Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S. cardinal calls out pope over Chile abuse comments

- By Nicole Winfield

LIMA, Peru — Pope Francis’ top adviser on clerical sex abuse implicitly rebuked the pontiff for having accused Chilean victims of slander, saying Saturday that his words were “a source of great pain for survivors of sexual abuse.”

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston, said he couldn’t explain why Francis “chose the particular words he used.” He said such expression­s had the effect of abandoning victims and relegating them to “discredite­d exile.”

In an extraordin­ary effort at damage control, O’Malley insisted in a statement that Francis “fully recognizes the egregious failures of the church and its clergy who abused children and the devastatin­g impact those crimes have had on survivors and their loved ones.”

Francis set off a national uproar upon leaving Chile on Thursday when he accused victims of the country’s most notorious pedophile priest of having slandered another bishop, Juan Barros. The victims say Barros knew of the abuse by the Rev. Fernando Karadima but did nothing to stop it — a charge Barros denies.

“The day they bring me proof against Bishop Barros, I’ll speak,” Francis told Chilean journalist­s in the northern city of Iquique. “There is not one shred of proof against him. It’s all calumny. Is that clear?”

The remarks shocked Chileans, drew immediate outrage from victims and their advocates and once again raised the question of whether the 81-yearold Argentine Jesuit “gets it” about sex abuse.

The Karadima scandal has devastated the credibilit­y of the Roman Catholic Church in Chile, and Francis’ comments will likely haunt it for the foreseeabl­e future.

O’Malley’s carefully worded critique was remarkable since it is rare for a cardinal to publicly rebuke the pope in such terms. But Francis’ remarks were so potentiall­y toxic to the Vatican’s yearslong effort to turn the tide on decades of clerical sex abuse and coverup that he clearly felt he had to respond.

O’Malley headed Francis’ muchtouted committee for the protection of minors until it lapsed last month after its initial three-year mandate expired. Francis has not named new members, and the committee’s future remains unclear.

O’Malley, who took over as Boston archbishop from the disgraced Cardinal Bernard Law after the sex abuse scandal exploded there in 2002, was traveling to Peru on Saturday to meet with the pope. His spokesman said the trip was previously scheduled. Francis leaves Sunday to return to Rome.

“It is understand­able that Pope Francis’ statements … were a source of great pain for survivors of sexual abuse by clergy or any other perpetrato­r,” O’Malley said. “Words that convey the message ‘if you cannot prove your claims then you will not be believed’ abandon those who have suffered reprehensi­ble criminal violations of their human dignity and relegate survivors to discredite­d exile.”

Francis’ comments were all the more problemati­c because Karadima’s victims were deemed so credible by the Vatican that it sentenced him to a lifetime of “penance and prayer” in 2011 based on their testimony. A Chilean judge also found the victims to be credible, saying that while she had to drop charges against Karadima because too much time had passed, proof of his crimes wasn’t lacking.

Catholic officials for years sought to discredit victims by accusing them of slandering the church. But many in the church had come to acknowledg­e that victims usually told the truth and that the church had wrongly sought to protect its own by demonizing and discrediti­ng the most vulnerable of its flock.

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