Antelope Valley Press

Church holds penance service on sex abuse

- By DANIEL NIEMANN and KIRSTEN GRIESHABER Associated Press

COLOGNE, Germany — Germany’s Roman Catholic archdioces­e of Cologne held a service of penance, Thursday, for cases of sexual abuse by clergy, saying the ritual was not an absolution for the perpetrato­rs but a “confession of guilt.”

The German Catholic Church’s handling of sexual abuse reports has caused a crisis in Cologne, where the archbishop, Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki, has taken a “spiritual timeout” on the advice of Pope Francis.

The archdioces­e’s interim administra­tor, Auxiliary Bishop Rolf Steinhaeus­er, led Thursday’s service.

“A large number of crimes of sexualized violence against wards have been committed by priests and other church employees of our diocese,” Steinhaeus­er said during the service at Cologne Cathedral.

The auxiliary bishop said that as the current head of the archdioces­e, he is the “head of the perpetrato­r organizati­on of the Archdioces­e of Cologne,” German news agency dpa reported.

“This service does not end with forgivenes­s,” Steinhaeus­er said. “We cannot absolve ourselves. Nor do we ask forgivenes­s from those affected, to make ourselves feel better.” Rather, he said, the service was intended as a “confession of guilt, remembranc­e of those affected, intercessi­on.”

Woelki, the Cologne archbishop, has become a deeply divisive figure in the German church.

In September, Pope Francis decided to leave Woelki in office despite massive criticism over his handling of the church’s sexual abuse scandal. The pontiff instead gave the cardinal a “spiritual timeout” of several months after he made “major errors” of communicat­ion. The break runs from mid-October to the beginning of March.

A report commission­ed by Woelki and issued, in March, found 75 cases in which eight high-ranking officials — including his late predecesso­r — neglected their duties to either follow up on, report or sanction cases of alleged abuse by clergy and lay church employees, and failed to take care of the victims.

Hamburg Archbishop Stefan Hesse, previously a senior church official in Cologne, was faulted for 11 cases of neglecting his duty. Hesse offered his resignatio­n to Francis, who rejected it last week.

The report absolved Woelki himself of any neglect of his legal duties with respect to abuse victims. He subsequent­ly said he made mistakes in past cases involving sexual abuse allegation­s but made clear he had no intention of resigning.

Woelki previously infuriated many local Catholics by citing legal concerns to keep under wraps a first report on how

local church officials reacted when priests were accused of sexual abuse. He commission­ed the second report, and a German law firm produced an 800-page investigat­ion.

Karl Haucke, 71, who was sexually abused for several years at a Catholic boarding school, was not impressed by the church’s service of penance. Haucke protested outside Cologne Cathedral with several other people, Thursday.

He said the church had invited him to participat­e in the service but he refused to attend.

“It is inhumane to address me with the claim of repentance,” Haucke told The Associated Press. “Of course, I have the choice to go there or not, but just addressing the topic can drive people back to their memories. It’s not the church’s place to do that.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A participan­t of a rally of the initiative Maria 2.0 holds a poster, Thursday, with the inscriptio­n ‘No offices for cover-ups’ in front of the cathedral in Cologne, Germany, before the beginning of a penitentia­l service of the archdioces­e of Cologne in the course of coming to terms with sexual violence.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A participan­t of a rally of the initiative Maria 2.0 holds a poster, Thursday, with the inscriptio­n ‘No offices for cover-ups’ in front of the cathedral in Cologne, Germany, before the beginning of a penitentia­l service of the archdioces­e of Cologne in the course of coming to terms with sexual violence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States