Gulf Today

Argentina’s paedophile priests speak out

-

MENDOZA: Ezequiel Villalonga spent most of his life at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza, a Catholic school for deaf children. But now the 18-year-old, who is deaf and mute, has lost all faith in the Church.

He and his classmates claim they are victims of the paedophile priests who ran the institutio­n, part of a sweeping scandal that has shaken Argentina, Pope Francis’s home country.

“I think that everything in the Church is fake. Everything they made us read, recite, the way (they said) people should live,” he said in sign language, just before the start of the priests’ trial on Monday.

“I think they lie and that they’re demonic,” he added.

Ezequiel only learned sign language as an adult, because despite the Institute’s specialise­d mission, the school situated in the Andean foothills didn’t teach him how to speak.

He was only seven months old when his mother realised he was deaf. When Ezequiel was four, she sent him to the Provolo, which was founded in 1995, 1,000km west of Buenos Aires.

Until Ezequiel was 16, when the scandal finally broke, he spent his days inside the massive building with a green roof. Once inside its red brick walls, he was only allowed to go home on weekends.

“Life there was terrible. We didn’t learn anything, we couldn’t speak to each other because we didn’t know sign language,” he said.

“We would write without knowing what it said, and when we asked other classmates, no one understood anything,” he added, speaking at the headquarte­rs for the NGO Xumek (which means “sun” in the indigenous Huarpe language), which provided him with a lawyer.

His testimony, and those of some 20 other victims, are at the centre of a trial for the priests Nicola Corradi, 83, and Horacio Corbacho, 59, as well as the school’s former gardener Armando Gomez, 49.

“I want them all to go to jail. Corbacho, Corradi and Gomez, so that we can resolve this,” said Ezequiel. Corradi came to Argentina in 1970 from the original Provolo Institute in Verona -- which has also been shaken by a pedophilia scandal in recent years -- to run the Provolo in La Plata.

In 1998, he transferre­d just 42 miles north to Mendoza, where he worked as the head of the Institute until his arrest in November 2016.

Former altar boy Jorge Bordon, now 50, was sentenced last year to 10 years in prison as part of the sweeping affair, ater admiting to abusing five victims himself. Fiteen others also stand accused and will be judged over the course of two other trials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain