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  Pope Disciplines Top Mexican Priest after Sexual Abuse Case

Gulf Times
May 20, 2006

http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2
&item_no=87400&version=1&template_id=43&parent_id=19

ATICAN CITY: The Vatican said yesterday that it had disciplined the ageing Mexican founder of an influential Catholic religious order who has been accused of sexual abuse, instructing him to retire to a life of "prayer and penitence".

The censure of Father Marcial Maciel, 86-year-old founder of the Legionaries of Christ, is significant because he and his conservative order had found favour under the late Pope John Paul II, making the decision by Pope Benedict XVI even bolder.

The instruction was the new Pope's first major decision involving sexual abuse charges since his election last year. Before he was elected, Benedict decried the "filth" in the Church.

The sanctions against Maciel made him one of the most prominent persons to be disciplined for alleged sexual abuse and could be devastating for the priestly order and its lay branch, Regnum Christi, which claims tens of thousands of members.

Founded by Maciel in 1941, the order now has about 600 priests and 2,500 seminarians in more than 20 countries. It also runs a major Pontifical university in Rome.

Maciel, who lives in Mexico, has been accused by some former seminarians of sexual abuses dating back to the 1940s and 1950s, when they were boys as young as 10.

In Mexico, the Legionaries said in a statement that he had "accepted the instruction with faith, total calm, with a clear conscience knowing that it is a new cross which God, merciful father, has allowed him to suffer".

The subject of on-and-off probes into abuse during his career, Maciel stepped down as leader of the conservative order in 2004 and has long denied the accusations.

 
 

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