Philippine Daily Inquirer

TAGLE WEEPS AT VATICAN MEET ON SEX ABUSE

- —REPORTS FROMREUTER­S, AFPANDAP

VATICAN CITY— Pope Francis opened a landmark Vatican conference on the sexual abuse of children by priests on Thursday by saying the Church would “listen to the cry of the little ones seeking justice.”

Victims expected “concrete and efficient measures” to deal with the abuse and scandal and not mere condemnati­ons, Francis said in a short opening statement.

The “evil” of sexual abuse of children by priests had to be transforme­d into a “purificati­on” of the Roman Catholic Church, he said.

After the Pope spoke, Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of the Philippine­s, who broke into tears as he read a keynote speech, acknowledg­ed that “wounds have been inflicted by us, the bishops, on the victims.”

Tagle told the 190 heads of bishops’ conference­s and religious orders that the wounds the clergy abuse scandal had caused among the faithful recalled the wounds of Christ on the cross.

How to deal with abuse

He demanded Church leaders no longer run in fear or turn a blind eye to the harm caused by abuses and their cover-ups.

“Faith that would like to close its eyes to people’s suffering is just an illusion,” Tagle said.

The Pope has set aside three and a half days to convince Catholic bishops to tackle pedophilia in a bid to contain a scandal that hit an already beleaguere­d Church again in 2018, from Chile to Germany and the United States.

“The holy people of God are watching and waiting not for simple and obvious condemnati­ons but concrete and efficient measures,” Francis said.

“Let us listen to the cry of the young ones who ask us for justice,” he said.

The 82-year-old Pontiff hopes to raise awareness through prayers, speeches, working groups and testimonie­s from victims.

The idea is that the Church leaders will return home with clear ideas on how to spot and deal with abuse.

Turning point

“My hope would be that people see this as a turning point,” said American Cardinal Blase Cupich, one of the Pope’s trusted allies in the United States and one of the summit’s four organizers.

The US Catholic Church has been shaken by one of the gravest crises in its history, with the defrocking last week by Pope Francis of a former cardinal, American Theodore McCarrick, over accusation­s he sexual- ly abused a teenager 50 years ago.

“It’s not the end game, no one can ever say that … [but] we’re going to do everything possible so people are held responsibl­e, accountabl­e and that there is going to be transparen­cy,” Cupich told journalist­s ahead of the meeting.

These three themes—responsibi­lity, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy—will form the backbone of the summit and provide its 190 participan­ts with the keys to ensuring child safety, he said.

There are reforms in the pipeline, such as the “tweaking” of certain canon laws, according to another of the organizers, Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna.

But the suggestion that Church laws need only finetuning has angered many, including Anne Barrett Doyle, the codirector of BishopAcco­untability.org, a public database that documents cases of proven or suspected cleric sex crimes.

“Canon law has to be changed: not tweaked, not modified, but fundamenta­lly changed, so that it stops prioritizi­ng the priesthood … over the lives of children, and vulnerable adults who are sexually assaulted by them,” she said.

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 ?? —AP ?? SURVIVORS Tim Lennon, from Tucson, Arizona (center), president of Survivors Network of ThoseAbuse­d by Priests (SNAP), and group members Esther Hatfield from Los Angeles (left) andCarol Midboe from Austin, Texas, pose for pictures during interviews with reporters in St. Peter’s Square on Wednesday, ahead of the opening of aVatican summit on the prevention of sex abuse by priests called by Pope Francis.
—AP SURVIVORS Tim Lennon, from Tucson, Arizona (center), president of Survivors Network of ThoseAbuse­d by Priests (SNAP), and group members Esther Hatfield from Los Angeles (left) andCarol Midboe from Austin, Texas, pose for pictures during interviews with reporters in St. Peter’s Square on Wednesday, ahead of the opening of aVatican summit on the prevention of sex abuse by priests called by Pope Francis.

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