Truro News

Church realized pedophilia problem ‘a bit late:’ pope

- By nicole Winfield

Pope Francis on Thursday acknowledg­ed the Catholic Church was “a bit late” in realizing the damage done by priests who rape and molest children, and said the decades-long practice of moving pedophiles around rather than sanctionin­g them was to blame.

Francis met Thursday for the first time with his sex abuse advisory commission, a group of outside experts named in 2014 to advise him and the Catholic Church on best practices to keep pedophiles out of the priesthood and protect children.

In his prepared remarks, Francis promised to respond with the “firmest measures possible” against sex abusers.

He said bishops and religious superiors bore “primary responsibi­lity” for keeping their flocks safe from abusive priests and would be held accountabl­e if they are negligent.

But Francis also spoke off-the-cuff, admitting the church’s response to the scandal was slow. Indeed, the Vatican for decades turned a blind eye to the problem and local bishops, rather than defrocking abusers, instead moved them from parish to parish, allowing them to abuse anew.

Part of the problem was that

under the papacy of St. John Paul II, the Vatican was reluctant to defrock young priests, even if they were abusers.

“The consciousn­ess of the church arrived a bit late, and when the consciousn­ess arrives late, the means to resolve the

problem arrive late,” Francis said. “Perhaps the old practice of moving people around, and not confrontin­g the problem, kept conscience­s asleep.”

Francis also addressed the way the Vatican was handling appeals of canonical sentences, saying he wanted to add more diocesan bishops to an appeals commission that is currently dominated by canon lawyers. He said lawyers “tend to want to lower sentences” and that he wanted the influence of diocesan bishops with experience of the problem in the field to balance it out.

“I decided to balance out this commission and also say that if abuse of a minor is proven, it’s sufficient and there’s no need for recourse. If there is proof, period. It’s definitive. Why? Not because of revulsion, but simply because the person who did this, man or woman, is sick. It’s a sickness.”

In its three years, the sex abuse commission has held educationa­l workshops in dioceses around the world, but has faced such stiff resistance to some of its proposals at the Vatican that its most prominent member, Irish abuse survivor Marie Collins, resigned in frustratio­n in March.

The commission’s statutes and membership are up for review, and it remains to be seen if survivors of abuse will be included in the new membership roster.

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston and head of the commission, told the pope that the commission had “benefited greatly” from listening to survivors, but made no mention of whether any were under considerat­ion for membership.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Pope Francis sits during a meeting with members of the Italian parliament­ary Antimafia Commission during an audience in the Clementine Hall at the Vatican.
AP PHOTO Pope Francis sits during a meeting with members of the Italian parliament­ary Antimafia Commission during an audience in the Clementine Hall at the Vatican.

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