Mercury (Hobart)

PELL’S CONVICTION GREW STRONGER

Being thrown in jail for offences he always maintained he did not commit gave Cardinal George Pell time to reflect, forgive and soften. But the experience didn’t break him, write and

- Shannon Deery Anthony Dowsley Shannon.deery@news.com.au

BEING imprisoned would be enough to break most people. Those who knew George Pell well say it made him a better person. Since his release from 13 months in solitary confinemen­t in April 2020 until his death this week, friends of Australia’s most senior churchman say he was never bitter over his imprisonme­nt.

Instead, the experience strengthen­ed his faith and conviction.

Anthony Fisher, Pell’s successor as Archbishop of Sydney, believes prison made Pell a softer man.

“Most of us don’t know the experience of being unjustly imprisoned, but we could expect it would embitter us,” he said this week.

“In his case it seemed to make him, if anything, gentler and kinder and more forgiving.

“He was a man of deep conviction­s and he stood up for them and he argued for them. What people didn’t see was there was a softer side of George Pell.

“He had a great concern for the poor, and he was constantly helping poor people in a way the world will never know about.”

Archbishop Fisher describes the Cardinal as the “greatest churchman Australia has ever produced”.

But Pell was plagued by criticism about his unrelentin­g conservati­ve views.

While he may have become softer in lieu of his prison experience, he made no apologies for his commitment to the Catholic faith.

He railed against same-sex marriage, contracept­ion and abortion, dubbing the latter “a worse moral scandal than priests sexually abusing young people”.

The public at large, and many inside the church, found his conservati­ve views unfathomab­le.

But the Cardinal was never one to be swayed by public opinion.

“The really important issue for the church is, do we teach publicly what Christ taught?” he said in an interview with EWTN News last year.

“Some of those teachings are quite unpopular. As a church leader, should you speak out on issues where you know you’re not going to get the popular vote? We have an obligation to keep presenting the teachings of Christ and the teachings of the Catholic Church.

“Our society will be deeply diminished to the extent it moves radically away from the Christian teachings on love, and service, and forgivenes­s.”

In the same interview, Pell acknowledg­ed he got things wrong.

“One mistake I think I did make, media wise, was not to project myself that showed that I was human,” he said.

“I’m not here to increase the cult of personalit­y. If I had allowed myself to be seen as somebody who didn’t always have two horns, and was totally unsympathe­tic, it might have helped the reception of my message.

“My biggest consolatio­n now, is whatever my imperfecti­ons and foolishnes­s, I haven’t thrown my life away on some nonsense cause, like just making money for myself.

“It doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of things what people think of me.”

In another interview with the BBC, Pell also admitted he could have acted with more empathy.

“That’s probably my personal style, I’m a bit old school, buttoned up, I think there are many worse things than the stoics,” he said. “What is much more important than words is what you do to help people. In the Melbourne Response in five years, we helped something like 300 people, that’s significan­t.”

The Royal Commission into Institutio­nal Response to Child Sexual Abuse was scathing of the Melbourne Response, introduced in 1996 by Pell while Archbishop of Melbourne.

The scheme was one of the Catholic Church’s first to offer redress to victims of paedophile priests.

But the commission found the scheme actually discourage­d victims from going to police, and worked to obfuscate the removal of paedophile­s within the church’s ranks.

It also released the church of any further liability but capped payments to survivors at $50,000, later increasing the maximum to $75,000.

The commission also found Cardinal Pell knew about child abuse by colleagues as early as the 1970s.

He’d also been involved in the shuffling of evil paedophile Gerald Ridsdale while working as a consultant to Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns in 1982.

The findings of the commission will forever stain his reputation.

As will the legal saga that led to his conviction, imprisonme­nt and subsequent acquittal on five child sex abuse charges.

Pell believed he was “set up” by his Vatican enemies who conspired with the mafia to have him accused of being a paedophile.

It was a conspiracy he believed until his death.

Inquiries were made as to whether witnesses were paid as the Cardinal faced the trial of his life.

At the time he was charged, he was among the most powerful Catholics, as the Vatican’s head of Secretaria­t of the Economy.

He was directed by Pope Francis to unravel years of financial corruption within the church, and Pell believed his work was central to his persecutio­n.

The Vatican’s anti-Pell camp were desperate to stop him dredging up financial misdeeds, the Cardinal believed.

Sources with impeccable

It doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of things what people think of me GEORGE PELL IN A 2022 INTERVIEW

knowledge of the Cardinal’s conspiracy became convinced themselves.

A federal investigat­ion into a Vatican funds transfer to Australia of more than $1 .1m in the same year Cardinal Pell was charged with historical sex crimes remains unresolved.

But as the Cardinal himself admitted, there wasn’t a shred of evidence to back it up.

In his darkest hours Pell relied on his personal motto to sustain him: “Be Not Afraid”.

He chose it, as is customary, when he was first called to be a bishop as a reflection of his beliefs and conviction­s.

Those close to him say the simple creed sustained him throughout his life especially in the face of increasing criticism over his conservati­sm as he rose through the ranks of the church.

Along with prayer, and daily writings that culminated in a three-volume canon of prison diaries, Pell emerged from jail a contented man.

Those diaries detail the humiliatio­n and mundane routine of prison life.

Of being stripsearc­hed by guards who thought him innocent, to his daily ritual of prayer, reading, cleaning his cell and responding to thousands of letters.

Of how he tried to pray himself to sleep after being woken while on suicide watch, and the encounter with another inmate in the “small, grotty” exercise yard.

He detailed a fastidious reading of news about his case as he prepared for his appeal, and plans to stop fighting for his innocence in a moment of desperatio­n.

And he explained an unexpected lack of animosity toward his accusers.

“I have felt more exasperate­d by one or two of the opposition lawyers and some journalist­s than with my accusers,” he wrote.

Being unable to celebrate mass remained the Cardinal’s biggest challenge to overcome.

For the first time in many decades, he faced Sundays alone without a church.

Instead, when he was able to learn to set his alarm, he turned to Mass For You At Home, broadcast at 6am, and US-based televangel­ists for his spiritual fix.

As well as the mundane aspects of prison life, Pell used his diaries to reflect on bigger issues.

Despite repeated criticisms he was indifferen­t to the broader crisis of child sexual abuse within the Catholic Church, the issue was never lost on him. “The paedophili­a crisis remains the greatest blow the Church has suffered in Australia,” he wrote just weeks after being imprisoned.

“So many terrible crimes, and so many among them horrendous.”

In a later entry, he noted “part of the paedophili­a crisis is the folly of the bishops.

“Few bishops, if any, suspected the enormity of the crisis; few, even among the experts, recognised the extent of the personal damage done to many victims.”

The Cardinal’s barrister, Robert Richter KC, said he was glad Pell did not suffer in his final days, and remembered a man with a mighty intellect and unflinchin­g faith in God.

“As an atheist I found it difficult to believe that the Cardinal was such a man of faith. It was difficult for me to understand that.

“But I came to the view he did. We had theologica­l discussion­s along the way.

“We grew to respect one another in an affectiona­te way.

“I’m sorry that he died and glad he didn’t suffer in any way.”

One mistake I think I did make ... was not to project myself that showed that I was human PELL IN THE SAME INTERVIEW

 ?? ?? Cardinal George Pell arrives in handcuffs at the County Court after being found guilty of child sex offences. Picture: David Caird
Cardinal George Pell arrives in handcuffs at the County Court after being found guilty of child sex offences. Picture: David Caird
 ?? ?? Pell with barrister Robert Richter and a strong police escort (right) exits Melbourne Magistrate­s’ Court in Melbourne in October 2017; (below) in the midst of a media scrum.
Pell with barrister Robert Richter and a strong police escort (right) exits Melbourne Magistrate­s’ Court in Melbourne in October 2017; (below) in the midst of a media scrum.
 ?? ?? Pell arrives at Melbourne Magistrate­s’ Court to face a mention hearing on historical sexual assault charges. Picture: Mark Stewart
Pell arrives at Melbourne Magistrate­s’ Court to face a mention hearing on historical sexual assault charges. Picture: Mark Stewart

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