The Post

Pope seeks solutions, victims sceptical

- Vatican City

Pope Francis has warned top Roman Catholic leaders that they would need to emerge with more than just ‘‘predictabl­e’’ statements as he opened a highly anticipate­d summit aimed at defining a worldwide response to clergy sex abuse.

To back up his call for ‘‘concrete’’ solutions, the pontiff offered 21 proposals to punish predators and keep children safe, including expanding roles for lay experts in investigat­ions and requiring prelates to report abuse to civil authoritie­s in their countries.

‘‘The holy people of God are looking at us, expecting not only simple and predictabl­e condemnati­ons but concrete and effective measures to put in place,’’ he said. ‘‘We need to be concrete.’’

The assertive tone Francis set at the start of the unpreceden­ted four-day gathering of bishops he summoned from more than 100 countries came as something of a surprise even to some of the meeting’s organisers. For weeks, the pope has been downplayin­g expectatio­ns that the global summit would end with the implementa­tion of any specific reforms.

Still, there was scepticism among the victims and their advocates – who have flocked to St Peter’s Square as the conference plays out behind closed doors.

‘‘First, they said this meeting was going to be serious. Then they said it was only going to be a teaching lesson. Now they say there will be concrete action,’’ said Mark Rozzi, an abuse victim and state legislator from Berks County, Pennsylvan­ia, who met Italian lawmakers and victims. ‘‘When I heard that there was going to be a meeting to have a meeting, as a Harrisburg politician I laughed at that. It basically means we’re kicking the can down the road.’’

The outcome of this week’s summit could shape the legacy of Francis’ papacy – one that has become overwhelme­d by an issue that plagued the church for decades only to re-emerge with new ferocity.

In less than a year, the United States alone has seen the defrocking of top Cardinal Theodore McCarrick for his alleged abuse of seminarian­s and minors and the scathing Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report that has since spawned similar investigat­ions in more than a dozen states, including New Jersey.

The pope’s critics have described him as sluggish to respond to the crisis and, at times, callous toward victims. On the eve of this historic meeting, some took offence at his remarks to a group of pilgrims from an Italian archdioces­e.

‘‘Those who spend their life accusing, accusing, accusing are . . . friends, cousins, relatives of the devil,’’ he said, according to an official readout of the meeting released by the Vatican. ‘‘This is not good. Flaws must be indicated so they can be corrected, but at the moment that flaws are noted, flaws are denounced, one loves the Church. Without love, that is of the devil.’’

Others questioned why Francis has no meetings with victims on his schedule during the conference. But the pope began to hear from them in other ways.

A handful of survivors from across the globe have been invited to share their accounts during the opening and closing prayers of each day’s session.

One, a woman from Africa, told the gathered prelates that her abuser forced her to have three abortions as a teenager while he raped her again and again for more than 13 years.

The conference’s organisers also met a dozen of the world’s most outspoken victims this week, including Johnstown, Pennsylvan­ia, resident Shaun Dougherty, whose abuse by a priest who served as his basketball coach in the 1980s was detailed in a 2016 grand jury report on abuse and cover-ups in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

‘‘It was respectful, it was very informativ­e, it was frank – at times hostile,’’ Dougherty, 49, said. ‘‘My supreme takeaway: It is up to our politician­s back home in Pennsylvan­ia to protect us because this organisati­on is too large to protect itself.’’

Dougherty said he was humbled by the chance to air his complaints with top officials, such as the Vatican’s chief sex-abuse investigat­or, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, and Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago and the lone American on the summit organising committee.

Still, he was disappoint­ed that the pope himself didn’t make time to meet with them.

‘‘I was upset he didn’t come to Pennsylvan­ia after the grand jury reports,’’ Dougherty said. ‘‘Then, to add insult to injury, we have to come to his country and to his office and he delegates to someone else?’’

While their detractors raged outside the Vatican, the members of the hierarchy spent most of the day cloistered inside, listening to lectures on responsibi­lity and breaking into working groups to discuss Francis’ proposals. –

 ?? AP ?? Survivors of sex abuse hold a cross as they gather in front of Via della Conciliazi­one, the road leading to St Peter’s Square, visible in background, during a twilight vigil prayer of the victims of sex abuse, in Rome, yesterday.
AP Survivors of sex abuse hold a cross as they gather in front of Via della Conciliazi­one, the road leading to St Peter’s Square, visible in background, during a twilight vigil prayer of the victims of sex abuse, in Rome, yesterday.

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