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Catholics in Unprecedented Abuse Talks

News.com.au
February 6, 2012

http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/catholics-in-unprecedented-abuse-talks/story-e6frfku0-1226264168326

SCORES of Catholic leaders from around the world have gathered for an unprecedented anti-abuse summit hosted by the Vatican intended to find ways to stamp out pedophilia.

Bishops from 100 countries and the leaders of 33 religious orders will take part in the four-day meeting, as well as the Vatican's anti-pedophilia prosecutor Charles Scicluna and one abuse victim, Ireland's Marie Collins.

Pope Benedict XVI is expected to issue a special blessing for the conference at the Vatican's Gregorian University, which will also launch a Centre for Child Protection in Germany to fight sex abuse by the clergy in the church worldwide.

The symposium entitled "Towards Healing and Renewal" will include a service tomorrow in which representatives of seven religious orders which had pedophile clergy in their midst will plead for forgiveness.

Abuse victims' groups have already criticised the conference.

"You can have all the symposiums you want but why don't you open a constructive debate. The church is too closed in on itself," said Roberto Mirabile, head of the Italian victim support group La Caramella Buona.

The meeting starts with a keynote speech by Cardinal William Levada, the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the top enforcement body of the Catholic Church which has led efforts against abuse.

The congregation has requested that all the national bishops' conferences of the world must submit by May a set of comprehensive guidelines on how to combat pedophilia, stressing that abuse is not only a problem for Western churches.

But Vatican officials say some countries are having trouble formulating these rules because of "cultural differences" over what exactly constitutes child abuse and victim-support groups say the measures lack enforcement powers.

Father Hans Zollner, a Jesuit priest and psychotherapist who heads the new Centre for Child Protection, said on Vatican Radio today: "The best measure is to listen to the suffering."

Bishops attending the meeting were asked to hold "listening sessions" with abuse victims before travelling to Rome to help them understand and psychologists and child health experts will address the conference.

Francois-Xavier Dumortier, rector of the Gregorian University, said: "This is a crucial problem for the church.

"The pope has taken a very clear and I think very courageous position not to skate over the surface of the problem but to go deeper."

"We want to provide all the means to prevent the problem," he said.

Dumortier stressed the importance of training for men and women of the clergy, including the 2000 students at his university.

"We have a major responsibility to look at this open wound in the church with open eyes and try to do everything so it does not happen again," he said.

Collins, who was raped by a priest in a hospital in Dublin when she was a little girl and has become a leading voice in pushing for justice for victims in Ireland, said her decision to attend was not an easy one.

"Despite apologies for the actions of the abusers, there have been few apologies for protection given to them by their superiors," she said earlier.

"There seems to be a lack of penalty for any of these men in leadership who deliberately or negligently covered up for abusers."




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