Chicago Sun-Times

Catholic Church may have cleaned up, but it has never come clean

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BY LISA MADIGAN

As a mother raising her children in the Catholic Church, reading the Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report detailing the rampant sexual assault of hundreds of children by Catholic priests nauseates and infuriates me, again.

The initial responses from the Catholic bishops in Illinois apologizin­g to victims and their families for these hidden, horrid crimes were well meaning. The bishops also explained the improvemen­ts the church adopted since at least 2002 that are intended to prevent and better respond to similar crimes in the future. Some bishops also pointed out that the terrible crimes detailed in the Pennsylvan­ia report are old. This stings. And it ignores a painful reality.

In many cases, the perpetrato­r priest is dead, but the impacts of violative sex crimes live on in hundreds of thousands of people across the country who had their childhoods stolen and their lives destroyed by the Catholic Church. Their wounds are still raw, and most will never heal. Their pain is compounded when the church claims it has reformed yet has never revealed its hidden archive of records documentin­g years of priest abuse. The church needs to acknowledg­e and publicly account for every allegation and every crime by opening their secret files to independen­t review. None of the bishops has offered to do that.

The Catholic Church may have cleaned up, but it has never come clean.

Decades upon decades of bishops hiding crimes, ignoring complaints of families, lying to parishione­rs, discrediti­ng victims, moving priests, evading law enforcemen­t, and destroying records demands a full accounting. It is my hope the leaders of the Catholic Church recognize that the legal tactics they have deployed to cover up heinous crimes are immoral and need to end now. Given the repeated history of horrific abuse and the cloak of secrecy, many people doubt things have really changed.

As attorney general, I can work with state’s attorneys to force the Church to produce its records and document all of the crimes children in Illinois suffered. That could be a long and painful process. But Catholic leaders have stood above the people and the law for far too long, and the results have devastated the Church.

Only truth and transparen­cy will bring reconcilia­tion. I await the day the Catholic Church agrees to practice what it preaches.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? People react Aug. 14 as Pennsylvan­ia’s attorney general reads details of the grand jury investigat­ion into the state’s clergy abuse. The report detailed the sexual assault of hundreds of children.
MATT ROURKE/AP People react Aug. 14 as Pennsylvan­ia’s attorney general reads details of the grand jury investigat­ion into the state’s clergy abuse. The report detailed the sexual assault of hundreds of children.

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