Albuquerque Journal

Pope Francis meets with survivors of priest abuse

Pontiff apologizes for ‘irreparabl­e damage’ caused by priests

- BY PETER PRENGAMAN AND NICOLE WINFIELD

SANTIAGO, Chile — Pope Francis met on Tuesday with survivors of priests who sexually abused them, wept with them and apologized for the “irreparabl­e damage” they suffered, his spokesman said.

The pontiff also acknowledg­ed the “pain” of priests who have been held collective­ly responsibl­e for the crimes of a few, Vatican spokesman Greg Burke told reporters at the end of the day.

Francis dove head-first into Chile’s sex abuse scandal on his first full day in Santiago that came amid unpreceden­ted opposition to his visit: Three more churches were torched overnight, including one burned to the ground in the southern Araucania region where Francis celebrates Mass on Wednesday. Police used tear gas and water cannons to break up an anti-pope protest outside Francis’ big open-air Mass in the capital, Santiago.

Despite the incidents, huge numbers of Chileans turned out to see the pope, including an estimated 400,000 for his Mass, and he brought some inmates to tears with an emotional visit to a women’s prison.

But his meeting with abuse survivors and comments in his first speech of the day were what many Chileans, incensed by years of abuse scandal and coverup, were waiting for.

Burke said Francis met with a small group of abuse victims after lunch, listening to their stories and praying with them. The spokesman gave no details, other than to say the pope “listened to them, prayed with them and wept with them.”

Earlier in the day, Francis told Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, lawmakers, judges and other authoritie­s that he felt “bound to express my pain and shame” that some of Chile’s clergy had sexually abused children in their care.

“I am one with my brother bishops, for it is right to ask forgivenes­s and make every effort to support the victims, even as we commit ourselves to ensuring that such things do not happen again,” the pope said.

Francis did not refer by name to Chile’s most notorious pedophile priest, the Rev. Fernando Karadima, who in 2011 was barred from all pastoral duties and sanctioned by the Vatican to a lifetime of “penance and prayer” for sexually molesting minors. Nor did he refer to the fact that the emeritus archbishop of Santiago, a top papal adviser, has acknowledg­ed he knew of complaints against Karadima but didn’t remove him from ministry.

The Karadima scandal and long cover-up has caused a crisis for the church in Chile.

 ?? L’OSSERVATOR­E ROMANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis celebrates Mass at O’Higgins Park in Santiago, Chile, Tuesday. Francis begged for forgivenes­s for the damage done to children who were molested by priests.
L’OSSERVATOR­E ROMANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis celebrates Mass at O’Higgins Park in Santiago, Chile, Tuesday. Francis begged for forgivenes­s for the damage done to children who were molested by priests.

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