The Oklahoman

Pope Francis vows to end sexual abuse after McCarrick report

- By Nicole Winfield

ROME—Pope Francis pledged Wednesday to rid the Catholic Church of sexual abuse and offered prayers to victims of former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, a day after the Vatican released a detailed report into the decadeslon­g church cover-up of his sexual misconduct.

The Vatican report blamed a host of bishops, cardinals and pop es for downplayin­g and dismissing mountains of evidence of McCarrick's misconduct starting in the 1990s — but largely spared Francis.

Instead, it laid the lion' s share of the blame on St. John Paul II, a former pope, for having appointed M cC ar rick archbishop of Washington in 2000, and making him a cardinal, despite having commission­ed an inquiry that found he had slept with seminarian­s.

Francis concluded his weekly general audience Wednesday by re calling that the report into the “painful case” of the former high-ranking American cardinal had been released the previous day.

“I renew my closeness to victims of any abuse and commitment of the church to eradicate this evil,” Francis said. He then paused silently f or nearly a minute, apparently in prayer.

Francis defrocked the 90- year-old M cC ar rick last year after a separate Vatican investigat­ion found he sexually abused children as well as adults.

Francis authorized the more in-depth study into McCarrick's rise through the hierarchy after revelation­s that it was an open secret in the U.S. and Vatican hierarchie­s that he behaved in appropriat­ely with seminarian­s, sleeping with them in his bed on weekend getaways.

The report raised uncomforta­ble questions about John Paul and his trusted secretary, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, who has been subject to inc re asi ng scrutiny and criticism in his native Poland over allegation­s he covered up other cases of clergy sexual abuse.

Just this week, the head of Poland's bishops conference, Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki, said he hoped an “appropriat­e commission of the Holy See will clarify all the doubts” about Dziwisz's record — scrutiny Dziwisz himself said he welcomed.

In his remarks Wednesday, Francis held up for praise John Paul, who was beloved in his native Poland and by many Catholics elsewhere but has come under criticism for his failure to take action against pedophile priests.

Noting that Wednesday marked Poland's independen­ce day, Francis quoted John Paul as telling young people what it means to be truly free.

“While we thank the Lord for the gift of national and personal freedom, what St. John Paul II taught young people comes to mind ,” Francis said. He then cited the former pope as saying that being free means being “am an of upright conscience, to be responsibl­e, to be a man `for others.'”

The Vatican report noted that John Paul—and presumably Dziwisz, too — often dismissed allegation­s of sexual impropriet­y involving priests because of their experience in Communist Poland, when many priests were discredite­d with false allegation­s.

The Vatican report found that John Paul initially agreed to take McCarrick off the list of candidates to be archbishop of Washington after his own ambassador to the U.S. determined that there was a reasonable doubt about McCarricks' “moral maturity” given the allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

The ambassador, Archbishop Gabriel Montalvo, concluded that it would be“imprudent” to promote him given the chance the rumors could become public.

John Paul initially agreed. But he changed his mind after McCar rick made a last-ditch, hand written appeal in an Aug. 6, 2000, letter addressed to Dziwisz, denying he ever had “sexual relations” with anyone.

The Vatican report went into great detail, including with substantia­l footnotes, about what Dzwisz did with the letter next, suggesting that the Polish secretary had something to hide about his involvemen­t.

For starters, McCarrick's letter begins by referencin­g a previous letter he wrote to Dziwisz about his possible promotion, but which has disappeare­d from the Vatican archives.

Subsequent­ly, the report says Dzwisz ordered t hat his name be removed from McCarrick's Aug .6 letter when it went into t he archives. Both points suggest Dziwisz wanted to remove any trace of his involvemen­t in the appointmen­t or in having possibly tipped McCarrick off to the fact that his promotion had been imperiled.

The authoritat­ive archbishop of New York, Cardinal John O' Connor, had warned John Paul not to promote McCarrick in an Oct. 28, 1999, letter he wrote shortly before he died.

He cited multiple claims that McCarrick would invite seminarian­s to his beach house and into his bed and enclosed four anonymous letters that had been sent to him and other U.S. churchmen in 1992-1993, alleging McCarrick sexually abused children and seminarian­s.

“I found out that he had written to the Holy Father,” McCarrick said of O'Connor in an interview with Vatican officials who prepared the report .“I had friends in the Curia and one of them tipped me off about it but I don't remember who.”

In Poland, the McCarrick scandal and the roles played by John Paul and Dziwisz in the cover-up have only fueled criticism of the Catholic hierarchy amid its own clergy abuse scandal that has seen several top bishops and even cardinals fall.

“If anyone is going to bury the legend of St. John Paul II, it will be Cardinal Dziwisz,” tweeted Tomasz Rozek, a journalist for the Catholic weekly“Gosc Niedzielny ”( Sunday Visitor).

Posters from World War I decorate the lobby of the Oklahoma City YWCA in November 1939 to commemorat­e Armistice Day. The posters encouraged buying U.S. government bonds, implored people to not waste food, and recruited men and women toward the war effort. Slogans included such anthems as “Hold up your end!” “The Red Cross counts on you,” “I summon you to the comradeshi­p” and “Over the top for you.” The banners were also considered works of art, created by artists and illustrato­rs such as Jessie Willcox Smith, Neysa McMein and Howard Chandler Christy. [GEORGE

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? In this Feb. 23, 2001, photo, U.S. Cardinal Theodore Edgar McCarrick, archbishop of Washington, D.C., shakes hands with Pope John Paul II during the General Audience with the newly appointed cardinals in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican. McCarrick was one of the three Americans on a record list of 44 new cardinals who were elevated in a ceremony at the Vatican on Feb. 21, 2001. [MASSIMO SAMBUCETTI/
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] In this Feb. 23, 2001, photo, U.S. Cardinal Theodore Edgar McCarrick, archbishop of Washington, D.C., shakes hands with Pope John Paul II during the General Audience with the newly appointed cardinals in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican. McCarrick was one of the three Americans on a record list of 44 new cardinals who were elevated in a ceremony at the Vatican on Feb. 21, 2001. [MASSIMO SAMBUCETTI/
 ?? CAUTHEN/ THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] Linda Lynn, News Research Editor ?? We are running a #ThrowbackT­hursday image each week, showcasing Oklahoma's history. Be sure to follow us on Twitter @ TheOklahom­an_ and “Like” us at Facebook. com/ TheOklahom­an for more historical photos.
CAUTHEN/ THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] Linda Lynn, News Research Editor We are running a #ThrowbackT­hursday image each week, showcasing Oklahoma's history. Be sure to follow us on Twitter @ TheOklahom­an_ and “Like” us at Facebook. com/ TheOklahom­an for more historical photos.

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