Otago Daily Times

‘IT’S INDEFENSIB­LE’

CATHOLIC BISHOP ASKS CITY FOR FORGIVENES­S

- CHRIS MORRIS chris.morris@odt.co.nz

THE Bishop of Dunedin has apologised to the city and asked for forgivenes­s, after admitting the Catholic Church failed to protect children from paedophile­s disguised as men of the cloth.

And, as more victims continue to come forward, he has also added his voice to growing calls for churches to be included in the Government’s upcoming Royal Commission into historic abuse.

The comments by Bishop Michael Dooley came during a widerangin­g interview, days after ODT Insight revealed more historic offending by Fr Magnus Murray and two Christian Brothers in Dunedin.

Bishop Dooley said the reports had left him shocked and with a feeling of ‘‘profound sadness’’, but he did not dispute the details.

‘‘I don’t dispute anything.’’ The publicity had already prompted ‘‘a handful’’ of previously unknown victims of Fr Murray to contact the Dunedin diocese office in recent days, he said.

They were speaking for the first time as a result of the recent ODT Insight coverage, he said.

The church also had to accept its share of the blame for the way it handled offenders, by moving them to new parishes and exposing more children to harm, Bishop Dooley said.

‘‘We didn’t do as good a job as we should. I have no problem at all in apologisin­g for the people who have suffered for the way we have handled it.

‘‘There’s no other way around it. It’s a failing,’’ he said.

His comments also followed the release of a grand jury report in Pennsylvan­ia, which showed 300 clergy abused more than 1000 children — and potentiall­y thousands more — over decades.

The global headlines had prompted a scathing letter of condemnati­on by Pope Francis to the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics on Monday, in which he condemned both the ‘‘atrocities’’ of child sex abuse and coverups by the church.

‘‘We showed no care for the little ones; we abandoned them,’’ he said.

Bishop Dooley said yesterday the offending and systemic failure highlighte­d in Pennsylvan­ia was on a different scale to that in Dunedin, but ‘‘there will be more’’ victims hidden within the Dunedin diocese.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg had responded by naming alleged offenders and announcing it would strip the names of bishops who failed to act from church properties.

Bishop Dooley said a similar course of action could follow in Dunedin, including renaming Kavanagh College, but only if an independen­t inquiry — such as the Royal Commission — found evidence to support such a move.

‘‘If it came out that there was credible evidence, then that would be a case for doing something,’’ he said.

The latest revelation­s in Dunedin had also strengthen­ed his belief churches needed to be part of the upcoming Royal Commission, he said.

An independen­t inquiry was needed to interrogat­e churches’ responses to sexual abuse and lift the ‘‘shadow’’ from them, he believed.

That had been the view of all New Zealand’s bishops since March, but ‘‘I would say it is firming up’’, he said.

‘‘There’s no use us doing it ourselves . . . we would be seen as policing ourselves.

‘‘If there’s any questions, then we do need to have a state inquiry.’’

In the meantime, Bishop Dooley said there was now a need for ‘‘healing and reconcilia­tion’’ within the Dunedin diocese.

He was considerin­g a ‘‘liturgical gathering’’ as a way of ‘‘acknowledg­ing the abuse and acknowledg­ing our failings’’.

Parishione­rs had been speaking directly to him, and to other priests across the diocese, either to vent or just to talk, he said.

‘‘There’s been support — people coming up and saying ‘We know you’re going through a tough time’ — but there’s also people who want the church to be transparen­t, and to deal with it in a just way.’’

The fallout had been felt by the diocese’s priests as well, he said.

‘‘It’s been bad,’’ Bishop

Dooley said.

‘‘It’s probably the one issue that’s had the most impact on the morale of priests, because it’s indefensib­le. You can’t defend it, the abuse of minors, of children.’’

❛ If there’s any questions, then we do need to have a state inquiry Bishop Dooley on need to include churches in Royal Commission into historic abuse.

 ?? PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON ??
PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON
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