Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Opinion: Pope Benedict's defense is outrageous and tragic

A report about how the archdioces­e of Munich handled cases of sexual abuse by priests makes for devastatin­g reading and tarnishes the image of the retired Pope Benedict XVI, says DW’s Christoph Strack.

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Before Joseph Ratzinger became Pope Benedict XVI in April 2005, critics called him the "Panzerkard­inal” or a ‘tank cardinal' in reference to his sharp, dogmatic views. Someone who uncompromi­singly defended the church's traditiona­l doctrine. Soon after his election to pontiff, there were reports that the reportedly tough ex-cardinal was capable of laughter and was even a softie, to everyone's surprise.

Now, Joseph Ratzinger is being described in a new way. One of the lawyers, whose office spent many months investigat­ing abuse in Ratzinger's former diocese of Munich, said the soon-to-be 95-year-old had a "very rock-like way of dealing with things” – in reference to the accusation of having covered up abuse in the church.

A 'catalogue of horrors'

The approximat­ely 1,900 pages that a Munich law firm has compiled on the archdioces­e of Munich-Freising's handling of sexual abuse cases are a "catalogue of horrors."

One of the lawyers says so

literally, several times. The thick volumes are also a document of church history - they represent a new dimension, a new stage in the investigat­ion of sexual abuse.

Since 1952, six archbishop­s headed the archdioces­e in Munich. All of them had been cardinals before or were elevated to cardinals while in office. All six, without exception, were guilty, to varying degrees, of clear misconduct in dealing with sexual abuse cases. Three of the six are still alive.

And from 1977 to 1982, that same Joseph Ratzinger was archbishop of Munich, who then continued his career in Rome and ascended to the top of the Catholic Church as Pope Benedict XVI in 2005. That's why the global Catholic community watched with baited breath the events in Munich on Thursday

this week.

With regard to the five years that Ratzinger spent in Munich, the experts speak of four cases of misconduct in which the archbishop should have acted against abusive priests, but did not. For example in the case of priests, whose acts of abuse were known, but who neverthele­ss continued with pastoral work.

Ratzinger himself reacted to the allegation­s in an 82-page written statement. In it, he rejects "allegation­s," claims ignorance of certain events or even not rememberin­g at all. He also firmly denies having attended a committee meeting at which a particular­ly nasty case of coverup was discussed. The experts from the law firm, however, prove with credible details that Ratzinger was there after all.

Church can't deal with the

past on its own

Ratzinger's letter is an outrageous, and at the same time, tragic document. It's hard to read when this great theologian explains that for a canonical judicial procedure to be opened would have required "an offense directed at the arousal of sexual desire.” Let's not forget, we're talking here about minors!

In light of the report by the Munich law firm, there are four points worth holding on to:

1) It's important that the lawyers repeatedly and explicitly addressed the importance of the victims and the survivors of sexual violence and thanked them, appreciate­d their courage and their openness. That's something they didn't attribute to any clergyman. And they are right to demand that an ombudsman's office be set up to represent their interests. This is about dealing appropriat­ely with victims, which the church can hardly do itself.

2) It is important to look at the parishes where abusive priests worked and which the Church should be monitoring more closely. Entire communitie­s, friendship­s and families have already been divided over allegation­s, assumption­s and disappoint­ments. Here, too, the church is sinning against its base.

3) The church obviously cannot deal with the past by

itself - the state judiciary must intervene more decisively. That is evident and not just because of Joseph Ratzinger's coldlyword­ed statement. Two days before the publicatio­n of the Munich report, an archbishop stood trial for the first time in Cologne — another hotspot of church cover-ups and appeasemen­t — as a witness in the proceeding­s against a priest and alleged sexual offender. The dignitary, Archbishop Stefan Heße of Hamburg, suddenly stood before the judge and had to answer concisely, precisely and— according to those present —meekly. This demonstrat­es that state prosecutor­s or judges should be pushing the legal process forward. The state, if it wants to at all, should take over prosecutin­g the crimes. This would also mean that victims would no longer have to face the perpetrato­rs or their organizati­ons.

4) And finally, the fourth point is that this clerical and episcopald­riven church that elevates itself

and tries to cover up its filth, is no longer the church of the present. If one can at all sense a line in Pope Francis' occasional­ly strangesou­nding statements, it is the effort to keep alive the longing for God. And the church?

Comes up somehow, too. But the exaltation of the past is over. The question is whether the Catholic

Church will be able to cope with this?

 ?? ?? Cardinal Reinhard Marx, right, has been the archbishop of Munich since 2007 while retired Papst Benedikt XVI was in that position from 1977 until 1982
Cardinal Reinhard Marx, right, has been the archbishop of Munich since 2007 while retired Papst Benedikt XVI was in that position from 1977 until 1982
 ?? ?? DW editor and expert on the church, Christoph Strack
DW editor and expert on the church, Christoph Strack

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