Ending The ‘Silence’ Around Priests’ Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
WSIU

By Mark Jenkins

Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God documents the claims made by four deaf men who accused a Catholic priest of sexual abuse — and in chronicling the response of the church, details the role the current pope played in such scandals earlier in his career.

By the time Father Lawrence Murphy died in 1998, it’s alleged, he had sexually abused more than 200 children. Many of them must have seemed ideal victims: Students at St. John’s School for the Deaf in Milwaukee between 1950 and 1974, they possessed limited ability to communicate with others. Commonly in that period, the boarding school’s pupils had hearing parents who didn’t know American Sign Language.

These boys, largely unable to speak, are more than metaphors for all of the voiceless children whose sexual assaults are chronicled in Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God. In 1972, three of them became the first known victims of a pederast priest to accuse their attacker publicly.

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