Los Angeles Times

Vatican abuse panel screens ‘ Spotlight’ before meeting

- BY TOM KINGTON Kington is a special correspond­ent.

ROME — A Vatican commission on clerical sex abuse gathered Thursday for a private screening of “Spotlight,” the Oscar- nominated f ilm about abuse by Boston priests, even as Pope Francis came under fire for failing to act on the crisis.

The extraordin­ary screening was held on the eve of a three- day meeting by the commission and was shown in the same church residence in central Rome where Francis — then Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio — stayed before his election as pope in 2013.

“The f ilm is extremely worrying about the coverup of abuse in the Catholic Church, and I think it would be a good moment for the pope to see it,” said Peter Saunders, a British anti-abuse campaigner who is a member of the commission. As a child growing up in London, he was abused by a Catholic priest.

Francis set up the commission in 2014, appointing clergy and abuse survivors as members and handing leadership to Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who took over the Boston Archdioces­e after the Boston Globe exposed rampant abuse by priests — events portrayed in “Spotlight.” The commission was charged with finding ways to better protect children from abuse by priests.

The pope was not reported to have been at the screening, which was closed to reporters. The Vatican has not officially commented on “Spotlight,” but Vatican Radio praised it last fall as “honest” and “compelling.”

Last year, Francis also set up a Vatican tribunal to prosecute bishops accused of covering up abuse.

Saunders, however, said he believes Francis’ good intentions were undone by his appointmen­t last year of Bishop Juan Barros to the diocese of Osorno, Chile, despite “very credible” accusation­s that Barros covered up for a predator priest, Father Fernando Karadima, who was punished by the Vatican.

In May, Francis told a group of Chileans to ignore Barros’ critics, who include survivors of abuse by Karadima.

“Think with your heads and do not be led by the noses by the lefties who orchestrat­ed this whole thing,” Francis said.

“Francis has said phenomenal­ly damaging and painful things about survivors,” Saunders said. “People in Chile now see the commission as a laughingst­ock.”

Marie Collins, an Irish abuse survivor and fellow panel member, has also criticized the Barros appointmen­t. After Francis’ remarks about “lefties,” she tweeted that she was “discourage­d and saddened” by what he said.

In an interview last month with the National Catholic Reporter, Collins said that it was “wonderful” that the church had become more humble under Francis, but she noted that there was “still resistance” in the Vatican to fighting abuse.

Saunders said he had met the pope in October and asked him to attend the commission meeting, which will be held Friday through Sunday in Rome.

“It will be outrageous if he doesn’t attend, and I will say so — it will be the end of the honeymoon for Pope Francis,” he said.

Looking ahead to the commission meeting, which follows two held last year, Saunders said he was not optimistic the experts would be able to change the way the church handles abuse.

“The last meeting in October was a nonevent. I was told that Rome was not built in a day, but the problem is that it takes seconds to rape a child,” he said.

 ?? Kerry Hayes ?? “SPOTLIGHT” is about the Boston Globe’s investigat­ion of the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal.
Kerry Hayes “SPOTLIGHT” is about the Boston Globe’s investigat­ion of the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal.

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