Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Argentine judge rules 20 nuns were abused by clergy members

- ALMUDENA CALATRAVA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Nicole Winfield and Isabel DeBre of The Associated Press.

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — An Argentine judge on Friday ruled that 20 cloistered nuns had suffered abuse for more than two decades at the hands of high-ranking clergy in the country’s conservati­ve north, and ordered the accused archbishop and church officials to undergo psychologi­cal treatment and training in gender discrimina­tion.

The ruling in the homeland of Pope Francis cast a spotlight on the abuse of nuns by priests and bishops in the Catholic Church.

Though long overshadow­ed by other church scandals, such abuses in religious life are increasing­ly being aired and denounced as a result of nuns feeling emboldened by the #MeToo movement, which has a corollary in the church, #NunsToo.

“I conclude and affirm that the nuns have suffered acts of gender violence religiousl­y, physically, psychologi­cally and economical­ly for more than 20 years,” Judge Carolina Cáceres said in the ruling from Salta in northweste­rn Argentina.

She also ordered the verdict be conveyed to Francis.

The four accused clergy members have denied committing any violence. The archbishop’s lawyer, Eduardo Romani, dismissed Friday’s ruling as baseless and vowed to appeal. Still, he said, the archbishop would abide by the order to receive treatment and anti-discrimina­tion training through a local NGO “whether or not he agrees with its basis.”

The nuns’ lawyer hailed the verdict as unpreceden­ted in Argentina in recognizin­g the plaintiffs’ plight and the deeper problem of gender discrimina­tion.

“It shatters the ‘status quo’ because it targets a person with a great deal of power,” said José Viola, the lawyer.

In recent years, several prominent cases have emerged involving nuns, laywomen or consecrate­d women denouncing spiritual, psychologi­cal, physical or sexual abuse by once-exalted priests.

But complaints have largely fallen on deaf ears at the Vatican and in the rigid allmale hierarchy at the local level in Argentina, apparently prompting the nuns in Salta to seek remedy in the secular justice system. A similar dynamic played out when the clergy abuse of minors scandal first broke out decades ago and victims turned to the courts because of inaction by church authoritie­s.

The 20 nuns from the reclusive order of Discalced Carmelites at San Bernardo Monastery — dedicated to solitude, silence and daily contemplat­ive prayer — brought their case forward in 2022, sending shock waves through conservati­ve Salta.

Their complaints cited a range of mistreatme­nt including verbal insults, threats, humiliatio­n and physical — although not sexual — assault.

The nuns describe archbishop Mario Cargnello as grabbing, slapping and shaking women. At one point, they said, Cargnello squeezed the lips of a nun to silence her. At another, he pounced on a nun, striking her as he struggled to snatch a camera from her hands. They also accused Cargnello of borrowing nuns’ money without paying them back.

Cáceres, the judge, described the instances as “physical and psychologi­cal gender violence.”

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