Combative cardinal enters the lion’s den

AUSTRALIA
The Age

May 28, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

Analysis

Say what you like about George Pell – and journalists sometimes have – you have to admire his fighting spirit. Apart from the four support staff he brought with him on Monday, nearly everyone in the Legislative Council committee room at Parliament house, and the overflow room nearby was antagonistic at best and hostile at worst.

It brought out the combative spirit and unshakeable self-belief of the street fighter that Sydney’s Catholic Archbishop has often seemed.

He sat composed, often with hands clasped in front of him, and fought every point, while the gallery – mostly victims – made its derision and disbelief clear at every opportunity.

The six members of the committee conducting the inquiry were determined to give no quarter in challenging the cardinal about the church’s record on dealing with child sexual abuse by members of the clergy. And he gave barely an inch in reply, though the weight of evidence used by the members forced a series of damaging admissions.

Cardinal Pell clearly learnt the lessons from Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart’s unconvincing display a week earlier, especially the smirk with which he said “better late than never” when asked why it took 18 years until after the inquiry was announced to seek to have a serial abuser defrocked.

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