Daily Nation Newspaper

POPE VOWS CRACKDOWN ON SEXUAL ABUSERS AND PROTECTORS

-

BERLIN - Pope Francis - in comments in the foreword of a new book - has branded sexual abuse of children by Roman Catholic priests a "monstrosit­y" and pledged action against perpetrato­rs and bishops who protected them.

The book titled "Father, I Forgive You: Abused But Not Broken" was written by Swiss man Daniel Pittet, 58, who was first raped by a priest when he was eight years old.

Francis, whose repeated promises of zero tolerance have been criticised by victims who say the Vatican needs to do much more, called sexual abuse "an absolute monstrosit­y, a terrible sin that contradict­s everything that the Church teaches."

The foreword was published on Wednesday by the mass circulatio­n German daily Bild.

Francis said the fate of abused children weighed on his soul, especially those who had taken their own lives.

"We will counter those priests who betrayed their calling with the most strenuous measures. This also applies to the bishops and cardinals who protected these priests - as happened repeatedly in the past," the pope wrote. Church sexual abuse broke into the open in the United States with reports of cases in Louisiana in 1984 and exploded in 2002, when journalist­s in Boston found that bishops had systematic­ally moved abusers to new posts instead of defrocking them.

Thousands of cases have come to light around the world as investigat­ions have encouraged long-silent victims to go public, shattering the Church's reputation in places such as Ireland, and more than $2 billion has been paid in compensati­on.

Francis' efforts against sexual abuse since his election in 2013 have sputtered.

Critics say he has not done enough to hold to account those bishops who mishandled cases of abuse or covered it up, and a Vatican commission formed in 2014 to advise him on rooting it out has been hit by internal dissent.

Francis praised Pittet's courage in telling his story, saying he was deeply moved by his ability to forgive his abuser 44 years after he was first molested. The Church has defrocked the abuser.

Pittet, who endured four years of rapes, abuse and exposure to pornograph­y, wrote that his act of forgivenes­s had nothing to do with human justice or denial. "Forgivenes­s does not heal the wounds or wipe away the misery ... forgiving him has allowed me to burst the chains that bound me to him and prevented me from living," Pittet wrote in the book, according to excerpts released by German publisher Herder.

Pittet, who lives in the Swiss city of Fribourg, works as a librarian and has six children.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia