How Will Church Attone for Pedophile Priests?

WHEELING (WV)
The Intelligencer

December 16, 2018

By Charles Rogerson

In a slow bleed, the Catholic Church is prying open secret files and releasing the names of “credibly accused” pedophile priests. The sheer numbers are staggering. Last summer, the report out of Pennsylvania listed 300 predator priests, with a number of names redacted. That eye-popping list didn’t include priests who had been named earlier.

The Wheeling-Charleston diocese listed 31 names. If nothing else, the revelations put the kibosh on the few-bad-apples excuse the church had lamely offered while still actively covering up the scandal.

And a coverup it was, of monumental proportions, conceived at the highest levels of the church hierarchy. The basic strategy was a cynical transgression of justice and decency: First, take advantage of the unassailable status of the priest to repress victims’ accusations. We’ll never know how many victims there were, because, to this day, may of them have never breathed a word about the crimes perpetrated upon them, body and soul.

Even on the family level, some parents have traditionally (and still do) send a sinister message to their children: Don’t make trouble. Don’t cause a problem. If a child victim hurdled these formidable obstacles and made the complaint, bishops and the police would often conspire to sweep the mess under the rug. Protecting the church’s reputation was always paramount. All too often, lay Catholics persecuted what few victims had the nerve to speak out.

If a particular case continued to fester, the lawyers stepped in with cash settlements, always with a non-disclosure gag-clause fastened to them. Afterward, they simply waited it out, and one could almost hear the sigh of relief which emanated from the clergy each time a specific statute-of-limitations date was reached. Meanwhile, the church would transfer the offending Father Can’t Help Himself to another parish — and not tell anyone about his penchant for molestation.

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