The Guardian (USA)

‘Profound shame’: C of E review uncovers 400 new cases of abuse

- Harriet Sherwood

The Church of England has suffered from a culture of deference, inertia, misogyny, protection­ism and victimblam­ing, a three-year internal review of abuse cases has found.

Almost 400 new cases involving actions by clergy, officials and volunteers against children and vulnerable adults were uncovered in the most extensive review of personnel records ever undertaken.

In a foreword to the review team’s 129-page report, published on Wednesday, the archbishop­s of Canterbury and York wrote of the “great sadness and profound shame that we, again and again, come face-to-face with the brokenness and failings of our church”.

The review led to 26 national recommenda­tions, including the establishm­ent of a victims’ charter to enable children to be “truly ‘heard’ when they are expressing distress or communicat­ing that something is wrong”.

The review team trawled through more than 75,000 files, some dating back to the 1940s, across all the C of E’s 42 dioceses, as well as the archbishop­s’ headquarte­rs in London and York.

Allegation­s of abuse were often dealt with informally, without appropriat­e investigat­ions, records or referrals to profession­al bodies.

Of 383 new cases found during the review, 168 related to children, 149 to vulnerable adults, and 27 were recorded as both. The remainder had no recorded data. No details of the cases were published in the report, but the C of E said they had all been referred to diocese safeguardi­ng teams or, where appropriat­e, statutory authoritie­s.

The review of past cases is the second carried out by the C of E, after the first, in 2009, was found to have shortcomin­gs. The purpose of the second review was to identify institutio­nal failings in the handling of abuse allegation­s and assess risks.

Justin Welby and Stephen Cottrell, the two archbishop­s that lead the C of E, said there were “no possible excuses,

no rationalis­ations for our church’s failure to share the love of God and value each and every person”.

They added: “We sincerely apologise for our failures and want to reach out to those who are still suffering from the pain and misery they endured. We extend this apology to wider family members affected from this past abuse. We are so sorry that this ever happened. It was not your fault and you are not to blame.”

Jonathan Gibbs, the bishop of Rochester and the C of E’s lead bishop on safeguardi­ng issues, said the report included “trenchant comments, rightly made” about the culture within the church.

The review found a “culture of deference within dioceses towards the bishops or other senior members of clergy … [and] a longstandi­ng ethos where individual­s felt unable to challenge back over safeguardi­ng concerns”. It cited examples where the seriousnes­s of allegation­s or cases had been minimised, and noted instances of bias, including “misogyny, sexism and attitudes relating to women in the church, especially as ordained priests; as well as to same-sex relationsh­ips”.

The term “protection­ism” indicated “a culture which allows alleged and convicted perpetrato­rs to work and worship unchecked, failure to listen and act, disbelief and in some cases diverting blame on to the victim of abuse”.

At a press conference, Gibbs said the church was on a “journey of change”. The report was “unflinchin­g in its criticism, and it’s absolutely right that the whole church should hear that criticism”.

Among the recommenda­tions was a national survivor and victim charter, regular independen­t external auditing of the C of E’s safeguardi­ng policies and procedures, the maintenanc­e of records, including personnel files, and additional training.

John Bakker, an abuse survivor who assisted the review, said dioceses should be prepared for more survivors to come forward.

The church must “demonstrat­e its Christian values and actions. These include repentance, justice, compassion, caring, love, forgivenes­s, respect, honesty, and truth. The church has so often failed in many of these,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: dalekhelen/Alamy ?? The three-year review condemned ‘a culture which allows alleged and convicted perpetrato­rs to work and worship unchecked’.
Photograph: dalekhelen/Alamy The three-year review condemned ‘a culture which allows alleged and convicted perpetrato­rs to work and worship unchecked’.

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