Texarkana Gazette

Chile’s bishops offer to resign en masse over ‘grave negligence’

- By Nicole Winfield

VATICAN CITY—In the biggest shakeup yet in the Catholic Church’s long-running sex abuse scandal, every active Chilean bishop offered to resign Friday over what Pope Francis said was their “grave negligence” in investigat­ing abuse and protecting children.

The bishops announced at the end of an emergency Vatican summit that all 31 active bishops in Rome had signed a document offering to resign.

Francis can accept the resignatio­ns, reject them or delay a decision, and the bishops remain in place until he acts. But the symbolic significan­ce of an entire national bishops’ conference resigning en masse because they covered-up for pedophiles marked a historic moment in the decades-long saga.

It marked the first known time that an entire national bishops conference had offered to step down over a scandal and laid bare the devastatio­n the abuse crisis has caused the Catholic Church in Chile and beyond.

“They didn’t know how to protect the weakest, exposed them to abuse and then impeded justice,” said Jose Andres Murillo, one of those abused and one of the main whistleblo­wers in the case. “For this, they deserve only to go.”

Calls for mass resignatio­ns had mounted after details emerged of the contents of a 2,300-page Vatican report into the Chilean scandal leaked early Friday. Francis had cited the report in footnotes of a 10-page document that he handed over to each Chilean bishop at the start of the summit.

In those footnotes, Francis accused the bishops of destroying evidence of sex crimes, pressuring church investigat­ors to minimize abuse accusation­s and showing “grave negligence” in protecting children from pedophile priests.

“No one can exempt himself and place the problem on the shoulders of the others,” Francis wrote in the document, which was published by Chilean T13 television and confirmed as accurate Friday by the Vatican.

Francis had summoned the 34 bishops to Rome after admitting that he had made “grave errors in judgment” in the case of Bishop Juan Barros, who is accused by victims of Chilean priest, the Rev. Fernando Karadima, of witnessing and ignoring their abuse.

But the scandal grew after Francis received the report written by two Vatican sex crimes experts sent to Chile to get a handle on the problem.

The whole report hasn’t been made public, but even the highlights Francis included in his footnotes were astonishin­g. The gravity of the accusation­s appeared to lay the foundation for a full-scale Vatican investigat­ion of Chilean dioceses, seminaries and religious orders. Such an investigat­ion was ordered up after a similar 2010 summit that Pope Benedict XVI called for Irish bishops over their dismal record dealing with abuse.

Barros and two other Karadima-trained bishops were among the 31 who offered to resign. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if Cardinal Javier Errazuriz and two other retired bishops in Rome did as well; Victims have accused Errazuriz of covering up for Karadima.

Francis said the investigat­ion showed there were “grave defects” in the way abuse cases were handled, with superficia­l investigat­ions or no investigat­ion at all.

In other cases, there was “grave negligence” in protecting children from pedophiles by bishops and religious superiors—a reference to the many cases of sexual abuse that have arisen in recent years within Chilean religious orders, including the Salesians, Franciscan­s and the Marist Brothers community.

While some guilty priests were kicked out of their orders, those same people “were then welcomed into other dioceses, in an obviously imprudent way, and given diocesan or parish jobs that gave them daily contact with minors,” he said.

Francis said he was also “perplexed and ashamed” by evidence that there were “pressures exercised” on church officials tasked with investigat­ing sex crimes “including the destructio­n of compromisi­ng documents.”

He said the problem can be traced to the training Chilean priests receive in seminary. He said there were “grave accusation­s against some bishops and superiors who sent to these educationa­l institutio­ns priests suspected of active homosexual­ity.”

 ?? Vincenzo Pinto/Pool Photo via AP ?? ■ Pope Francis arrives to meet with Benin President Patrice Talon on the occasion of a private audience Friday at the Vatican.
Vincenzo Pinto/Pool Photo via AP ■ Pope Francis arrives to meet with Benin President Patrice Talon on the occasion of a private audience Friday at the Vatican.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States