Los Angeles Times

Chile’s bishops offer to resign for sex scandal

- By Jorge Poblete Poblete is a special correspond­ent. Special correspond­ent Chris Kraul in Bogota, Colombia, contribute­d to this report.

SANTIAGO, Chile — All 33 Roman Catholic bishops in Chile offered to resign Friday after meeting with Pope Francis in the wake of a sexual abuse scandal that has rocked the Latin American country.

The unpreceden­ted offer by the Chilean church’s top hierarchy came after a week of tense meetings with Francis in the Vatican to discuss the harsh conclusion­s of a report on the Chilean scandal prepared by Malta Archbishop Charles J. Scicluna that accused church leaders of a cover-up.

“We want to announce that all bishops present in Rome, in writing, have placed our positions in the Holy Father’s hands so that he may freely decide regarding each one of us,” Bishop Juan Ignacio Gonzalez said in a news conference Friday in Rome.

It was unclear whether Francis would accept any or all of the resignatio­ns. Thirty-one of the 33 bishops attended the Vatican meetings, and the two who did not attend added their names to the letter.

“I assume with responsibi­lity, in communion with the rest of the church, this need to support the Holy Father,” Bishop Carlos Pellegrin said after arriving Friday at the airport in Santiago, the capital.

After visiting Chile in February to investigat­e the alleged abuse of an unspecifie­d number of victims that included minors and adults, laymen and clerics, Scicluna filed a scathing report that found a cover-up by church leaders of sex crimes committed by Father Fernando Karadima during his tenure at a Santiago parish.

The report blamed, among others, Karadima’s superior, Bishop Juan Barros, who attended the Vatican meetings. Karadima, now 87, was condemned by a special canonical court to a lifetime of penance and prayer, but he faced no criminal charges because of the statute of limitation­s.

In his five years as pontiff, Francis has been praised for his attention to social issues and the poor but accused of failing to punish clergy members who abused children. Such criticisms intensifie­d during the pope’s visit to Chile in January, when he called the accusation­s against Barros “calumny.”

The pope’s words were widely criticized, even by Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, a key Vatican advisor on clergy abuse.

Francis later apologized and asked Scicluna to investigat­e the matter. The pontiff also had emotionall­y charged meetings with three men who said they were abused by Karadima. Those meetings prompted him to write a letter to the Chilean bishops last month, saying that he felt “pain and shame” over the men’s accounts and that he wanted to “apologize to all those I have offended.”

One of the men who met with the pope, Juan Carlos Cruz, described their discussion­s as “raw.” Cruz said he had “never seen someone so contrite. He was truly sorry, and I felt he was hurting.”

The night before the Chilean bishops sent Francis their offer of resignatio­n, he sent them a letter. According to the Vatican news service, it referenced his meetings with the bishops and said: “In light of these painful incidents which concern abuse — of minors, power, and conscience — we exchanged views on their seriousnes­s as well as on their tragic consequenc­es, particular­ly for the victims. For each of them I have wholeheart­edly asked for forgivenes­s, an action to which all of you have united in one will and with the firm intention of repairing the damage done.”

Scicluna’s 2,300-page report enumerated “a series of absolutely reprehensi­ble acts that have occurred in the Chilean church in relation to those unacceptab­le abuses of power, of conscience and sexual abuse that have resulted in the lessening of the prophetic vigor,” Auxiliary Bishop Fernando Ramos of Santiago said at the Friday news conference.

Karadima served as spiritual guide to more than 40 priests and four of the bishops whose future is now at stake — Barros, Horacio Valenzuela, Tomislav Koljatic and Andres Arteaga. They all have denied covering up abuses. Barros was perhaps closest to Karadima, having been trained by him as a junior priest.

“The fame of Father Karadima was extraordin­ary at that time; he even had a reputation of being a saint,” Emeritus Cardinal Francisco Javier Errazuriz testified at a civil court hearing in 2015, explaining why he didn’t believe the accusation­s against Karadima in the early 2000s.

Triggering the crisis was Francis’ appointmen­t of Barros in 2015 as head of the Osorno Diocese in southern Chile. Up to then, Barros had a low profile, but his alleged role in the Karadima cover-up was widely known by then and many parishione­rs protested the appointmen­t.

On Friday in Santiago, another of the whistle-blowers who exposed Karadima said Francis needed to get rid of the bishops.

“I hope the pope accepts the resignatio­n of all the bishops, because none of them was willing to side with the victims,” Jose Andres Murillo said at a news conference. “The church must transform itself from a refuge of abusers to a refuge for the victims.”

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