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Catholic Church Sex Abuse Scandal 'Has Now Reached' The Pope

March 14, 2010 01:33 AM EST (Updated: March 14, 2010 01:34 AM EST)
http://news.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474978102301

Germany’s sex abuse scandal within the Catholic Church has finally reached the Pope.  As Archbishop of Munich, 1977-1982, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger allegedly allowed a priest suspected of having abused a child to return to pastoral work in the 1980s.  The archdiocese said the chaplain, identified only as H., underwent therapy for suspected "sexual relations with boys." In nearby Grafing, the same priest was suspended 3 years later in 1985, following new accusations of sexual abuse. The following year, he was convicted of sexually abusing minors.

Ireland too is reeling from the scandals of abuse at the hands of officials within the Irish church.  With approximately 170 priests in question in the Archdiocese of Dublin alone, Ireland was the first country in Europe to confront the church's worldwide custom of shielding pedophile priests from the law and public scandal. The legacy of both abusers and victims is now surfacing across many European countries; the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland,  and Italy.  Analysts are now beginning to wonder if a likely tide of lawsuits will force European dioceses to declare bankruptcy like their American cousins.

Saturday, the Vatican denounced “aggressive attempts to drag Pope Benedict XVI into the spreading scandals of pedophile priests in his German homeland.”  According to Rev. Fergus O'Donoghue, editor of the Irish Jesuit journal Studies;  “The pope was no different to any other bishop at the time. The church policy was to keep it all quiet – to help people, but to avoid scandal. Avoiding scandal was a huge issue for the church," "Of course there was cover-up," he added. But worse was "the systematic lack of concern for the victims."

Nothing’s changed.  As a victim of sexual abuse as a child (not by anyone in the church), I sat in the pew at mass in 2001, waiting to hear what the church would say about the breaking American scandal.  I was appalled to hear the pulpit directives - that Catholics should be “praying that the Church will overcome and withstand the demeaning and untrue accusations by the press.”  There was not a single word said at that time about praying that the victims could somehow, someway, escape the psychological hell they had been sentenced to for life at the hands of priests and church policy.  In 2002, as I sat watching the 60 Minutes reports about the vast and far reaching American scandal, I determined to never again support any actions of any kind of the Catholic Church.  Apparently, I wasn’t alone.

The pope, meanwhile, continues to be harshly criticized for a 2001 Vatican policy letter he sent to all bishops advising them that all cases of sexual abuse of minors must be forwarded to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and that the cases were to be subject to pontifical secret.  As most sexual abuse victims, including this one, will tell you; one of the worst aspects of facing both pre and post events of abuse is the propagation of secrets, lies, and cover-ups that protect the abuser and abandon, if not outright blame, the victims.   I can only imagine the hell these victims have and continue to endure for the church’s sake and convenience of avoiding scandal, exposure, and the loss of church property and money.  Never mind about the unrecoverable legacy of lost innocence, lost childhood, and irreparable damage done to the hearts and psyche’s of the victims.  No matter what, the “church,” and apparently, the “show,” must go on.




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Catholic Church continues to reel from worldwide sexual abuse scandal

March 21, 2010 12:47 PM EDT
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You wonder how much more the Catholic Church can take. The child -abuse scandal that tore through the United States and left the Catholic Church's finances and reputation in tatters, has now spread to Europe.

Today at his weekly appearance from his balcony overlooking St. Peters Square, the Pontiff asked Catholics to refrain from judging sinners, i.e. trusted clergy who for decades--about a half century--sexually abused children under their tutelage and care. During his sermon he did not mention a letter he wrote chastising Ireland's clergy. Instead, he cited the New Testament story of Jesus allowing those without sin to cast the first stone at an adulterer.

It's a tall order, what the Pontiff is asking. With Ireland, abuse scandals involving Catholic dioceses, monasteries, and other institutions including a Regensburg, Germany boys choir led by the Pope's brother are surfacing. Besides Germany where Pope Benedict was once the archbishop of Munich, victims are starting to come forth in Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Italy stating cases of abuse and coverup. In many of the scandals, bishops have been accused of moving known molesters to other parishes after complaints were lodged. In Munich, lower level clergy have sought to spare the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who later became the current Pope Benedict in 2005, of any responsibility for sex abuse scandals, saying the blame belongs on lower level prelates should have shouldered the blame, including the responsibility for allowing known pedophiles to continue having access to children.

The real gist of this problem seems to be the belief by many that it was the policy of the Catholic Church to keep the abuses secret, thereby making the situation worse.



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Pope Tries To Turn History Back...

July 10, 2007 03:35 PM EDT (Updated: July 12, 2007 09:01 AM EDT)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070710/ap_on_re_eu/pope_other_christians

After such archaic, pre-Vatican II claims, I'm deeply concerned for the future not only of the Catholic Church, but Christianity in general.  Not that our Russian Orthodox Church doesn't have our share of die-hard conservators whose way of thinking reminds me too strongly of Neanderthals in their worst - it's enough to remember the notorious "Letter of Diomid" (a bishop of Chukotka on the Russian Far East) with its vigorous attacks on modern "evils" and "heresies" like democracy, secular humanism or ecumenism. But the very structure of Orthodoxy is different - how a Russian writer Merezhkovsky so aptly put it, on the East, Caesar is the Pope, on the West, Pope is the Caesar.  Eastern Orthodox Churches depend too much on their respective secular governments. Vatican's elite is the government in itself, and therefore can define its own policies and practices. What makes this bit of news even more worrying... such messages (along with getting back to the Trident Mass) add little optimism to those who (like your faithful servant) support Christian unity and ecumenism in the wider sense of the word.

Does Pope realize how offensive such comments could sound to the non-Catholic Christians, who are thus denigrated to the level of the second-rates - even those who are otherwise positive towards Catholicism? What is it - a show-off or a conscious reactionary rollback?

I'm very interested to hear your opinions on that, my dear friends - especially those of you who are Catholics.

 

Blessings and best wishes to everybody -

 

Sveta



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Pope to Resign? Bookies Cut Odds to 3-1 As Pedophilia Found in his Munich Diocese

In recent weeks Europe has found the pattern we’ve seen in the U.S. for years: Pedophile priests allowed to thrive and when caught, not stopped, but transferred to new parishes, not just in every US diocese, but now likely in every diocese in the world.  Last week brought new charges in Germany and Austria inlcuding the Vienna Boys Choir, which was run by the Pope’s brother.  The Murphy Report continues to cause hell to break loose in Ireland, last year were horror stories of Catholic orphanes in Canada, Australia, and Alaska.  Plus Africa, Haiti: All over the world, this strange pattern exists in the Catholic Church of tolerance for child sex crimes and indifference to the harm done to children.

Last week the epidemic erupted in the Regensburg Diocese in Munich, where today’s Pope Benedict was once Cardinal Ratzinger, and transferred a suspected pedophile priest to a job and new housing where he later abused children (see links below).

Amid all these wretched  revelations, it’s like comic relief to find a story, Like this: Irish bookmaker Paddy Power said Friday it had cut the odds on Pope Benedict resigning after allegations of child abuse by priests in Germany gripped the Roman Catholic Church… Ireland’s biggest bookmaker said it had cut the odds from 12 to 1 to 3 to 1 following a “cascade of bets.”  Continued here:  Irish bookmaker slashes odds on pope’s resignation

Turns out when he was Cardinal Ratzinger in Munich, the current Pope Benedict transferred and tolerated pedophile priests just like every other Cardinal and Bishop in every other Catholic diocese in the world, as is being reported all over the world:

Vatican decries effort to draw pope into clergy abuse scandal VATICAN CITY  Boston Globe – By Rachel Donadio and Nicholas Kulish New York Times / March 14, 2010 – ROME — As new details emerged on allegations of child sexual abuse by priests in the Munich archdiocese then led by the future Pope Benedict XVI, the Vatican spoke out yesterday to protect the pope against what it called an aggressive campaign against him in his native Germany.

AS USUAL A BLOGGER does it best, here is best analysis written of this I’ve seen so far:

 

Questions Arise About Pedophile Priest From Pope’s Old Diocese -  Dana Kennedy, The Hive Blog at Modesto Bee, March 12) –

The fallout from the growing Catholic sex abuse scandals finally reached as far as the pope Friday when it was revealed that Benedict XVI knew a priest was a pedophile in 1980 but approved a stint in therapy that allowed him to continue in the ministry, where he remains today…

 

Germany abuse scandal edges closer to Pope Benedict; Vatican insists no connection VATICAN CITY, New York Daily News, BY Larry Mcshane DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER, Saturday, March 13th 2010…

Catholic Church Sex Abuse Scandal ‘Has Now Reached’ The Pope EUROPE  – Gather -Germany’s sex abuse scandal within the Catholic Church has finally reached the Pope. As Archbishop of Munich, 1977-1982, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger allegedly allowed a priest suspected of having abused a child to return to pastoral work in the 1980s. The

The Pope: The Sex Abuse Crisis Gets Closer and Closer

VATICAN CITY – The Daily Dish [with video] First his brother, now this from the Süddeutsche Zeitung:  “With the knowledge of the current pope, in the 80s a previously incriminated (charged with child molestation) priest was moved to Munich.  Vatican officials, taking the offensive Saturday, proclaimed Pope Benedict’s innocence against charges the pontiff helped protect a pedophile…

Pope under fire VATICAN CITY  – The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)  – Germany’s sex abuse scandal has now reached Pope Benedict XVI: His former archdiocese disclosed that while he was archbishop a suspected paedophile priest was transferred to a job where he later abused children …

Missbrauchsfälle auch in Norddeutschland GERMANY  Der Spiegel – Der Skandal um Missbrauch an katholischen Einrichtungen nimmt kein Ende. Auch in einem Internat in Cloppenburg sollen drei Priester und ein Laie sich an Kindern vergangen haben. Der Papst schweigt und gerät unter Druck. Der Vatikan sieht ihn als Kampagnenopfer.  [summary] New cases of suspected child abuse by Catholic priests have beem made at a now-closed boarding school in Cloppenburg. Named were three priests, who are now dead, and a layman who worked at the school. The abuse is said to have happened in the 1950s and 1960s…

Paedophilia cases shake Catholic church worldwide France 24 – The paedophilia scandal that has gripped the Catholic Church in Germany, and crept into the halls of the Vatican, follows a series of similar revelations around the world in recent years. A review of some of the most striking cases…

German Sex Abuse Scandal Includes The Pope NPR - Audio for this story from Weekend Edition Saturday will be available at approx. 12:00 pm ET A growing scandal in Europe over child sexual abuse by priests

Vatican Speaks as Abuse Details Emerge New York Times - Rachel Donadio, Nicholas Kulish -

ROME — As new details emerged on allegations of child sexual abuse by priests in the Munich archdiocese then led by 
Pope Benedict XVI has said he was ’shocked’ to hear of the Munich sex abuse case. Other church officials have taken responsibility for letting the abuser 
Pope Benedict XVI with Robert Zollitsch, the former diocese in Bavaria who acknowledged he was involved in a 1980 decision to reassign a 

Vatican defends Pope Benedict in German abuse scandal

BBC News - The Vatican has denounced attempts to link Pope Benedict to a child abuse scandal in his native Germany. A Vatican spokesman said there had been 

Celibacy vows to stay despite sex abuse scandal

ABC Online ELIZABETH JACKSON: In the wake of the latest sex abuse claims in the Catholic Church in Germany, a number of senior clergy have called for a debate on the 

The Associated Press - Frances D’Emilio

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican on Saturday denounced what it called aggressive attempts to drag Pope Benedict XVI into the spreading scandals of pedophile ...
MORE
History of an Abuse Case – New York Times – The Munich Archdiocese acknowledged mishandling an abuse case in the late ’70s and early ’80s, when the pope served as its archbishop. …

Pope’s former archdiocese clarifies details of abusive priest’s placement – Catholic News Agency – Munich, Germany, Mar 13, 2010 / 01:32 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The vicar general of the Archdiocese of Munich has owned up to his responsibility in making the …

Report: Pope Allowed Pedophile to Work – Daily Beast – The Pope reportedly took part in sending a pedophile priest to therapy instead of dismissing him in 1980. Despite repeat offenses and convictions of child …

About the bookmaker in Ireland:

Irish bookmaker cuts odds Pope will resign from 12-1 to 3-1 after ‘cascade of bets’

Posted by Kay Ebeling, Producer City of Angels

WAIT, ONE MORE:  This Blog Miscellanea Agnostica has GREAT ongoing coverage of the Pope’s involvement in the pedo-priest scandal.   He blogs about

… the Pope’s own personal involvement in the case of at least one pedophile priest (known only as “H”) during his tenure as Archbishop (and Cardinal) of Munich and Reising. This involvement is incontrovertible, since then-Cardinal and Archbishop Ratzinger signed the orders to reassign H — but the Vatican is saying that, somehow, in spite of this fact, the Pope had not actually been involved. (I guess they define “signing an order” as something other than “involvement.”



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Vatican denies celibacy rule led to sex scandal

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican on Sunday denied that its celibacy requirement for priests was the root cause of the clerical sex abuse scandal convulsing the church in Europe and again defended the pope's handling of the crisis.

Suggestions that the celibacy rule was somehow responsible for the "deviant behavior" of sexually abusive priests have swirled in recent days, with opinion pieces in German newspapers blaming it for fueling abuse and even Italian commentators questioning the rule.

Much of the furor was spurred by comments from one of the pope's closest advisers, Vienna archbishop Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, who called this week for an honest examination of issues like celibacy and priestly education to root out the origins of sex abuse.

"Part of it is the question of celibacy, as well as the subject of character development. And part of it is a large portion of honesty, in the church but also in society," he wrote in the online edition of his diocesan newsletter.

His office quickly stressed that Schoenborn wasn't calling into question priestly celibacy, which just this week Pope Benedict XVI reaffirmed for priests as an "expression of the gift of oneself to God and others."

But Schoenborn has in the past shown himself receptive to arguments that a celibate priesthood is increasingly problematic for the church, primarily because it limits the number of men who seek ordination.

Last June, Schoenborn personally presented the Vatican with a lay initiative signed by prominent Australian Catholics calling for the celibacy rule to be abolished and for married men to be allowed to become priests.

In the days following Schoenborn's editorial this week, several prominent prelates — in Germany and at the Vatican — shot down any suggestion that the celibacy rule had anything to do with the scandal, a point echoed Sunday by the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano.

"It's been established that there's no link," said the article by Bishop Giuseppe Versaldi, an emeritus professor of canon law and psychology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.

"First off, it's known that sexual abuse of minors is more widespread among lay people and those who are married than in the celibate priesthood," he wrote. "Secondly, research has shown that priests guilty of abuse had long before stopped observing celibacy."

The article — subtitled "The rigor of Benedict against the filth in the Church" — also defended Benedict as a "vigilant shepherd of his flock" in confronting the crisis decisively early on and taking charge of abuse cases himself as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The Vatican has been on the defensive ever since the first of some 170 former students from Catholic schools in Benedict's native Germany came forward with claims of physical and sexual abuse, including at a boys choir once led by the pope's brother.

Since then, claims have spread to the Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland — all while the pope was preparing a letter for Irish Catholics in response to the decades of systematic abuse in church-run schools, orphanages and other institutions in that predominantly Roman Catholic nation.

The crisis reached the pope himself on Friday. The Munich archdiocese reported that when he was Munich Archbishop Joseph Ratzinger, he had approved therapy for a priest suspected of abuse in the 1980s. The priest was then transferred to another location, where he was convicted of abusing minors.

The Vatican and the archdiocese stressed that Ratzinger didn't authorize the transfer and that an underling had taken "full responsibility."

Benedict didn't refer at all to the scandal Sunday during his traditional noon blessing. He spoke in general terms about the parable of the prodigal son and assured the faithful — in German — that God loves everyone "even when they feel estranged" and that God created forgiveness.

Later Sunday, Benedict was to visit the Lutheran church in Rome to participate in a previously scheduled ecumenical service.

The scandal has clearly shaken the Vatican, which has gone on a full-court media offensive to stem the damage. In an extraordinary move, the Vatican's chief prosecutor for sex crimes, Monsignor Charles Scicluna, detailed for the first time statistics on the number and types of cases of abuse that had been reviewed since the Vatican in 2001 ordered diocese to forward cases of suspected abusive priests to Rome to determine whether church trials were warranted.

The Vatican has said such church trials, while secret, in no way precluded bishops from reporting abuse to civil authorities.

In the interview with the newspaper of the Italian bishops' conference, Scicluna suggested that the statute of limitations for church tribunals be removed altogether for such crimes. Currently the statute is 10 years after the alleged victim reaches 18.

"Practice has shown that the limit of 10 years is not enough in this kind of case," he said, noting that the Vatican in 2002 allowed exceptions to the statute on a case-by-case basis, and that such exemptions are generally granted.

Associated Press writer Melissa Eddy contributed to this report from Berlin.



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Pope apologizes to Irish sex abuse victims

Pope apologizes to sex abuse victims
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Pope apologizes to sex abuse victims
VATICAN CITY: Pope Benedict apologized on Saturday to victims of child sex abuse by Irish clergy, saying he felt "shame and remorse". 

"You have suffered grievously and I am truly sorry," he said in an unprecedented letter which addressed the abuse of minors in Ireland. 

In the letter, the Pope also announced a formal Vatican investigation of Irish dioceses, seminaries and religious orders affected by the scandal. 

He said he was willing to meet victims to acknowledge their suffering personally. 

Pope Benedict, facing a spreading scandal of child sexual abuse by priests in the Roman Catholic Church, said on Wednesday he hoped his letter would "help repentance, healing and renewal". 

In recent weeks, the Vatican has been trying to contain damage as a string of scandals over sexual abuse of children by priests has hit Ireland, Germany, Austria and the Netherlands.


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Pope failed to answer our concerns, say Irish abuse victims

DUBLIN: Victims of sexual abuse by Catholic priests in Ireland said on Saturday a pastoral letter from the pope expressing shame and remorse "falls far short" of addressing their concerns. 

Irish Catholic clergy welcomed Pope Benedict XVI's letter, saying it paved the way for a "season of rebirth", but campaigners said his response to a scandal that has rocked the Church in Ireland left many questions unanswered. 

In the letter read out to congregations across Ireland, the pope said he was "truly sorry" for the suffering of the victims and admitted Irish bishops had made serious errors in their response to allegations of sexual abuse. 

But one of the main campaign groups, One in Four, bemoaned the lack of an apology for the "scurrilous" way victims were dismissed or silenced when they tried to complain about their treatment to Church authorities. 

"The lack of an apology to them in this regard is hurtful in the extreme," said executive director Maeve Lewis. 

Highlighting concerns of a cover-up, the group said the pope had wasted "a glorious opportunity" to address "the deliberate policy of the Catholic Church at the highest levels to protect sex offenders, thereby endangering children." 

"There is nothing in this letter to suggest that a new vision of leadership exists," Lewis said. 

John Kelly, of Survivors of Child Abuse (SOCA), who was sexually abused as a boy in the notorious Daingean Catholic care home, told AFP that while he welcomed aspects of the letter, it lacked "substance." 

The pope said priests and religious workers guilty of child abuse must answer for their crimes "before properly constituted tribunals". Kelly asked if this meant giving themselves up to police. 

"In short, the basic question is, are the victims likely to get justice as a result of what the pope has said?" he said. 

Campaigner Christine Buckley, abused by nuns while attending the Goldenbridge Industrial School in Dublin, said the pope should have specifically apologised to the victims of institutional abuse in Ireland. 

She and others like her were the "forgotten children", she said. 

While she welcomed the pope's indication that he would be willing to meet victims, she wanted the nun who inflicted the beatings to be present too. 

"I want to meet with him in the flesh. I want my abuser there. I want him to hear in her presence what she did and how she almost destroyed my life," she said. 

Ireland has been rocked by three judicial reports in the past five years, the most recent late last year, revealing sexual abuse and cruelty by clerics and attempts by church authorities to silence the victims. 

The head of the Church in Ireland, Cardinal Sean Brady, voiced hope that the pope's letter would herald a "season of rebirth". 

The cardinal is himself facing questions over his role in allegedly having covered up abuse. 

Speaking in Saint Patrick's Cathedral in Armagh, Brady said: "No one imagines that the present painful situation will be resolved quickly. 

"Yet with perseverance, prayer and working together in unity, the Holy Father says we can be confident that the Church in Ireland will experience a season of rebirth and spiritual renewal." 

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin, whose archdioceses has been at the centre of many abuse allegations, appealed for Catholics to read the letter closely. 

"With Pope Benedict, I appeal to each of you to read the letter and reflect on it," Martin said in his homily at the Pro-Cathedral in Dublin late Saturday. 

"The Church tragically failed many of its children: it failed through abuse; it failed through not preventing abuse; it failed through covering up abuse." 

He added: "The Church is called to renew itself in turning back more closely to her founder Jesus Christ." 

The main opposition Fine Gael party condemned the "grotesque failure" by the state and the Church to protect Ireland's children. 

Separately, it called for school lands controlled by the Catholic Church to be handed back to the state.


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Pope Benedict apologises to victims of sex abuse priests in letter

THE Pope apologised yesterday to the victims of child sex abuse by Catholic priests in Ireland.

Pope Benedict XVI admitted there had been "serious mistakes" and "grave errors of judgment" among bishops in responding to the crimes of paedophile priests.

His pastoral letter, which will be read out at masses across Ireland today, is the first public statement by the Vatican on the sexual abuse of children and its systematic cover-up.

To the victims, the Pope wrote: "You have suffered grievously and I am truly sorry."

He added those guilty of abuse must "answer before God and properly constituted tribunals" for their "sinful and criminal actions".

But victims' rights groups, who had demanded assurances there will be no further cover-ups, were disappointed.

They want a clear instruction that it is the responsibility of local churches to inform the police about cases of paedophilia by priests, as well as reporting them to Rome.

Maeve Lewis, executive director of Irish victims' group One in Four, said: "We feel the letter falls far short of addressing the concerns of the victims." 

Anne Lawrence, of campaign group Ministry and Clergy Sexual Abuse Survivors, said: "We acknowledge the apology and welcome the call for systems to be put in place to allow victims to tell what has happened in openness and transparency.

"However, we believe that the apology must go further and must acknowledge and take responsibility for the harm caused to both the victims and to Catholic Church communities around the world."

The leaders of Scotland's Catholics declined to comment on the Pope's unprecedented statement, saying the country's eight bishops will only break their silence after discussing a response at a meeting this week.

However, the leader of the Catholic Church in England and Wales was quick to support the Pope's apology.

Archbishop Vincent Nichols said safeguarding the young and the vulnerable needed to be the top priority.

He said: "Robust procedures are necessary to ensure all allegations are dealt with swiftly and appropriately in full cooperation with the relevant authorities.

"These procedures need also to be just if they are to make a lasting difference and ensure the support of all."

Last year, a damning report into child abuse in the Dublin archdiocese criticised Catholic chiefs for covering up hundreds of cases going back to the early 1970s.

The problem, originally seen in Rome as a local issue, has grown into a global scandal, with a stream of new sex abuse allegations emerging.



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