Barbara Blaine, founder of SNAP group, dies at 61
Priest-abuse victim support started in ‘88
CHICAGO — Barbara Blaine — the founder of SNAP, a prominent activist group in the Roman Catholic Church’s clergy-abuse crisis — died Sunday in Utah at 61.
The cause of death was a condition resulting from a sudden tear in a blood vessel in her heart, her family said in a statement Monday.
“Her relentless advocacy enabled millions to eventually accept a long unbelievable reality: that tens of thousands of priests raped and fondled hundreds of thousands of kids while bishops hid these heinous crimes,” said Barbara Dorris, managing director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.
“Her contributions to a safer society would be hard to overstate,” she added.
For the past 15 years, Blaine made a name for herself, standing on sidewalks outside parishes and diocesan offices, and even St. Peter’s Square, brandishing a picture of herself at age 12, when she said a priest in Ohio molested her in middle school.
In a 2012 interview, she told the Chicago Tribune that she never envisioned a combative relationship with the Catholic Church. In fact, she devoted her life to its mission to help the poor and promote peace.
As the director of the Catholic Worker House on Chicago’s South Side, she worked with then-Cardinal Joseph Bernardin’s administration to house and feed the homeless. While working in the North Side’s Uptown neighborhood, she made sure the indigent received a proper burial. Alongside a Catholic priest, she was arrested for trespassing during an antinuclear demonstration at the west suburban Argonne National Laboratory.
In 1985, however, a newspaper article about clergy abuse triggered a sudden recollection of being abused by her family’s priest in Toledo, Ohio. Church officials there questioned whether she had misinterpreted the priest’s affection. They also instructed her not to tell law enforcement.
Feeling, as she said, “raked over the coals,” Blaine rounded up other victims to figure out how to heal. For the first meeting, in 1988 at a Holiday Inn in Orland Park, she invited professional counselors and lawyers to offer expertise. She didn’t expect the group to stay together for longer than a year. It now has more than 20,000 members around the world.
“Now I understand it’s a lifelong process,” she told the Tribune. “I thought it was something you heal from, like a broken leg. I never realized it would take so long.”
In 2002, shortly after the clergy abuse scandal broke in Boston, bishops invited victims, including Blaine, to join them at a landmark meeting in Dallas. It was the first and last time she would be asked to address the bishops.
Eventually, the bishops adopted a zero-tolerance policy, including a pledge to remove priests from ministry immediately upon their being credibly accused of abuse.