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  Two Group Leaders Leave for Europe to Meet with Church Sex-Abuse Victims

By Erika Slife
Plain Dealer
March 21, 2010

http://www.cleveland.com/world/index.ssf/2010/03/two_group_leaders_leave_for_eu.html

UNITED STATES, CHICAGO -- A day after the pope issued an apology to victims of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in Ireland, two leaders from a Chicago-based group for survivors of church sexual abuse left for Europe to meet with victims, criticize Vatican officials and urge independent investigations into church sex crimes.

"That's why we're going now. We're extremely concerned about what's coming out of Rome," said Barbara Blaine, president of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, before she left for Munich on Sunday. "We've been hearing from so many victims from across the globe. We're going to be meeting with some of the survivors and advocates. We're hoping to possibly meet with government officials as well."

Roman Catholics line up to receive a letter from the Pope which was delivered by Primate of All Ireland Cardinal Sean Brady, at St Patrick's Cathedral Armagh, Northern Ireland, Saturday, March, 20, 2010. Pope Benedict XVI rebuked Irish bishops Saturday for "grave errors of judgment" in handling clerical sex abuse and ordered a Vatican investigation into the Irish church to wipe out the scourge. In a letter to the Irish faithful read across Europe amid a growing, multination abuse scandal, the pope did not mention any Vatican responsibility. And he doled out no specific punishments to bishops blamed by victims and Irish government-ordered investigations for having covered up years of abuse.

The group made their hasty arrangements on Friday in anticipation of Pope Benedict XVI's apology on Saturday to Irish Catholics for what he called sinful and criminal acts committed by priests and the failure of Church authorities to respond to them. But the pontiff's letter has been criticized by victims' groups for not going far enough to discipline Catholic leaders for inaction.

Blaine said two more leaders from SNAP will meet them in Europe this week. The group will travel to Germany, Austria, Italy and the Netherlands, where the church sex abuse scandal continues to grow.

"We're hoping to reach other victims, we're hoping to spread the word that the bishops shouldn't be investigating themselves," Blaine said. "We're hoping that the governments and police agencies will launch investigations and we're going to encourage anyone who has been abused, or witnessed or suspects abuse to speak up and report what they know to the police. We hope that by their doing so, they could protect others from these dangerous predators and they could begin their own healing."

 
 

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