Los Angeles Times

Nun scolds clergy at abuse summit

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VATICAN CITY — A prominent Nigerian nun blasted the culture of silence that has long kept clergy sexual abuse hidden in the Catholic Church, telling Catholic leaders Saturday that they must transparen­tly admit their mistakes to restore trust among the faithful.

A Mexican journalist followed up, telling the bishops and others at Pope Francis’ abuse summit that their collective failure to report abuse and inform their flocks about predator priests made them complicit in the crimes.

In between those admonition­s, a German cardinal admitted that church files about abusers had been destroyed, victims were silenced and church procedures were ignored — all in an attempt to keep the scandal under wraps.

Sister Veronica Openibo, Mexican correspond­ent Valentina Alazraki and German Cardinal Reinhard Marx delivered powerful speeches to nearly 190 church leaders on the third day of the pope’s four-day meeting on preventing abuse and protecting children.

The first two days focused on the responsibi­lity of church leaders in tending to their flocks, and how they must be held accountabl­e when they fail to properly protect young people from predator priests. Saturday was dedicated to issues of transparen­cy and breaking the code of silence. And it was dominated by women.

Openibo was one of only a handful of women invited to the meeting, and she used her time at the podium to shame the church leadership for its silence in the face of such crimes.

“How could the clerical church have kept silent, covering these atrocities?” she asked. “We must acknowledg­e that our mediocrity, hypocrisy and complacenc­y have brought us to this disgracefu­l and scandalous place we find ourselves as a church.”

Alazraki, the longtime Vatican correspond­ent for Mexico’s Televisa, challenged the leaders to decide whether they are on the side of the priests accused of abuse and those who cover up the crimes, or the victims.

“We have decided which side to be on,” she said, and warned that unless church leaders side with victims, “journalist­s, who seek the common good, will be your worst enemies.”

Marx called for a redefiniti­on of the Vatican’s legal code of secrecy and for the publicatio­n of statistics about cleric sex abuse. He said such transparen­cy would be a first step toward restoring trust with the faithful.

Francis demanded that the conference be held to impress on church leaders that sex abuse isn’t just a problem confined to a few countries but the entire church.

Survivors who have gathered in Rome to protest marched toward the Vatican shouting, “Zero tolerance!”

Among them was Alberto Athie of Mexico, one of the original accusers of the pedophile founder of the Legion of Christ, the Rev. Marcial Maciel. The decadeslon­g coverup of Maciel’s well-documented crimes has been a stain on the legacy of St. John Paul II.

“To protect the abusers means, ‘Don’t say it to the authoritie­s, don’t say it to the parents, don’t say it,’ ” Athie said.

In her speech, Openibo, the superior of the Society of the Holy Child Jesus religious order, recalled the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight,” based on the Boston Globe’s prize-winning expose of clergy abuse and coverup that sparked the explosion of cases coming to light in the U.S. in 2002.

Openibo told African and Asian church leaders that they must no longer justify their silence about sexual violence by claiming that poverty and conflict are more serious issues.

“This storm will not pass by,” she warned them.

She called for talks on controvers­ial issues to address the scandal and praised “Brother Francis” for his honesty in admitting he had erred in an abuse coverup case in Chile last year.

Francis had defended a bishop accused of witnessing and ignoring the abuse of a notorious predator, accusing the victims of “slander.”

“I admire you, Brother Francis, for taking time as a true Jesuit, to discern and be humble enough to change your mind, to apologize and take action — an example for all of us,” Openibo said.

Alazraki urged greater transparen­cy and offered advice about growing revelation­s of nuns who have been sexually abused by priests and bishops.

“I would like that, on this occasion, the church play offense and not defense, as has happened in the case of the abuse of minors,” she told the gathering. “It could be a great opportunit­y for the church to take the initiative and be on the forefront of denouncing these abuses, which are not only sexual but abuses of power.”

A man and a woman who were sexually abused by priests as young people also addressed Catholic leaders. The man, speaking Saturday, said sexual abuse is the greatest humility anyone can suffer.

“You realize you cannot defend yourself against the strength of your oppressor. You cannot escape. You must endure it,” he said.

The woman said Friday that she had wanted to tell them about her childhood.

“But there’s no point, because when I was 11 years old, a priest from my parish destroyed my life. Since then I, who loved coloring books and doing somersault­s on the grass, have not existed,” she said.

They were not identified to protect their privacy.

Panama Archbishop Jose Domingo Ulloa Mendieta said he was looking forward to Francis’ final speech on Sunday.

“This is a time to reflect, to find more awareness on the gravity of minors’ abuse,” he said. “What we hope most for is that tomorrow, during conclusion­s, that the Holy Father will give us concrete guidelines to follow.”

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