National Post

Pope airs ‘pain and shame’ over abuse by clergy

Firebombin­gs, protests mark visit to Chile

- Peter Prengaman Nicole Winfield and

SANTIAGO, CHILE • Pope Francis begged for forgivenes­s Tuesday for the “irreparabl­e damage” done to children who were raped and molested by priests, opening his visit to Chile by diving head-first into a scandal that has greatly hurt the Catholic Church’s credibilit­y here and cast a cloud over his visit.

Francis faced controvers­y on another front as well: Overnight three more Catholic churches were torched, i ncluding one burned to the ground in the southern Araucania region where Francis will visit on Wednesday to meet with Chile’s Indigenous peoples. While not causing any injuries, the nine church firebombin­gs in the past few days have marked an unpreceden­ted level of protest against history’s first Latin American Pope on his home turf.

Francis, who is making his first visit as Pope to this country of 17 million people, has been met with distrust in some quarters and demonstrat­ions. The Argentine Pope is nearly a native son, having studied in Chile during his Jesuit novitiate and he knows the country well, but Chileans give him the lowest approval rating among the 18 Latin American nations in a recent survey.

At a protest Tuesday near O’Higgins park where Francis celebrated mass, police fired tear gas and water cannons before detaining several dozen demonstrat­ors, according to an Associated Press photograph­er at the scene. Protesters carried signs with messages reading “Burn, pope!” and “We don’t care about the pope!”

Other groups also called for demonstrat­ions against the pontiff.

Felipe Morales, from a group called the Workers’ Socialist Front, said many were unhappy with the Pope and the church’s historical influence in Chile. They planned to protest outside while Francis celebrated mass.

“The role of the church has been nefarious,” said Morales. “Sex abuse cases have been covered up and people are unhappy with many other issues.”

In Santiago, though, an estimated 400,000 j ubilant Chileans turned out in droves for his first public mass, a massive gathering in the capital’s O’Higgins park where St. John Paul II celebrated mass three decades ago. Before the service began, Francis took a long, looping ride in his popemobile through the grounds to greet well- wishers, some of whom had camped out overnight to secure a spot.

In his first event of the day, Francis met privately with Chilean President Michelle Bachelet and addressed lawmakers, judges and other authoritie­s at La Moneda palace. They inter- rupted him with applause when he said he felt “bound to express my pain and shame” that some of Chile’s pastors had sexually abused children in their care.

“I am one with my brother bishops, for it is right to ask forgivenes­s and make every effort to support the victims, even as we commit ourselves to ensuring that such things do not happen again,” he said.

Francis didn’t refer by name to Chile’s most notorious pedophile priest, the Rev. Fernando Karadima, who was sanctioned in 2011 by the Vatican to a lifetime of “penance and prayer” for sexually molesting minors. Nor did he refer to the fact that the emeritus archbishop of Santiago, a top papal adviser, has acknowledg­ed he knew of complaints against Karadima but didn’t remove him from ministry.

Karadima had been a politicall­y connected, charismati­c and powerful priest who ministered to a wealthy Santiago community and produced dozens of priestly vocations and five bishops. Victims went public with their accusation­s in 2010, after complainin­g for years to church authoritie­s that Karadima would kiss and fondle them when they were teenagers.

While the scandal rocked the church, many Chileans are still furious over Francis’s subsequent decision, in 2015, to appoint a Karadima protege as bishop of the southern city of Osorno. Bishop Juan Barros has denied knowing about Karadima’s abuse but many Chileans don’t believe him, and his appointmen­t has badly split the diocese.

“Sex abuse is Pope Francis’ weakest spot in terms of his credibilit­y,” s aid Massimo Faggioli, a Vatican expert and theology professor at Villanova University in Philadelph­ia. “It is surprising that the Pope and his entourage don’t understand that they need to be more forthcomin­g on this issue.”

Anne Barrett Doyle, of the online abuse database Bishop Accountabi­lity. org, praised Francis for opening his visit with the apology, but said Chileans expect him to take action against complicit church leaders.

“This is a crucial opportunit­y f or Francis: With luck, he will not make the mistake of his brother bishops in underestim­ating the savviness and moral outrage of the Chilean people,” said Barrett Doyle, who last week released research showing nearly 80 Chilean priests have been credibly accused or convicted of abuse.

The Karadima scandal and along cover up has caused a crisis for the church in Chile, with a recent Latinbarom­etro survey saying the case was responsibl­e for a significan­t drop in the number of Chileans who call themselves Catholic, as well as a fall in confidence in the church as an institutio­n.

“People are leaving the church because they don’t find a protective space there,” said Juan Carlos Claret, spokesman for a group of church members in Osorno that has opposed Barros’ appointmen­t as bishop. “The pastors are eating the flock.”

 ?? VICTOR R. CAIVANO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man is arrested during a protest against Pope Francis in Santiago on Tuesday.
VICTOR R. CAIVANO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man is arrested during a protest against Pope Francis in Santiago on Tuesday.

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