Bangkok Post

Vatican abuse victim testifies

Pope makes U-turn over accused bishop

-

NEW YORK: The key witness in the case of a Chilean bishop accused of covering sexual abuse said he gave “eye-opening” testimony to a papally mandated investigat­or and hoped it would lead to the truth.

Juan Carlos Cruz met in a church on Manhattan’s Upper West Side for about four hours with Archbishop Charles Scicluna, one of the most experience­d and respected Vatican investigat­ors of clergy sexual abuse.

“It’s been a good experience and I leave here very hopeful today,” he told reporters afterwards. “I feel that I was heard ... it was very intense and very detailed and very, sometimes, eye-opening for them.”

“Hopefully it will lead to good things,” he said.

The Vatican announced on Jan 30 that Pope Francis had appointed Archbishop Scicluna to look into accusation­s that Bishop Juan Barros of the diocese of Osorno in Chile had covered up crimes against minors.

It was a dramatic U-turn for the pope, who eight days earlier told reporters aboard his plane returning from Latin America he was sure Bishop Barros was innocent and that the Vatican had received no concrete evidence against him.

“For the first time I feel that someone is listening,” said Mr Cruz, who now lives in Philadelph­ia and works for a large-multinatio­nal company in nearby Delaware.

“We’ll see what the outcome is of all this, but I feel that Monsignor Scicluna is a very good man, and I think he was sincerely moved by what I was saying. He cried,” Mr Cruz said.

“He was hearing my testimony, and I was telling him about the abuse, about the cover up [and] the way survivors, not just me, are treated ... the personal toll it takes on someone. He was crying ... it wasn’t an act ... I felt that he was concerned and that he was listening,” Cruz said.

As a teenager, Mr Cruz was sexually abused by Rev Fernando Karadima, who was found guilty in a Vatican investigat­ion in 2011 of abusing him and other teenage boys over many years. Karadima always denied the allegation­s.

The Vatican ordered him to follow a life of prayer and penitence and banned him from public ministry, but he avoided criminal prosecutio­n because under Chilean law too much time had elapsed since the offences. The 87-year-old still lives in Chile.

Mr Cruz says Bishop Barros witnessed the abuse by Karadima, who was Bishop Barros’ mentor years ago in a Santiago parish.

Bishop Barros has always denied this and said he was unaware of any wrongdoing by Karadima, who had trained him to become a priest.

The Karadima case has gripped Chile for years and many Chileans protested against the pope’s decision to make Barros a bishop in 2015. It cast a long shadow over the pope’s trip to Chile last month.

Archbishop Scicluna will travel to Chile tomorrow to continue his investigat­ion of Bishop Barros there.

Mr Cruz said he was “emotionall­y drained” but felt empathy from Archbishop Scicluna and another priest rom the Vatican’s doctrinal office in Rome who also took part in the meeting.

During his visit to Chile last month, the pope testily told a Chilean reporter: “The day I see proof against Bishop Barros, then I will talk.

“There is not a single piece of evidence against him. It is all slander. Is that clear?”

He later apologised to victims, acknowledg­ing that his choice of words and tone of voice had “wounded many”.

Mr Cruz said all victims deserved to be heard with the same respect and treatment he received.

“The pope needs to understand that is what survivors need,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Chilean victim of clerical sexual abuse Juan Cruz speaks with media after meeting with investigat­or, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta in New York on Saturday.
REUTERS Chilean victim of clerical sexual abuse Juan Cruz speaks with media after meeting with investigat­or, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta in New York on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand