about today happened years ago. In Canada the number of new cases has fallen off dramatically, but unsettling questions remain for the broader church. Recently, attention
has focused on Ireland, one of the most traditionally Catholic countries
of Europe. Will there soon be another shoe to drop in Asia, Africa, or
Latin America? If so, can we trust church officials to respond with transparency
and with the interest of victims uppermost in mind? Let’s hope so,
but given the Vatican’s performance in the past few weeks we have
at least some reason to be skeptical. Gruending is an Ottawa-based writer and a former member of Parliament. His blog can be found at http://www.dennisgruending.ca/pulpitandpolitics |
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