Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Wuerl’s colleagues here stunned over turn of events

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He’s credited, and blamed, for a massive parish restructur­ing that led to the closure of scores of churches, many of them historic and ethnic congregati­ons with deep emotional ties to their members.

He promoted scholarshi­p funds for needy students even while closing some schools with dwindling enrollment.

He helped cultivate a generation of priest-administra­tors in Pittsburgh, several of them now bishops of their own dioceses.

And then there was his response to sexually abusive priests.

In the early 1990s, the Vatican ordered him to reinstate an abusive priest, Anthony Cipolla, who had appealed his suspension in a process that had not allowed the diocese to present its case. Then-Bishop Wuerl refused, instead traveling to Rome to make an unheard-of appeal to get the court to reverse itself. It finally did three years later based on a fuller account of the case against Cipolla, who had molested at least three boys.

Early on, Bishop Wuerl chose to meet with a family of victims in 1988, even as they had a pending lawsuit against the church over the predations of a ring of pedophile priests. In an official response to the grand jury, Cardinal Wuerl said he was so moved by that meeting that he quickly declared that “no priest who had abused a minor could expect to return to ministry.”

But the grand jury concluded he didn’t always live up to his self-proclaimed standard, which came years before U.S. bishops adopted a nationwide zero-tolerance policy in the crisis year of 2002.

The grand jury cited cases in which abusive priests did stay in ministry under his watch in his early years, and it noted he presided over legal settlement­s that required victims not to speak publicly about their abuse.

In the case of a priest named Ernest Paone, for example, it said Cardinal Wuerl allowed him to do ministry in other states even as evidence steadily piled up over his past offenses in Pittsburgh.

In the aftermath of the grand jury report, Cardinal Wuerl North Catholic High School in Cranberry reverted to its historic name, North Catholic High School. That followed a petition for the name change, one that Cardinal Wuerl himself ultimately assented to.

Those who worked with Cardinal Wuerl during his Pittsburgh years say he did the best he could in a setting in the early 1990s when Vatican rules made it difficult to remove a priest who didn’t admit to abuse allegation­s, and when some of the claims against priests came from third-hand sources or were otherwise hard to substantia­te.

“I can’t tell you how much I worked with him and how passionate he was on this issue and not taking any nonsense” regarding abusive priests, said Sister Hannan, the Pittsburgh local leader of the Sisters of Mercy.

Current Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik, who served as an administra­tor under his predecesso­r, noted that many of Cardinal Wuerl’s policies served as a model for the 2002 charter approved by bishops, calling for abusers to be removed from ministry and reported to law enforcemen­t.

“I just hope, as people take a look at whatever decision Pope Francis is going to make, people don’t lose sight of the passion he did have in terms of addressing the issue of sexual abuse,” Bishop Zubik said.

The Rev. Frank Almade, who has been a priest for 40 years in the diocese, recalls a clergy meeting early in Cardinal Wuerl’s tenure in which he made it absolutely clear there would be no tolerance for priests violating children.

“Did Bishop Wuerl do some things that today we would not have done? Yes,” Father Almade said. But “at the time he was ahead of the curve, leading the way to where other bishops did not want to go.”

The most dramatic impact Cardinal Wuerl had on the literal landscape of the Pittsburgh diocese was in a massive parish consolidat­ion in the early 1990s. Faced with a sharp decline in parishione­rs and other factors following the collapse of the steel industry, the diocese dissolved 163 of 333 parishes, replacing them with 56 merged parishes.

Many churches were closed.

It didn’t go down well with parishione­rs who fought and still remember those changes.

“Well, in a nutshell, he’s arrogant and feels he’s above everyone else,” said Gene Selko, who was a parishione­r at St. Matthew in South Side Flats, which was merged into another parish. “You could never get in to see him. He ignored the people.”

Mr. Selko said to this day, he remains a “roamin’ Catholic” who doesn’t belong to any parish.

But Cardinal Wuerl’s successor says he responded out of necessity.

“He had a vision to say we weren’t going to wait until we came to the point of crisis,” Bishop Zubik said. “He saw difficulti­es and tried to address them as best he could.”

Cardinal Wuerl was also a pioneer in interfaith relations, said Pittsburgh Rabbi Alvin Berkun. The Second Vatican Council, which then-seminarian Wuerl attended during studies in Rome, issued a landmark document seeking to repair Catholic relations with Jews.

Rabbi Berkun, now rabbi emeritus of Tree of Life Congregati­on, said then-Bishop Wuerl enthusiast­ically embraced a program that is still active in Pittsburgh Catholic high schools in which rabbis visit to teach about the Jewish origins of Christiani­ty and the history of anti-Semitism.

The two also bonded personally.

“I went to Rome for his red hat [installati­on as cardinal], he came to my daughter’s wedding, spoke at my congregati­on,” Rabbi Berkun said.

“I’m heartbroke­n about what’s happened” with Cardinal Wuerl recently, he added. “For many, many years I held him in awe over the fact that he went to Rome” to challenge the Cipolla ruling.

Sister Hannan echoed the thought but believes he’s resigning “because it’s what’s best for the church.”

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