Philippine Daily Inquirer

POPE VOWS TO CONFRONT PREDATORS, END COVER-UPS

- M. AURELIO —AFP

VATICAN CITY— Pope Francis on Sunday vowed to tackle every single case of sexual abuse by priests in the Roman Catholic Church, comparing pedophilia to “human sacrifice.”

But his public address to the Church’s top bishops at the end of a landmark summit in the Vatican on tackling clerical assault of minors threatened to disappoint victims.

“If in the Church there should emerge even a single case of abuse, which already in itself represents an atrocity, that case will be faced with the utmost seriousnes­s,” Francis promised.

“I am reminded of the cruel religious practice, once widespread in certain cultures, of sacrificin­g human beings—frequently children—in pagan rites,” he added.

The sexual abuse of minors was “a widespread phenomenon in all cultures and societies,” Francis

said, and he slammed those priests who prey on children as “tools of Satan.”

The scandals have hit countries around the world, with lives devastated from Australia to Chile, Germany and the United States.

The Argentine had opened the four-day meeting by calling for “concrete measures” against child sex abuse and handing 114 senior bishops a road map to shape the debate on tackling pedophile priests.

The 82-year-old had warned victims to lower their expectatio­ns, saying that much of the work on tackling abuse would be done postsummit.

But survivors watching his speech closely for signs of change within the centuries-old institutio­n slammed his decision to spend a lot of time at the start of his speech pointing out that child sex abuse was not limited to the Church.

Pastoral ‘bla-bla’

“Honestly, it’s a pastoral ‘bla-bla,’ saying it’s the fault of the devil,” Swiss victim JeanMarie Furbringer said.

“They are pulling the wool over our eyes, so that they don’t have to directly address the Church’s problems. We are not surprised, but we are disappoint­ed,” he said.

The meeting has been marked by soul-seeking and self-recriminat­ion by the Church, and horror stories from abuse victims.

In his lengthy speech, Francis said the Church would draw inspiratio­n from the “best practices” in the Seven strategies for Ending Violence Against Children, measures developed under the guidance of the World Health Organizati­on.

He said the Church “in devel- oping her legislatio­n” will focus on eight aspects: “the protection of children,” “impeccable seriousnes­s,” “genuine purificati­on,” “formation,” “strengthen­ing and reviewing guidelines by episcopal conference­s” and “accompanim­ent of those who have been abused.”

“The echo of the silent cry of the little ones who, instead of finding in them fathers and spiritual guides encountere­d tormentors, will shake hearts dulled by hypocrisy and by power,” Francis said.

“It is our duty to pay close heed to this silent, choked cry,” he added.

Those gathered at the Vatican had heard testimonie­s from victims, one of whom was forced to have three abortions after being abused for years by a priest who beat her, while another said he had been molested more than 100 times.

“A mission stretches before us—a mission demanding not just words but real concrete action,” Australian Catholic Bishops Conference president Mark Coleridge said in a homily on Sunday, ahead of the Pope’s speech.

“We do not have forever, and we dare not fail,” he said.

“We have shown too little mercy, and therefore we will receive the same,” Coleridge warned his fellow bishops.

German Cardinal Reinhard Marx admitted on Saturday that “files that could have documented the terrible deeds and named those responsibl­e were destroyed, or not even created.”

New legal procedures

The admission sparked an angry reaction from the internatio­nal associatio­n ECA (Ending Clerical Abuse), which slammed the destructio­n of such documents “illegal” and called for an investigat­ion.

Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago said new legal procedures were needed to deal with those either accused of abuse or of protecting alleged perpetrato­rs, and insisted lay experts should be involved in every step.

He said transparen­t new structures were needed to make it easier both to lodge allegation­s and punish the guilty.

The Vatican has in the past refused to hand over internal documents about abuse cases to police investigat­ing pedophilia.

The Church had to “recognize that the enemy is within,” Cardinal Jose Horacio Gomez said on Thursday.

“The damage caused is so deep, the pain inflicted is so profound, the consequenc­es of the abuses that have taken place in the Church are so immense that we will never be able to say that we have done all that can be done,” he said.

They are pulling the wool over our eyes, so that they don’t have to directly address the Church’s problems. Weare not surprised, but we are disappoint­ed Jean-Marie Furbringer Swiss victim

 ?? —AFP ?? CLERICAL ‘ATROCITY’ Pope Francis, who appears to be in deep prayer during Saturday’s liturgical prayer, on Sunday ends the landmark Vatican summit on clergy abuse by vowing to confront abusers with “utmost seriousnes­s.”
—AFP CLERICAL ‘ATROCITY’ Pope Francis, who appears to be in deep prayer during Saturday’s liturgical prayer, on Sunday ends the landmark Vatican summit on clergy abuse by vowing to confront abusers with “utmost seriousnes­s.”
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines