The Catholic Church: institutionalised sexual violence against children

AUSTRALIA
Online Opinion

By Sheleyah Courtney – posted Friday, 23 November 2012

As a social scientist who is interested in calibrations of power, religion and sexuality, my outlook on a discussion of the Catholic Church’s involvement in sexual abuse of Australian children is one that considers such a phenomenon as being situated and operative well within a wider psycho-social context. While there have been very recently published valuable sociological studies of such problems, for example last year Marie Keenan’s important “Child Sexual Abuse and the Catholic Church” in Ireland, such works as this one focus especially on the institutional dimensions of the church itself. However, regarding this terrible issue, I view the intersections between the church and our society as seriously warranting greater consideration.

There are several issues that extend beyond the actual church’s internal cultural structures that are especially noteworthy to me. Firstly, child sexual abuse by the Catholic Church has a factuality that has been taken for granted for some time in the public imagination both in Australia and abroad; this knowledge has been reflected in popular culture ranging from tabloid news sensationalism to Hollywood films such as “Sleepers” (1996) starring Brad Pitt and closer to home, “Oranges and Sunshine” which exposed several cases of the thousands of English children who were illegally transported to Australia and who were placed in homes run by the Christian Brothers, were sexually abused and or forced into virtual slave labour (2011).

The 2006 documentary “Deliver Us From Evil” which traces the notorious pedophile priest Oliver O’Grady and the corruption in the Catholic Church that protected him; it was Oscar nominated. In Australia there has been a victim support group, “Broken Rites” operating since 1993, and a book, “Hell on the Way to Heaven” published by Chrissie and Anthony Foster parents of two daughters who died due to sexual abuse by a priest of the Catholic Church.

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