The Boston Globe

Cardinal Pell, adviser to pope, most senior Catholic prelate jailed over child sex abuse

- By Natasha Frost and Damien Cave

Cardinal George Pell, an Australian cleric and adviser to Pope Francis who became the most senior Roman Catholic prelate sent to prison for child sexual abuse, before later being acquitted of all charges, died Tuesday in Rome. He was 81.

The cause of death was complicati­ons from hip replacemen­t surgery, according to Peter Comensoli, the archbishop of Melbourne, who confirmed the death in a post on Twitter. Cardinal Pell had gone to Rome to attend the funeral last week of Pope Benedict XVI.

For decades, Cardinal Pell was one of Australia’s most powerful religious figures. A former athlete with a formidable intellect and a combative streak, he was a conservati­ve voice heard regularly in the media, strongly opposing abortion while defending the church against accusation­s of child abuse as the archbishop of the Melbourne diocese and then the Sydney diocese.

For many Australian Catholics, his personal journey, from his origins in the tiny town of Ballarat to his stratosphe­ric rise through the ranks of the Vatican, had at one time been personally inspiratio­nal, said journalist Lucie Morris-Marr, the author of “Fallen: The Inside Story of the Secret Trial and Conviction of Cardinal George Pell.”

“He was really seen as a success story, a superstar, in effect,” Morris-Marr said. “But of course, the trajectory of his career and reputation have been terribly, irrevocabl­y damaged, because of the child abuse allegation­s.”

From 2014 to 2019, Cardinal Pell was the church’s financial czar and third-in-command, and he tried to push through reforms to make its finances more transparen­t. Those efforts were truncated in 2017, when he was forced to return to Australia to face trial on charges of sex abuse dating to the 1990s. The case transfixed Australia — cameras met Cardinal Pell at the airport when he arrived from Rome.

In December 2018, he was convicted by an Australian jury of five counts of child sexual abuse of two choir boys that were said to have occurred in 1996, during his time in Melbourne. Less than two years later, in April 2020, Australia’s highest court overturned the conviction, saying that there was “a significan­t possibilit­y” that he was not guilty.

Throughout the proceeding­s, Cardinal Pell maintained his innocence. At a news conference in Rome in 2017, he said he had been a victim of “relentless character assassinat­ion.” He said, “The whole idea of sexual abuse is abhorrent to me.”

At the time of his death, Cardinal Pell faced a lawsuit by the father of a now-deceased choir boy who alleged that the cleric had abused the boy when he was archbishop of Melbourne. In a statement, the claimant’s lawyer said the suit would continue, adding: “There is still a great deal of evidence for this claim to rely upon.”

Separately, a 2017 Australian government inquiry into the abuse of tens of thousands of children in churches, schools, and other institutio­ns over a period of decades found that Cardinal Pell had been aware of the sexual abuse of children by other Roman Catholic priests as early as 1974 but failed to take action.

At the Vatican, Cardinal Pell had been lauded for his financial expertise and creative methods to protect the church from being bankrupted by cases involving claims of abuse.

His promotion to Vatican treasurer in Rome followed a period of leadership in Australia during which church attendance declined but the institutio­n’s finances were secured. As archbishop of Melbourne in October 1996 — two months before the alleged incidents that led to his conviction — Cardinal Pell set up what would become a firewall for the church’s finances and reputation in connection with abuse accusation­s. He called it “The Melbourne Response.”

On paper, it was an alternativ­e resolution process for survivors. Cardinal Pell said it aimed to “make it easier for victims to achieve justice” outside the courts. But it capped payments, initially at $35,000, and usually forced victims to keep their traumas confidenti­al.

Cardinal Pell brought a similar approach to Sydney, where he served as archbishop from 2001 to 2014.

The response to Cardinal Pell’s death in his native Australia was divided. Some said their thoughts would be with the victims of those abused by the Catholic Church, while others paid tribute to him — muted tribute, in some cases. In a statement, Comensoli of Melbourne expressed “great sadness” at Cardinal Pell’s death. “May eternal light now be his, who so steadfastl­y believed in the God of Jesus Christ,” he wrote.

Tony Abbott, a former Australian prime minister and longtime Catholic, told The Australian newspaper that the cardinal had been a “saint for our times.”

George Pell was born in Ballarat, Australia, on June 8, 1941, to George Arthur and Margaret Lillian (Burke) Pell. His father, an Anglican of little religious conviction, was the manager of a gold mine and a heavyweigh­t boxing champion; his mother was a devout Catholic. He had a sister, Margaret, who died in 2021, and a brother, David, who survives him.

He grew up attending Mass weekly and confession once a month. He was a keen sportsman as a child and signed a contract to become a profession­al player of Australian rules football for the team of Richmond, which he did not ultimately take up. In his final year at a Catholic secondary school, in 1959, he decided to become a priest.

“I feared and suspected and eventually became convinced that God wanted me to do his work, and I was never able to successful­ly escape that conviction,” he told an interviewe­r in 1997. “I still marvel that I made the leap of being interested in it and thinking about it to saying ‘I’ll have a go.’”

Cardinal Pell was known within the church for his traditiona­l views, which he said had made him unpopular among the public. Speaking to the BBC in 2020, he described his style as “rather direct.”

“The fact that I defend Christian teachings is irritating to a lot of people,” he said. “For my basic Christian positions I make no apology at all.”

Even as he faced his own accusation­s, Cardinal Pell did not dispute that the Catholic Church had been complicit in the sexual abuse of children. He deeply lamented their suffering, he said, but was “able to sleep quite well on most occasions.”

A requiem Mass would be celebrated in Rome, but Cardinal Pell was expected to be buried in Sydney.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE/2018 ?? Cardinal Pell left court in Melbourne, Australia, with a group of officers.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE/2018 Cardinal Pell left court in Melbourne, Australia, with a group of officers.

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