Miami Herald (Sunday)

42 women accuse Opus Dei of labor exploitati­on

- BY DEBORA REY Associated Press

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA

Lucia Gimenez still suffers pain in her knees from the years she spent scrubbing floors in the men’s bathroom at the Opus Dei residence in Argentina’s capital for hours without pay.

Gimenez, now 56, joined the conservati­ve Catholic group in her native Paraguay at the age of 14 with the promise she would get an education. But instead of math or history, she was trained in cooking, cleaning and other household chores to serve in Opus Dei residences and retirement homes.

For 18 years she washed clothes, scrubbed bathrooms and attended to the group’s needs for 12 hours a day, with breaks only for meals and praying. Despite her hard labor, she says: “I never saw money in my hands.”

Gimenez and 41 other women have filed a complaint against Opus Dei to the Vatican for alleged labor exploitati­on, as well as abuse of power and of conscience. The Argentine and Paraguayan citizens worked for the movement in Argentina, Paraguay, Bolivia, Uruguay, Italy and Kazakhstan between 1974 and 2015.

Opus Dei – Work of God in Latin – was founded by the Spanish priest Josemaria Escriva in 1928, and has 90,000 members in 70 countries. The lay group, which was greatly favored by St. John Paul II, who canonized Escriva in 2002, has a unique status in the church and reports directly to the pope. Most members are laymen and women with secular jobs and families who strive to “sanctify ordinary life.” Other members are priests or celibate lay people.

The complaint alleges the women, often minors at the time, labored under “manifestly illegal conditions“that included working without pay for 12 hours-plus without breaks except for food or prayer, no registrati­on in the Social Security system and other violations of basic rights.

The women are demanding financial reparation­s from Opus Dei and that it acknowledg­es the abuses and apologizes to them, as well as the punishment of those responsibl­e.

“I was sick of the pain in my knees, of getting down on my knees to do the showers,” Gimenez told The Associated Press. “They don’t give you time to think, to criticize and say that you don’t like it. You have to endure because you have to surrender totally to God.”

In a statement to the

AP, Opus Dei said it had not been notified of the complaint to the Vatican but has been in contact with the women’s legal representa­tives to “listen to the problems and find a solution.”

The women in the complaint have one thing in common: humble origins. They were recruited and separated from their families between the ages of 12 and 16. In some cases, like Gimenez’s, they were taken to Opus Dei centers in another country, circumvent­ing immigratio­n controls.

They claim that Opus Dei priests and other members exercised “coercion of conscience” on the women to pressure them to serve and to frighten them with spiritual evils if they didn’t comply with the supposed will of God. They also controlled their relations with the outside world.

Most of the women asked to leave as the physical and psychologi­cal demands became intolerabl­e. But when they finally did, they were left without money. Many also said they needed psychologi­cal treatment after leaving Opus Dei.

“The hierarchy (of Opus Dei) is aware of these practices,” said Sebastian Sal, the women’s lawyer. “It is an internal policy of Opus Dei.” The women’s complaint, filed in September with the Vatican Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith, also points to dozens of priests affiliated with Opus Dei for their alleged “interventi­on, participat­ion and knowledge in the denounced events.”

 ?? NATACHA PISARENKO AP ?? From left: Lucia Gimenez, Alicia Torancio and Beatriz Delgado, former Opus Dei domestic workers in Argentina, have filed a complaint against Opus Dei to the Vatican.
NATACHA PISARENKO AP From left: Lucia Gimenez, Alicia Torancio and Beatriz Delgado, former Opus Dei domestic workers in Argentina, have filed a complaint against Opus Dei to the Vatican.

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