San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Argentine archbishop admits 2019 mistakes

But Fernández denies allegation­s that he tried to protect a priest accused by five children

- By Almudena Calatrava and Natacha Pisarenko

LA PLATA, Argentina — Archbishop Victor Manuel Fernández, chosen by Pope Francis to head the Vatican office that ensures doctrinal orthodoxy, conceded Sunday he made mistakes in handling a 2019 case of a priest accused of sexual abuse of minors.

The case has drawn allegation­s by critics that Fernández tried to protect the priest, a charge that he has denied.

“Today I would certainly act very differentl­y and certainly my performanc­e was insufficie­nt,” he told the Associated Press during an interview after celebratin­g Mass in La Plata, about 40 miles south of Buenos Aires.

Francis appointed Fernández on July 1 to head the Holy See’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, which guarantees doctrinal orthodoxy and one of whose areas involves handling sexual abuse allegation­s brought against clergy. He was also named a cardinal Sunday along with 20 other new cardinals, including prelates from Jerusalem and Hong Kong, places where Catholics are a small minority.

The pope announced his picks during his customary Sunday appearance to the public in St. Peter’s Square, saying the ceremony to formally install the cardinals will be held on Sept. 30.

BishopAcco­untability.org, a U.S. group that maintains an online archive on abuse in the Roman Catholic Church, has questioned the archbishop’s appointmen­t as head of the dicastery. It said Fernández refused to believe allegation­s by minors who accused Eduardo Lorenzo, a priest in the archdioces­e of La Plata, of abusing them.

At the end of 2019, hours after learning that an Argentine judge had ordered his arrest for the alleged sexual abuse of five children, Lorenzo was found dead in what was ruled a suicide.

In response to the U.S. organizati­on’s criticism, Fernández told AP in a statement that he had never said he did not believe the allegation­s and that he took steps to distance the priest from the alleged victims.

On Sunday, though, he was more self-critical of his actions, which he attributed to arriving in 2018 as archbishop of La Plata “without any expe

rience in another diocese.” He said church procedures for dealing with allegation­s of abuse committed by clerics “were less clear” at that time.

“I cannot say that I have committed a crime or something against what was establishe­d at that time, but that I could have been a much better father, much better pastor and much more efficient. That, of course, I recognize,” he told AP.

“With everything I say it is clear that I did not act in the best way,” he said.

Fernández said he should have “treated the victims more closely” and acted “a little earlier” in removing Lorenzo from his duties as a priest while he was being investigat­ed.

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAcco­untability.org, expressed disbelief at the

archbishop’s words.

“He declares himself bewildered, but he is a sophistica­ted and educated man,” she said, adding that “claims of ignorance are not credible.”

Barrett Doyle said Fernández “repeatedly” demonstrat­ed support for the priest.

“If Archbishop Fernández finally regretted his handling of this case, why did he never reach out to Lorenzo’s victims?” she said.

A close adviser to the Argentine-born pontiff, Fernández has been nicknamed the “pope’s theologian” because he is widely believed to have helped author some of Francis’ most important documents. Francis named him to head the La Plata archdioces­e in 2018.

Fernández said he had spoken to the pope about the criticism received about Lorenzo’s case and was told: “You explain reality as it was.”

 ?? Natacha Pisarenko/Associated Press ?? Monsignor Victor Manuel Fernandez, named archbishop of La Plata in 2018, is nicknamed the “pope’s theologian.”
Natacha Pisarenko/Associated Press Monsignor Victor Manuel Fernandez, named archbishop of La Plata in 2018, is nicknamed the “pope’s theologian.”

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