Bangkok Post

YOUTH LOSE THEIR FAITH IN CHURCH

The Polish Catholic Church is in a deep crisis, as its authority is sapped by cascading sexual abuse scandals and as more people grow wary of its perceived alliance with the country’s right-wing government

- ANDREW HIGGINS BYDGOSZCZ, POLAND

Acommitted Catholic who served from childhood as an altar boy, Karol dreamed as a teenager of entering the seminary in his hometown in northern Poland and becoming a priest. “I had a deep faith and wanted to serve the church,” said Karol, now 26, recalling how he had discussed his hopes of one day becoming a bishop with his spiritual mentor, a priest at the Church of Divine Providence in the city of Bydgoszcz.

But that was before the priest raped him.

“The whole church has been poisoned,” Karol said in an interview, asking that his full name not be used by The New York Times.

His story, one of many that has stirred outrage over the years in the Polish news media, is part of a cascade of sexual abuse scandals that has plunged the Roman Catholic Church in Poland into a deep crisis and eroded trust among young people.

Polish youths are also wary of what many of them see as the church’s symbiotic relationsh­ip with the country’s deeply conservati­ve governing party, Law and Justice.

A report issued last November by CBOS, a government-funded polling agency, found that only 23% of Poles younger than 25 regularly go to church, one-third the level of three decades ago.

The Catholic Informatio­n Agency reported that only 20% of young people now disapprove of sex before marriage. The primate of the Polish church, Archbishop Wojciech Polak, deplored what he called a “devastatin­g” decline in religious practice among younger Poles.

This past summer, the seminary in Bydgoszcz that Karol had planned to attend shut down, bereft of new students.

One of Poland’s biggest pop stars, Dawid Podsiadlo, 29, announced last month that, though still a believer, he was formally leaving the church. “I have a problem with the institutio­n,” he said, because of “more and more cases of paedophili­a and its meddling in political and ideologica­l matters.”

Andrzej Kobylinski, a professor at Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw and an outspoken critic of the church’s failure to grapple with sexual abuse, said in an interview that the “creeping secularisa­tion” of Poland had “turned into a gallop”. He added, “This is a time bomb that was always going to explode sooner or later.”

Compared with most other European countries, Poland is still a bastion of faith, with nearly 94% of the population identifyin­g as Catholic, according to the Central Statistica­l Office.

The church, deeply implanted in society thanks to its more than 33,000 priests in 10,382 parishes, is also closely aligned with the Polish government.

Dominated since 2015 by Law and Justice, the government has delivered changes dear to the church: a near-total ban on abortion, a ban on Sunday shopping, the expanded use of a law banning “blasphemy” and a drive to root out what it denounces as “LGBT ideology”.

But for many young people, the “church is just sad”, Poland’s Catholic Synod acknowledg­ed in a recent report bemoaning “empty seats in the pews of parish churches.”

The coronaviru­s pandemic, which began in 2020, has also caused many to break their churchgoin­g habits, as lockdowns at the start of it meant that large gatherings were prohibited.

In Bydgoszcz, the number of people celebratin­g Mass picked up slightly last year as fear of infection eased, but it was still only about 20%, down from 33.5% in 2019, the local bishop, Krzysztof Wlodarczyk, told Polish news media this month.

For Tomasz Terlikowsk­i — a Catholic philosophe­r who headed a commission investigat­ing the abuse of nuns and other women by a Dominican friar convicted of rape in September — the “biggest threat to the church now is indifferen­ce” as young people lose interest in an institutio­n tainted by scandal and amid perception­s that it is allied with the political agenda of Law and Justice.

Walking by the now-closed Bydgoszcz seminary on a recent morning, Michal Malada, 23, said he used to celebrate Mass regularly with his grandmothe­r but stopped because it “has become too political”.

He added, “I haven’t lost my faith, but the church as an institutio­n does not represent God as it should.”

The bishop of Bydgoszcz declined to comment for this article.

In the 1980s, the Catholic Church in Poland stood shoulder to shoulder with the Solidarity trade union movement in the struggle for freedom, respected as a unifying force that could rally opposition to the ruling Communist Party.

But the church has become a highly divisive force in a country increasing­ly polarised between supporters and opponents of the governing party.

Renata Mazurowska, a former regular churchgoer who now campaigns for women’s rights in Bydgoszcz, recalled how in 1991 she celebrated a Mass by Pope John Paul II, who was born in Poland, and had looked up to the church as her guide.

“The pope was a moral certainty for me; we were all on the same side” against communist rule, she said. She no longer goes to church and has encouraged her two daughters to stay away, too, because, she said, “the idea that they are meeting priests who are paedophile­s is horrifying”.

“For me,” Ms Mazurowska said, “the authority of the church has collapsed”.

Rural areas have largely avoided this collapse. Piaski Kruszwicki­e, a small village south of Bydgoszcz, was decked with pennants and pictures of the Virgin Mary recently when nearly all of its residents turned out to celebrate the arrival of a copy of a revered Polish icon, the Black Madonna of Czestochow­a.

But even there, disillusio­nment with the church over its handling of predatory priests bubbled below the display of devotion.

A 50-year-old believer who gave only her first name, Beata, joined the crowd welcoming the icon but said she “felt more distant from the church than in the past” because of the “outrageous behaviour of some priests”.

A big factor in the Polish church’s failure to tackle sexual abuse, according to Prof Kobylinski, is the legacy of communist rule, during which accusation­s of rape and molestatio­n against priests were routinely dismissed as fabricatio­ns spread by secret police agents dedicated to atheism. To defend itself against the state, he added, the church developed a “culture of omerta”, or silence.

While abortion rights activists and other foes of the government turn their anger on the church, Law and Justice has tended to support the church no matter what.

When the head of Law and Justice, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, and other officials presided over the opening of a canal in September, they were joined by Slawoj Leszek Glodz, a disgraced archbishop who in March 2021 was punished by the Vatican for negligence “in cases of sexual abuse committed by certain clergy against minors” and barred from preaching in his previous diocese.

Mr Terlikowsk­i, head of the commission that investigat­ed Dominican order abuse, said right-wing politician­s often discounted evidence of wrongdoing by priests, viewing it as “just another attack on the church” by their political foes.

Some senior Catholics have spoken out against the rot in the church and pushed for action.

Responding to figures last year showing that the church had received complaints of abuse against 368 boys and girls during a two-year period ending in 2020, Archbishop Polak, the primate, pleaded for “forgivenes­s” from “those wronged and all those shocked by the evil in the church”.

Karol said he was first abused when he was about 14. He said he was raped multiple times but did not tell his parents or anyone else at the time because he “felt ashamed and did not realise what was happening”.

Church hierarchs acknowledg­ed they had failed Karol only when a court in the city of Gdansk ruled in 2021 that the dioceses of Bydgoszcz and Wroclaw were guilty of negligence because “the bishops were aware of their priest’s paedophili­a.” The court ordered the two dioceses to pay Karol damages of around US$60,000 (2 million baht).

The two bishops who presided over the attempted cover-up have not been punished. One died, and the other, placed under investigat­ion by the Vatican, resigned last year.

Karol says he still believes in God but wants nothing to do with the Catholic Church.

“The whole institutio­n should be abolished,” he said. “It is based on lies and hypocrisy. It is evil.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? TOP TO BOTTOM Activist Renata Mazurowska in front of the Diocese of Bydgoszcz, where she held her protests against sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.
The Divine Providence Church in Bydgoszcz, Poland, on Sept 20. Parishione­rs celebrate the visit of a copy of a revered Polish icon, the ‘Black Madonna of Czestochow­a’, in Piaski.
A group of altar boys at the celebratio­n for the ‘Black Madonna’ icon in Piaski, Poland. St Anne’s Church after the Sunday evening Mass in Warsaw.
TOP TO BOTTOM Activist Renata Mazurowska in front of the Diocese of Bydgoszcz, where she held her protests against sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. The Divine Providence Church in Bydgoszcz, Poland, on Sept 20. Parishione­rs celebrate the visit of a copy of a revered Polish icon, the ‘Black Madonna of Czestochow­a’, in Piaski. A group of altar boys at the celebratio­n for the ‘Black Madonna’ icon in Piaski, Poland. St Anne’s Church after the Sunday evening Mass in Warsaw.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? PHOTOS: MACIEK NABRDALIK/NYT ??
PHOTOS: MACIEK NABRDALIK/NYT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand