ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

March 11, 2013

What are the chances of an American pope? This time, not zero

ROME
Christian Science Monitor

Until recently, American candidates faced unease about US hegemony. With the end of the cold war and decline in American power, a couple of US cardinals are getting serious attention.

By Nick Squires | Christian Science Monitor

What are the prospects of an American being elected pope when 115 cardinals from around the world solemnly enter the frescoed splendor of the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel on Tuesday to begin the voting process known as the conclave?

Until recently, the received wisdom was that the Roman Catholic Church would never accept a pontiff from the world’s only superpower on the grounds that the United States already had quite enough temporal power.

There has also been concern that having an American pope could give the impression that the Vatican had embraced a pro-Washington bias, hindering the Catholic Church’s efforts to engage in tangled international issues such as the Israel-Palestinian conflict, the spread of militant Islam and poverty alleviation.

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CONCLAVE: NOTES FROM RECENT CENTURIES

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 11 March 2013 (VIS) – Following is a brief chronology of Conclaves in recent centuries along with interesting facts that occurred during each.

In the entire history of the Church, the longest papal election—taking place in Viterbo, Italy in 1268 and ending with the election of Gregory X—lasted for two years. It was as a result of this instance that the modern incarnation of the papal Conclave was instituted.

In modern history, the longest Conclave was that of 1740, which ended with the election of Benedict XVI. It lasted from 18 February until 17 August, 181 days. Fifty-one cardinals participated in the final ballot, four cardinals having died during the proceedings.

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NORMS AND RITES REGULATING CONCLAVE PROCEDURE

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 11 March 2013 (VIS) – The “logistics” of the procedures carried out in a Conclave are not established on the basis of personal opinion nor are they subject to passing fads or improvisation. The liturgical tradition—established after the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council—notes with great precision the norms and rites that are to be followed. These are found in the Book of Rites of the Conclave.

The first aspect that the book highlights is the importance of the Conclave, as it involves the election of the Roman Pontiff. Then, focusing on the Mass that precedes the Cardinal electors’ entrance into Conclave, it dedicates an entire chapter to explaining the rites and rubrics of this Eucharistic celebration.

The Second Chapter describes the most significant moments of the ceremony of entry into Conclave, with the specific oath that the cardinals swear. The process of voting and the scrutiny of the votes is also subject to a precise order to be followed exactly as are the preceding and following rituals and the moment of the chosen cardinal’s acceptance as Roman Pontiff and his proclamation.

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SWEARING IN OF OFFICIALS AND AUXILIARY PERSONNEL FOR CONCLAVE

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 11 March 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Office of Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff announced that this afternoon at 5:30pm in the Pauline Chapel of the Apostolic Palace, the officers and assistants of the Conclave process will take the oath of secrecy.

All those involved in the care of the coming Conclave, both ecclesiastic and secular persons, have received prior approval from the Cardinal Camerlengo and the three Cardinal Assistants as established in No. 46 of the Apostolic Constitution “Universi Dominici Gregis”. The following will take the oath prescribed in No. 48 of that document:

– The Secretary of the College of Cardinals
– The master of the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff
– The masters of pontifical ceremonies

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LAST GENERAL CONGREGATION BEFORE CONCLAVE

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 11 March 2013 (VIS) – In this morning’s 10th and final General Congregation 152 Cardinals were in attendance. Three new members for the Particular Congregation were picked by lot to assist the Cardinal Camerlengo for the next three days in the lesser affairs of the proceedings. The Cardinal assistants chosen were: from the Order of Bishops, Cardinal Antonios Naguib, patriarch emeritus of Alexandria, Egypt; from the Order of Priests, Cardinal Marc Ouellet, P.S.S., prefect of the Congregation for Bishops; and from the Order of Deacons, Cardinal Francesco Monterisi, archpriest emeritus of the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside-the-Walls.

“Twenty-eight cardinals spoke today,” Fr. Federico Lombardi, S.J., director of the Holy See Press Office reported, “bringing the total number of interventions given during the course of the 10 General Congregations to 161. There was a wide participation, even if some other cardinals would have liked to participate or to speak again. It was, however, decided not to have another Congregation this afternoon in light of the move to the Domus Sanctae Marthae and the preparations for the Conclave.”

This morning, among other topics, the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR) was discussed. “Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, as president of the Commission of Cardinals for oversight of the IOR, presented the current operations of that commission to those present along with the process for adopting the norms of transparency that it has established. Naturally, much was also said about the expectations and hopes for the future Holy Father.”

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Who’s up, who’s down…

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

Who’s up, who’s down: Cardinals hold final talks amid debate over manager or pastoral pope

By Associated Press

Updated: Monday, March 11

VATICAN CITY — On the eve of their conclave to select a new pope, cardinals held their final debate Monday over whether the Catholic Church needs a manager to clean up the Vatican or a pastor to inspire the faithful at a time of crisis.

The countdown underway, speculation has gone into overdrive about who’s ahead in the papal campaign.

Will cardinals choose Cardinal Angelo Scola, the archbishop of Milan, an Italian with serious intellectual and managerial chops who hasn’t been tainted by the scandals of the Vatican bureaucracy?

Or has Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the Capuchin monk from Boston who has charmed the Italian media worked the same magic on fellow cardinals?

Most cardinals already knew Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet since he heads a powerful Vatican office. But maybe over the past week they’ve gotten a chance to hear him sing — he has a fabulous voice and is known for belting out French folk songs.

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African Catholics Look to Black Pope to Safeguard Tradition

AFRICA
San Francisco Chronicle

March 11 (Bloomberg) — Ugandan property broker Joseph Nsubuga has a message for those who think choosing an African pope would lead the Catholic church to become more flexible on such divisive social issues as abortion or homosexuality: Think again.

“An African pope would fight the homosexuality vice which has infiltrated our society,” the father of six said as he exited Sunday mass in the Kampala suburb of Kiwatule on Feb. 17. “The Pope would fight abortions and contraceptives since they are condemned by the faith.”

Africa is the fastest-growing region for a church with 1.2 billion members worldwide. The number of baptized Catholics on the continent more than tripled between 1980 and 2010 to 185.6 million, offsetting a decline in the flock in Europe and slower growth in the U.S. The shifting Catholic demographics and the African faithful’s conservative social values have helped make Ghana’s Cardinal Peter Turkson one of the favorite’s to succeed Benedict XVI at oddsmakers William Hill Plc and Paddy Power Plc.

“The church is doing well here because Africans are notoriously religious,” Emmanuel Abbey-Quaye, assistant secretary general of the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference, said in a Feb. 11 interview in the capital, Accra. “Africans have strong cultural values which, in consonance with the church, frown on many issues including homosexuality.”

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A Catholic Spring?

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Michael D’Antonio

Like the victims of authoritarian states who remain devoted to their countrymen, many Catholics who were sexually abused as children by priests remain fiercely loyal to their faith and their fellow believers, who actually constitute the church. For them, Pope Benedict’s resignation and the conclave that will convene to name his successor, spark hope for a Catholic Spring that might bring the Vatican into the modern world.

To understand this hope, it helps to consider the recent report on American Catholics by the New York Times, which showed a steep increase in dissatisfaction with the way the church has handled the sweeping sexual abuse scandal that began 30 years ago. Three-quarters approved of Benedict’s resignation and a solid majority prays for the next pope to be more liberal on issues like birth control, the ordination of women, and marriage for priests. Sixty-two percent favored gay marriage, which is truly anathema for institutional Catholicism.

Beyond the opinions of lay people, the hope for a Catholic Spring is inspired by the same powerful forces — social media and the spread of democratic ideals — that have supported various Arab Spring movements and continually fuel the transformation of Chinese society. Here the media, both the conventional press and new web-based social tools, are speeding the pace of change by distributing information worldwide in real time and enabling the mobilization of great masses of people who never before possessed the means to organize in this way.

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Governance in the Legacy of Vatican Council II

CALIFORNIA
National Catholic Reporter

by Emeritus Archbishop John R. Quinn | Mar. 11, 2013

The eyes of the world are focused on Rome. The big question is who will be the next Pope. As they approach the election, reports indicate that the Cardinals are deeply concerned about scandals in the Church. But they are also concerned about two other things: about papal government and about reform.

Media reports, dealing with reform, tend to focus on clerical celibacy and on the ordination of women and on the reform of the Curia understood as putting it back in order. These are important topics but it would be a mistake to stop there. We know that there were reform movements during the period before the Reformation. Most of them failed, not so much for lack of holiness or the lack of worthy objectives, but because they failed to ask the deeper questions. They did not go far enough.

Today, if we want to deal seriously with the legacy of Vatican II and issues of reform we must have the courage to consider the deeper questions. This is not possible unless the paramount issue of the exercise of the papal office is addressed.

The papacy and the reform of the Roman Curia were taken off the agenda of the sixteenth century Council of Trent. Rome feared that discussion of the papacy or of reforming the Curia could reignite the controversy about whether a council was superior to the Pope. Vatican Council II balanced and corrected the teaching of the 19th century Vatican Council I and clearly located the papal office within the College of Bishops.

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Former San Francisco archbishop calls for papal reforms ahead of conclave

CALIFORNIA
National Catholic Reporter

Full text of Emeritus Archbishop John Quinn’s Stanford address

by Thomas C. Fox | Mar. 10, 2013

Stanford, Calif. —
With the world’s cardinals set to choose a new pope, Emeritus Archbishop of San Francisco John Quinn on Saturday called for major church governance reforms, including changes in the papacy itself.

“Media reports dealing with reform tend to focus on clerical celibacy and on the ordination of women and on the reform of the [Roman] Curia. … These are important topics, but it would be a mistake to stop there,” Quinn said.

“Today, if we want to deal seriously with the legacy of Vatican II and issues of reform we must have the courage to consider the deeper questions. This is not possible unless the paramount issue of the exercise of the papal office is addressed.”

Quinn, who spoke as part of a daylong symposium, “The Legacy of Vatican II: Personal Reflections,” at Stanford University, called for major decentralization of Vatican and papal authority. He said this could be achieved through the creation of regional bishops’ conferences and synods of bishops with decision-making authority.

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Final Press Briefing: Cardinals hold last General Congregation

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

The Holy See Press Office on Monday held its last briefing before the Conclave. The briefing happened after the 10th and final General Congregation of the Cardinals, in which 152 Cardinals participated. The head of the Holy See Press Office Father Federico Lombardi, SJ, confirmed the Cardinals heard a report on the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), more commonly known as the Vatican Bank. The Cardinals also spoke about their expectations and hopes for the new Pope.

They also chose the three assistants, from each class of Cardinals, who will help during the first days of the Conclave: Cardinal Antonios Naguib for the Cardinal-Bishops, Cardinal Marc Ouellet for the Cardinal-Priests, and Cardinal Francesco Monterisi for the Cardinal-Deacons.

The press officer said, judging by previous conclaves, if a ballot is held on Tuesday, the first smoke would probably not be seen until around 8pm.

Reporters were also reminded of a small change after a Pope is elected: Before appearing on the Central Loggia, he will pray, by himself, in the Pauline Chapel.

It was confirmed that Archbishop Georg Gänswein, the personal secretary of Pope-emeritus Benedict XVI, will proceed with the Cardinals before the Conclave, in his role as Prefect of the Pontifical Household.

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Cardinal called to skip conclave for abuse record

ROME
Gazzetta del Sud

Rome, March 11 – Activists are persisting in their call for the removal of an Italian cardinal from the conclave to elect a pope this week over allegations of covering up priest sex abuse. Francesco Zanardi, the head of victims group L’Abuso, appeared alongside the leaders of the US-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) at a hotel in Rome this weekend, accusing Cardinal Domenico Calcagno of systematically covering up cases of pedophilia at the diocese of Savona in northern Italy where he previously served as bishop. “Don’t attend the conclave,” said Zanardi.

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AS WE WAIT – blog

UNITED STATES
Catholic Free Press

As we wait for the election of a new pope we will hear from people on the ground in Rome and here at home to give us a sense of the anticipation. Today, Donato Infante III, a diocesan seminarian in Rome, explores the legacy of the various popes. The conclave to elect a new pope begins Tuesday.

Submissions for blog should be sent to editor@catholicfreepress.org

The Legacy of Pope Benedict, Part I
Monday, March 11

By Donato Infante

There are certain events, moments, or decisions that go down in history as defining a pontificate. For example, when people think of Pope Leo XIII, what comes to mind is the publication of Rerum Novarum, an encyclical that established Catholic social doctrine as a branch of theology in many ways moved the papacy away from the old model that had existed during the time of the Papal States to what we are familiar with now, the papacy as the world’s conscience. He is also known for inaugurating the great renaissance in the philosophy and theology of Saint Thomas Aquinas. Blessed John XXIII is remembered for having called the Second Vatican Council. Venerable Pope Paul VI is known for the publication of the controversial encyclical Humanae Vitae, upholding the Church’st2,000-year-old teaching on the sinfulness of using artificial contraception and the immortality of abortion.

A picture of the late pope Blessed John Paul II is seen on a rosary case at a souvenir stall near St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican March 10. A group of 115 cardinals is expected to enter the Sistine Chapel March 12 for the conclave to elect the next pope. (CNS photo/Eric Gaillard, Reuters)

The pontificate of Blessed John Paul II is still very close in memory, and so many such happenings come to mind. As time goes on, some of these will probably seem less significant than others, but now, eight years after his death, people associate with him the fall of communism, the reform of seminary life with the publication of Pastores Dabo Vobis, many world travels, the creation of World Youth Day, and his final witness that life, even amidst great suffering, is worth living.

What will the legacy of Pope Benedict XVI be? Over the next few days, while we wait for the start of the conclave and the election of the new pope, I will be writing about the four things that come to mind which seem to me the main contributions that Pope Benedict made during his pontificate and for which he will be remembered in history. The first of these is that Pope Benedict became a leader in handling the sexual abuse crisis. The leader of the Catholic Church acknowledge the horrendous acts that had been committed by priests and personally met with victims on his international trips in the United States, Malta, Australia, Germany, and the United Kingdom.

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Religious Sexual Repression and the Responsibilities of the New Pope

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

Whoever the new Pope will be, he will have the chance to address the 900 pound gorilla staring down the Catholic Church, namely the constant sexual abuse scandals. I am a Jew who wishes to see the Catholic Church flourish. I count myself fortunate to have met Pope Benedict prior to his resignation and remember his humility, graciousness, and warmth. As I travel the world I am awed by the global network of schools, orphanages, and hospitals run by the Catholic Church. No other world body even comes close.

But much of that is being eclipsed, be it fairly or otherwise, by the seemingly never-ending sexual scandals that bedevil the Church. Even in the brief interregnum between the announcement of Benedict’s resignation and its taking effect, we witnessed the sudden resignation of the leader of all Britain’s Catholics who confessed to a thirty-year history of abuse.

The Jewish community is likewise not averse to sexual scandal and in the New York area we recently witnessed the tragic story of a Rabbi found guilty of abusing a girl and being sentenced to 130 years in prison. This followed several other stories of Rabbis or religious Jewish teachers being found guilty of abuse of both boys and/or girls.
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Abgeschottete Freikirche unter Missbrauchsverdacht

DEUTSCHLAND
Sudwest Presse

In einer fundamentalistischen Freikirche sollen Kinder jahrelang sexuell missbraucht worden sein. Alle Fälle aus der Spätregen-Mission in Beilstein, die erst jetzt bekannt wurden, sind offenbar verjährt.

Autor: HANS GEORG FRANK | 11.03.2013

Martin Illig (61) ist als Vorsitzender der Spätregen-Mission in Beilstein bei Heilbronn erst im November 2012 angetreten. Schon bald wurde er mit schlimmen Vorwürfen konfrontiert. Als Chef der zuvor stark abgeschotteten Sekte hatte er Transparenz versprochen. Nun muss er beweisen, wie ernst es ihm mit der Offenheit ist. In der Glaubensgemeinschaft soll es mehrere Fälle des sexuellen Missbrauchs von Kindern, hauptsächlich Buben, gegeben haben. Erst jetzt, rund 40 Jahre nach den angeblichen Verbrechen, melden sich traumatisierte Opfer zu Wort.

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Mitterer-Stück “Die Beichte” in Kapelle abgesagt

DEUTSCHLAND
Kleine Zeitung

“Die Beichte”, Felix Mitterers Theaterstück über sexuellen Missbrauch in der Kirche, darf nicht in einer niederbayerischen Kapelle aufgeführt werden. Vor einem Jahr habe der Pfarrer der Gemeinde Eggenfelden noch die Zusage für die Kapelle St. Anna gegeben, sagte am Montag der Betriebsdirektor des Theaters an der Rott, Uwe Lohr. Knapp vier Wochen vor der Premiere kam jetzt der Rückzieher.

“Die zuständigen Kirchengremien haben nun einstimmig erklärt, dass ein geweihter Raum nicht der richtige Ort für dieses Stück ist.” Die “Passauer Neue Presse” hatte am Samstag über den Fall berichtet.

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Im Blickpunkt: Berechtigte Anerkennung

DEUTSCHLAND
Die Tagespost

Von Regina Einig

Gäbe es ein Ranking für kirchliche Institutionen, die das Übel von sexuellem Missbrauch und Gewalt gegenüber Minderjährigen glaubwürdig aufarbeiten, so käme Kloster Ettal einer der vorderen Plätze zu. Seit drei Jahren stellt sich der Konvent ohne Selbstschonung einem dunklen Kapitel seiner Geschichte. Die Einsicht, dass Entschädigungszahlungen und Therapien das Geschehene nicht ungeschehen machen, hatte in Ettal sichtbare Konsequenzen. Deutlich wurde das an der Art und Weise, wie sich der Konvent beispielsweise in der Fastenzeit mit den Fehlern der Vergangenheit auseinandersetzte und an der internen Kommunikation im Kloster arbeitete.

Die Benediktinermönche in Ettal sind heute weit davon entfernt, einen Schlussstrich unter die Vergangenheit zu ziehen. Kloster, Schule und Internat sind nach dem Jahr 2010 nicht mehr wie vorher. Auch die in dieser Woche vorgestellte Studie (Seite 5) wurde vom Kloster in Auftrag gegeben und bezahlt. Die guten Früchte der Aufarbeitung sind nicht zu übersehen. Der Ettaler Opferverein hat das nicht verschwiegen und billigt dem Kloster zu, was katholischen Institutionen öffentlich in der Regel bewusst oder unbewusst verweigert wird: Anerkennung für ihre Aufklärungsarbeit in puncto sexueller Missbrauch.

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Agenda für einen neuen Papst: Aufarbeitung, Hilfe und Entschädigung für die Kirchenopfer

DEUTSCHLAND
Eckiger Tisch

Für einen glaubwürdigen Neuanfang und eine wirksame Prävention von sexuellem Missbrauch sind eine breite Diskussion der Ursachen und eine Erneuerung der Hierarchie der Katholischen Kirche notwendig, die an der Verheimlichung und Vertuschung mitgewirkt hat. Dazu gehört unbedingt eine Öffnung der Akten des Vatikans zu sexuellem Missbrauch für unabhängige Untersuchungen.

In Rom trifft sich dieser Tage ein Kreis von 115 Männern, um den neuen Bischof von Rom zu bestimmen, der für die katholische Weltkirche mit ihren über 1,2 Milliarden Mitgliedern, 400.000 Priestern und fast 5000 Bischöfen den Petrusdienst erfüllen soll und der dabei den Anspruch erhebt, in der Weltgemeinschaft ein Brückenbauer zu sein.

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Deetman recommends special mediation …

NETHERLANDS
Onderzoekrk.nl

Deetman recommends special mediation for victims of violence against women in the Roman Catholic Church

THE HAGUE, 11 March 2013 – Special mediation by professional mediators should be provided for female victims of (excessive) violence within the Roman Catholic Church to offer them healing, acknowledgement and reparation, in combination with financial compensation. Drs. W.J. (Wim) Deetman recommends that the Catholic Church should facilitate this mediation to show its concern about the violence that has been reported by victims. Deetman makes the recommendation in the final report of the follow-up inquiry conducted under his chairmanship into the abuse of and violence against girls within the Catholic Church.

The findings of this independent inquiry, which was carried out between August 2012 and the beginning of 2013, do not provide sufficient basis for a sharply defined, clearcut definition of (excessive) violence that can be used widely and with retrospective effect. In the absence of a clear definition of (excessive) violence, the existing complaints procedure cannot be applied. Deetman recommends that complaints of violence should therefore be handled through this programme of special mediation.

This inquiry was a follow-up to the Commission’s earlier inquiry, also under Deetman’s chairmanship, into sexual abuse of minors (boys and girls) in the Catholic Church. The original Commission of Inquiry’s final report was published at the end of 2011. The research organisation that carried out this follow-up study focused not only on sexual abuse, but also on (excessive) physical and psychological violence against female minors within the Catholic Church in the Netherlands since 1945. Both inquiries were commissioned by the Conference of Bishops and the Conference of Religious in the Netherlands (KNR).

Research questions and sources

The main objectives of the follow-up to the earlier enquiry were:
 to provide more insight into the nature, seriousness, circumstances and impact of sexual abuse and (excessive) physical and psychological violence against underage women within the Roman Catholic Church, as well as accountability for it;

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ITALY – “Step aside tomorrow” victims urge Cardinal Sodano

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Peter Isely on March 11, 2013

Dozens of deaf men were abused as kids by a priest. As adults, they were betrayed by Cardinal Angelo Sodano and other Catholic officials who ignored their pleas for help. We grieve for these once-helpless children and struggling adults as Sodano prepares to lead a special liturgy tomorrow as the conclave begins.

Sodano is a dramatic symbol of almost everything that is wrong with the Catholic hierarchy, especially when it comes to addressing and stopping the sexual assault of children by clergy and the cover up these crimes. We hope he’ll have the decency to let someone else lead the conclave’s opening mass tomorrow. If he doesn’t, we hope his colleagues will persuade him to step down.

Sodano has the distinction of occupying during the past 23 years the two senior most positions of power after the Pope, at one time simultaneously, of Vatican Secretary of State and Dean of the College of Cardinals, where he either enabled or ignored clergy child sex crime worldwide.

It was Sodano, according to knowledgeable sources, who blocked the investigation of the notorious Austrian pedophile Cardinal Hermann Groer.

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An Argentine cardinal who’s quietly drawing attention – again

ROME
John Thavis

As we approach the start of Conclave 2013, it’s instructive to take a look back on Conclave 2005 – especially given the possibility that a protagonist of that election could return as a papabile this time around.

The vote tallies in the 2005 conclave were leaked five months later in an anonymous cardinal’s diary, which formed the basis of an article published by the Italian journal Limes. The author, Lucio Brunelli, is a respected journalist who has covered the Vatican for decades, so his account – which has since been supported by others – deserves attention.

According to the diary, Cardinal Ratzinger led off the first ballot by obtaining 47 votes. Behind him were Argentine Cardinal Jorge Maria Bergoglio with 10 votes, Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini of Milan with 9 votes and a handful of other candidates with lower numbers.

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Papabili of the Day: The Men Who Could Be Pope

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

by John L. Allen Jr. | Mar. 11, 2013

ROME – John Allen is offering a profile each day of one of the most frequently touted papabili, or men who could be pope. The old saying in Rome is that he who enters a conclave as pope exits as a cardinal, meaning there’s no guarantee one of these men actually will be chosen. They are, however, the leading names drawing buzz in Rome these days, ensuring they will be in the spotlight as the conclave draws near. The profiles of these men also suggest the issues and the qualities other cardinals see as desirable heading into the election.

Read all of John Allen’s papabile of the day stories here.

Attentive readers will notice a subtle shift in the headline today, from papabile, singular, to papabili, plural. That’s because I’m treating three papal candidates in this piece, not just one. We’re going to examine the prospects of the three Americans generally considered the most plausible contenders: Cardinals Timothy Dolan of New York, Sean O’Malley of Boston and Donald Wuerl of Washington.

I’m assuming my readers don’t need a whole lot of biographical background on these three figures. What’s critical is to understand why each might become pope, and why they might not. In this last installment of the “Papabile of the Day” series, that’s precisely what we’ll explore.

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Vatican clean-up involves addressing Maciel scandal

IRELAND
Irish Times

Tony Flannery

Mon, Mar 11, 2013

When Pope Benedict spoke of the face of the Catholic Church being “disfigured”, and when he used the word “filth” about aspects of church life, maybe he was partly referring to the Vatican itself. The next pope will have a major task ahead of him, not just with the universal church, but with reforming the Roman curia.

The Vatileaks gave us insight into a dysfunctional system. We got a glimpse of a structure that was riddled with power struggles, infighting and jealousies. Even if only part of what was revealed is true, it still amounts to a major clean-up task for the new pope.

My concern is an older scandal, which continues to reveal new and more astonishing features. I am referring to the story of the founder of the Legionaries of Christ, Marcial Maciel Degollado. For those who don’t know, this man founded a large and conservative religious order, and also a lay institute, Regnum Christi. He was a great friend of John Paul II, and of one of the most powerful people in the Vatican, Cardinal Angelo Sodano.

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‘Too easy to blame church for sex abuse’

FRANCE
IOL

March 11 2013

AFP

Paris – Putting the blame for paedophilia on the Roman Catholic Church is a way of avoiding the issue, a top French cardinal says.

“There is a kind of opinion that is an easy way of ridding (society) of the issue of paedophilia by putting it on the Church,” Andre Vingt-Trois, the archbishop of Paris, told AFP in an interview.

“We shouldn’t be duped. It’s easy because that prevents asking the question within society itself,” said Vingt-Trois, 70, one of the 115 cardinals set to elect the next pope in a conclave starting on Tuesday.

“Paedophilia is not solely a Church problem. Eighty percent of victims of paedophilia are in families, and we don’t talk about that,” he said, rejecting what he called a “fascination” over the issue in connection with the Church.

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“They All Look Like a Vatican Version of the Tea Party Movement”

UNITED STATES
Mother Jones

By Kiera Butler

Mon Mar. 11, 2013

“Even on a good day, I get discouraged thinking about the election of a new pope,” laments Maureen Fiedler, a nun and blogger at the progressive Catholic newspaper National Catholic Reporter. “They all look like a Vatican version of the tea party movement.”

On Tuesday, three weeks after Pope Benedict XVI announced his resignation on February 28, the world’s cardinals will begin their conclave to choose a new pope. The past few decades have been rough ones for a church struggling with the widespread sex abuse scandal and an ever-worsening shortage of clergy. But with 1.16 billion members worldwide, the Church is still massive—and it’s actually in a perfect position to help save the planet, should it choose to do so.

The flock is increasingly centered in the developing world, where people are most likely to bear the brunt of environmental destruction and climate change. The church has a strong tradition of social justice work, including the United States’ Catholic Worker movement and Latin America’s liberation theology. Indeed, National Catholic Reporter notes that even the notoriously socially conservative Benedict XVI famously delivered a World Day of Peace speech called “If You Want to Cultivate Peace, Protect Creation,” and named pollution among the world’s “social sins.”

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A time of transition: Governance a top issue in 2013 conclave

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

by John L. Allen Jr. | Mar. 11, 2013

Rome —
Eight years ago, when the cardinals of the world gathered to elect a successor to Pope John Paul II, their watchword was “continuity.” Buoyed by the massive outpouring of grief and affection for the late pope that washed through the streets of Rome, they felt they had just witnessed the end of a massively successful pontificate, and they wanted to keep the momentum going.

The man who was the intellectual architect of John Paul’s papacy, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, therefore seemed an obvious choice.

This time around, there’s another voting issue that seems equally front and center, although it may not lead quite as directly to a specific candidate. In a word, the driving issue this time appears to be “governance.”

Time and again, both publicly and privately, cardinals have said that whatever other qualities the next pope may possess, he has to be someone who can remedy the perceived breakdowns in business management in the Vatican over the last eight years.

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A time of transition: Unclear calls for change in final days of Benedict

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

by Joshua J. McElwee,Dennis Coday | Mar. 11, 2013

Rome —
As a few night owls strolled through the crisp Roman evening Feb. 28, they were illuminated by one less reflection of lights. Behind the northern side of the square’s iconic colonnades, the apostolic palace was dark.

In a small but tell-tale sign of the transition facing the church, the lights of the pope’s apartment had been turned off.

Hours before, as Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation took effect at exactly 8 p.m. local time, the doors to the apartment had been ceremonially sealed with ribbon and wax, not to be broken before the election of a new pontiff by the church’s cardinals.

It was a dramatic change in scenery. And in the days before and after, change has been the watchword of the former pope, the cardinals who have taken up the role of shepherding the church, and analysts speculating on what happens next for the central command of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

Following a series of scandals — reports that gay Roman priests are overly influenced by their lovers, the resignation of a cardinal accused of sexual impropriety, and the continuing effects of last year’s trial of the papal valet for leaking Vatican documents — each has said the church needs to go through some sort of spiritual change or transformation.

“This is a time of thirst” for the church, Vienna Cardinal Christoph Schönborn, considered a long-shot possibility to be pope, told NCR in a brief interview March 4.

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Time for courage from those who have most to lose

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by NCR Editorial Staff | Mar. 11, 2013

Editorial

In the opening days of the general congregations, the series of meetings the College of Cardinals convene in the lead-up to the conclave that will choose the next pope, an idea was floated in the Italian press about a way to clean up the governance issues that have plagued the Vatican under Pope Benedict XVI’s reign. The idea was to elect one of the over-80-year-old cardinals as pope. Such a pope, a curial old hand, would have a clear understanding of how the Curia actual works and could rein it in. The candidate would have to be somebody tough enough to crack down on uncooperative dicasteries and end rivalries. Somebody with clear thinking and a firm hand — that’s what’s needed. The idea — like many floated in the Italian media these days — didn’t get much traction.

We have also heard people longing for a return of someone like Archbishop Giovanni Benelli, a legendary substitute (assistant) secretary of state under Pope Paul VI. This guy knew how to run a tight ship. With Benelli in charge, everyone knew his job and his place and the work of the Vatican got done. A TIME magazine profile of him from 1969 describes how he prepared and organized newspaper clippings and reports and arranged them on the breakfast table every morning for Paul VI. He arranged papal audiences and appointments with similar efficiency. Though only an archbishop and only the No. 2 man in his office, he could make cardinals tremble in fear if they tried to circumvent or cross him. A new Benelli would turn this place around, they say.

A third idea has emerged in the last day or so. The new pope needs to be a modern CEO who would update church systems with modern management practices, understand finances and have a command of modern communication technologies. The idea is to shuffle a few MBAs among the theology degrees.

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Machiavelli: How the Darkest Conspiracy Ever Backfired and Gave Us Two Popes 500 Years Later

ITALY
Huffington Post

Paul Schwarzman

There is strong circumstantial evidence that Niccolò Machiavelli – history’s most cunning writer about power – may have plotted to obliterate the Roman Catholic Church and its governing Cardinals to purge it of the corruption of that epoch. The repercussions of those events definitively changed the mission of the Church to what it is today.

Machiavelli may have precipitated the Sack Of Rome in 1527, in which tens of thousands of Romans were butchered. Ironically — in a brilliant strategic PR shift by the Church government — the horrors of the Sack allowed the Church to survive and thrive. Now, with Pope Benedict XVI’s possible repudiation of his election by the Cardinals, he may have seeded doubt to their claim to be the infallible voice of God, and with it, shaken their pillar in the Church. In his actions, the Pope may have achieved the very goal of Machiavelli 500 years later.

Let’s consider the background history of how we arrived here.

Machiavelli was a Florentine diplomat and author of The Prince that became the handbook for despots from Napoleon through Hitler to Mao. It specifies how to apply acts of cruelty to achieve and maintain power at any cost. It is a page-turner, with Machiavelli serving as eye witness to Cesare Borgia — the son of Pope Alexander VI and role model for The Prince — who galloped with death squads and proudly garroted a general in the diplomat’s presence.

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Quebec abuse victims support Cardinal Ouellet as the next pope

CANADA
Digital Journal

By Arthur Weinreb
Mar 11, 2013

Montreal – A Quebec victims group would like to see Marc Cardinal Ouellet succeed Pope Benedict as the next head of the Catholic Church. But the reasons for their support are not exactly complimentary to the 68-year-old cleric.

A small rally was held yesterday outside a Montreal church. Some protesters wore white paper hats similar to mitres worn by Bishops saying, “Vote for Ouellet.” At the rally, the Quebec Association of Victims announced their support for the Quebec cardinal to become the next pontiff. The group was, and is, critical of Ouellet for not doing enough to help those who were victimized by the church.

Since Pope Benedict announced his resignation last month, Ouellet’s name has been included in a list of serious contenders to succeed Benedict. In supporting the cardinal, the group does not believe he is necessarily the best candidate for the job.

The group believes if Ouellet becomes the next pope, international attention will be focused on Quebec and this will put the abuse suffered by their 3,500 members in the international spotlight.

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Don’t Spurn This Priest, or He’ll Slash Your Tires and Torch Your Buildings

TEXAS
Houston Press

By Casey Michel
Mon., Mar. 11 2013

Martin Villanueva didn’t mind the first time his tires were punctured. He knew how to repair the drill-holes — take a nail, take a bit of adhesive, and call it good. He was frustrated, sure. But these things happen. Random day, random car.

Then, it happened again. Nails, adhesive, frustration. And it happened again, and again, and again. And Villanueva’s nail stock ran low, and his budget ran lower, new tires purchased after every few punctures.

And a pattern, beginning nearly three years ago in Edinburg, began to grow. The holes, this automotive stigmata, came only when Villanueva’s car was sitting in the parking lot of a new church he was visiting. They came only when he skipped out on his traditional place of Catholic worship, Edinburg’s Holy Family Church, and settled into another pew on Sunday mornings.

The whole time, Villanueva suspected. The location, and timing — it all pointed to one individual. It all pointed to a jilted love. It all pointed to a friend-cum-vagrant, a priest, Eusebio Martinez, who believed that he and Villanueva should maintain more than a simple pastor-parishioner relationship.

“When I met when him, I was building a house for him,” Villanueva told Hair Balls on Friday. A relationship developed, and flowered. It grew far quicker than Villanueva would have preferred. “He wanted me to be real close, wanted to be a real good friend. And then he wanted to be in control of myself.”

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New abuse charges against priest who worked in Ipswich

MASSACHUSETTS
My Fox Boston

IPSWICH, Mass. (MyFoxBoston.com) – There are more abuse allegations against a Roman Catholic priest who is already accused of abusing a young boy in Ipswich.

The Salem News says Rev. Richard McCormack has been indicted on additional counts of child sex abuse.

Last year, McCormack was charged with abusing a young boy in the early 1980s. That’s when McCormack worked at the Salesian Brothers’ Sacred Heart retreat center and seminary in Ipswich. FOX 25 covered that story.

A second victim has reportedly now come forward to prosecutors after McCormack’s arrest. He claims he was abused between 1981 and 1983 when he was 9 years old.

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Lo strano affare …

ROMA
La Repubblica

Lo strano affare del palazzo del cardinale che in un giorno raddoppiò il suo prezzo

Roma, pagato 9 milioni e rivenduto a Propaganda Fide per 20. Imbarazzo in Vaticano perché negli stessi locali c’è la sauna gay più famosa d’Italia. E grazie a Tremonti la Chiesa non paga un euro di tasse. L’acquisto voluto fortemente dal Segretario di Stato Bertone di CARLO BONINI

ROMA – Al civico 2 di via Carducci, nel cuore della città umbertina, a un centinaio di metri dal ministero dell’Economia, un palazzo nobiliare dall’elegante atrio e dalle grandi finestre tiene insieme, tra le stesse mura, la Congregazione per l’Evangelizzazione dei Popoli (Propaganda Fide) e la più grande sauna gay d’Italia.

Non solo. Custodisce i segreti di una singolare operazione immobiliare costata al Vaticano 23 milioni di euro, caldeggiata dal cardinale e Segretario di Stato Tarcisio Bertone, conclusa con grande soddisfazione e importanti plusvalenze da una società di Busto Arsizio, ma con nessun vantaggio fiscale per le casse dello Stato che, a questo complesso immobiliare acquistato dalla Congregazione ha riconosciuto l’extraterritorialità e dunque l’intangibilità e la totale esenzione fiscale che i Patti Lateranensi assicurano ai luoghi di culto.

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Advies Deetman: Katholieke Kerk moet mishandeling van vrouwen erkennen

NEDERLAND
NRC

door Joep Dohmen

De Rooms-Katholieke Kerk moet vrouwen die als kind vaak ernstig mishandeld zijn in katholieke tehuizen, erkennen en smartegeld betalen. Dat adviseert Wim Deetman in een vandaag gepubliceerd vervolgonderzoek rond het misbruikschandaal in de Kerk.

In de bestaande klachtenprocedure krijgen alleen slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik erkenning en compensatie. Deetman stelt voor vrouwelijke geweldsslachtoffers te helpen via een speciale bemiddeling door mediators. Over mannelijke geweldsslachtoffers zegt hij niets.

Vervolgonderzoek commissie-Deetman

Het vervolgonderzoek bouwt voort op het onderzoek van de commissie-Deetman, naar seksueel misbruik van jongens en meisjes in de katholieke kerk. Daaruit bleek dat “enkele tienduizenden” kinderen, vooral jongens, sinds 1945 slachtoffer waren. Voor hen kwam er een klachten- en compensatieregeling. Op verzoek van de Tweede Kamer keek Deetman daarna nog specifiek naar het seksueel misbruik van meisjes en jonge vrouwen, en naar schrijnende gevallen van geweld.

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Drie verjaarde misbruikgevallen toch naar OM

NEDERLAND
Kerknieuws

De commissie-Deetman heeft drie gevallen van seksueel misbruik binnen de Rooms-Katholieke Kerk gemeld aan het Openbaar Ministerie (OM). De gevallen zijn verjaard, maar omdat de gemelde mishandelingen zo ernstig waren, zijn ze toch aan het OM doorgegeven.

Dat meldde de commissie-Deetman maandag, op basis van vervolgonderzoek naar seksueel, fysiek en geestelijk misbruik van meisjes binnen de kerk.

De commissie onder leiding van Wim Deetman deed eerder al onderzoek naar seksueel misbruik binnen de kerk. Uit dat onderzoek bleek dat door falend toezicht tussen de 10.000 en 20.000 kinderen misbruikt konden worden in katholieke instellingen en internaten. Voor dit vervolgonderzoek kwamen 181 nieuwe meldingen binnen van minderjarige slachtoffers over seksueel misbruik, al dan niet in gecombineerd met geweld. 79 meldingen werden verder onderzocht. Ook 71 oude meldingen, uit het vorige onderzoek, werden meegenomen.

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Misbruikklachten katholieke meisjes relatief vaak ernstig

NEDERLAND
Trouw

UPDATE Ruim veertig procent van de meisjes die melding hebben gedaan van seksueel misbruik door rooms-katholieke geestelijken zijn ‘ernstig’ misbruikt. Dat blijkt uit het rapport dat Wim Deetman maandag presenteert.

Bij ‘ernstig’ misbruik is sprake van verregaande seksuele handelingen en penetratie. De meeste seksuele zaken vonden thuis en in de parochie plaats. Fysiek geweld vond vooral plaats in instellingen, zoals internaten en ziekenhuizen. Meisjes waren doorgaans tussen de 6 en 14 jaar toen het misbruik of het geweld begon.

Het onderzoek, dat zich richtte op de periode van 1945 tot 2010, bracht alleen verjaarde feiten aan het licht. Deetman kreeg 181 nieuwe meldingen binnen, waarvan er 79 nader zijn onderzocht. Ook zijn er 71 meldingen uit het vorige onderzoek (naar seksueel misbruik van jongens) meegenomen.

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Cardinals hold their last general congregation meeting before Conclave

VATICAN CITY
Rome Reports

March 11,2013 (Romereports.com) (-ONLY VIDEO-) On Monday morning at 9:30 a.m, Cardinals made their way to the Vatican to hold their last congregation meeting before the conclave begins on March 12th.

The congregation meetings are a time for the 115 cardinal electors (and non-electors) to discuss the state of the Church, its strengths, challenges and above all the profile the next Pope should have.

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Cardinals arrive at Vatican for final pre-conclave meeting

VATICAN CITY
City News Toronto

Cardinals began arriving at the Vatican on Monday for a final day of talks before entering the conclave to elect a new pope.

The balloting process is due to start on Tuesday.

The cardinals are expected to discuss the state of their Church which was left reeling by the abdication last month of Pope Benedict and struggling to deal with a string of sexual abuse and corruption scandals.

“So today is really a day where the cardinals are coming together for a meeting, they’re having more prayer and reflection in their very great responsibility for the rest of the week,” Kim Daniels, the Director of Catholic Voices USA said.

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Jim Hume: Priest dodged blame in residential-school deaths

CANADA
Times Colonist

Following a coroner’s inquiry into the deaths of four truant children, frozen to death on Fraser Lake on New Year’s Day 1937, the headlines in most B.C. newspapers reported no blame for the tragedy should be attached to the priests who ran the Lelac Indian School, about 80 kilometres west of Prince George.

“Indian School Authorities Absolved in Lake Tragedy,” read one. “No blame in boys’ death,” echoed another. And the Catholic priest who ran Lelac suggested it was really the failure of parents to discipline their children that led to the deaths of eight-year-olds Maurice Justice and Allan Willie, and nine-year-olds Johnny Michael and Andrew Paul.

Careful reading of the coroner’s report tells a different story.

School principal Father Patrick MacGrath, testifying at the inquiry convened Jan. 4, 1937, by local coroner C. Pitts, MD, set the scene for casual indifference of staff toward students on the day the drama began. Mark his protestations of innocence carefully: “I had been away all day on Jan. 1, returning at 5 p.m., but it was not until 9 p.m that I first heard that four boys were missing.” Four boys aged eight and nine missing late on a winter afternoon with temperatures already below zero and falling fast, and no one thought to inform the principal for four hours? He added the runaways were “first reported to Bishop Caudert” but didn’t clarify whether the bishop had been alerted earlier or whether he, on hearing the news, had immediately passed the word along.

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Victims Of Priest Abuse In Rome To Urge Cardinals To Choose Wisely

ROME
CBS Miami

ROME (CBS4) – While many pilgrims on a spiritual journey are flocking to Rome to observe history in the making, others have made the trek here to expose hurt anger and outrage.

Dark clouds hovered above St. Peter’s Basilica Sunday, days before the start of the papal conclave. The haunting faces of innocence lost, allegedly stolen at the hands of abusive priests, emerged with the hope the world will watch and the cardinals will listen.

They feel that the cardinals need to select a Pope who will do more to heal the wounds of victims and more to safeguard the children.

“They have to do something, intervene, because there’s a problem. We are talking about children, they are completely abandoned before, during and after. They are treated like animals,” David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) told CBS4′s Michele Gillen in Rome.

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Cardinal Pell angered by newspaper ‘smear’

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

AAP

Cardinal George Pell has labelled an article about him in the Fairfax media on Monday as a “smear of the most vindictive kind”.

A statement released by the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney on Monday says the article misrepresents the outcome of a 2002 inquiry into an allegation against Cardinal Pell.

The inquiry, headed by independent commissioner Alex Southwell QC, cleared Dr Pell of allegations he molested a boy during a camp at Phillip Island, in Victoria, in 1961.

The church says the article said Dr Pell was tainted by sex abuse scandals and long dogged by allegations of sexual abuse against him.

“These statements are utterly false and seriously defamatory,” the church said in a statement.

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Residential schools chief adjudicator to resign

CANADA
APTN

By Kathleen Martens
APTN National News
WINNIPEG – Canada’s chief adjudicator for the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement’s Independent Assessment Process (IAP) has resigned, APTN Investigates has learned.

Dan Ish gave his written notice to the IAP’s Oversight Committee a few weeks ago, saying it will be effective in June.

Ish has been overseeing the multi-billion dollar program since being appointed for five years in Sept. 19, 2007.

However, the IAP has received triple the expected number of applications from former residential school survivors, something Ish cited in stepping down.

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When “The Impossible” Creates an Imperative: PBC’s Tsunami of Controversy

TEXAS
Spiritual Sounding Board

Sometimes, catastrophic events sweep us into a stress-inducing storyline that we never intended or even imagined. And the outcomes may change our lives forever. That’s the core of the story in the 2012 movie, The Impossible. Just as a family is enjoying what’s supposed to be a relaxing vacation together in Thailand, they get caught in a disastrous tsunami. It literally sweeps them apart from one another and lands them in crisis mode as they scramble just to survive – and then, hopefully, to search despite stress, find one another, and recover.

I think that’s kind of what happened to Chris Tynes this past week. I don’t know where this experience will take him, but for now, he’s ended up seemingly at the vortex of a long-term controversy involving Prestonwood Baptist Church (PBC) in Plano, Texas. Through a series of events outside his control, he became the latest lightning rod in a spiritual electric storm that started in the 1980s and has been building toward super-spark status since 2010. He was the wrong man in the wrong place at the wrong time, and he got shocked.

Or – if you believe that God providentially puts the right person in the right place at the right time – then Chris is yet another link in a heaven-ordained chain of people sent to Prestonwood to give them opportunities to respond to truth and justice. And pretty much all Chris did was ask questions, especially to confirm or deny some rumors that had surfaced. Here’s the new reality: Because we live in an era where allegations linger, in part because news online is “unscrubbable,” it turned out Chris read accounts from Amy Smith and Christa Brown about ongoing accusations of issues at PBC with a now-convicted sexual offender, John Langworthy, who previously served on staff with Prestonwood in Dallas. Apparently Chris asked PBC leaders “The Deplorable Question,” and it triggered what seemed to be self-protective actions by one of the largest churches in the entire Southern Baptist Convention.

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Deetman komt met tweede rapport

NEDERLAND
NOS

De commissie-Deetman komt vandaag met een tweede rapport over seksueel misbruik binnen de katholieke kerk. Het rapport gaat met name over het misbruik van meisjes en vrouwen, van 1945 tot nu.

Het onderzoek van de commissie, waarvan oud-minister Wim Deetman de voorzitter is, richtte zich eerder vooral op de gang van zaken in katholieke internaten. Daar werden jongens opgeleid en daardoor lag de focus op mannelijke slachtoffers van misbruik.

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Rapport seksueel misbruik vrouwen in kerk

NEDERLAND
RTL

Wim Deetman presenteert vandaag een rapport over seksueel misbruik van en geweld tegen meisjes en vrouwen in de Rooms-Katholieke Kerk. Het onderzoek richtte zich op seksueel misbruik en fysiek en psychisch geweld van 1945 tot nu.

Een commissie onder leiding van oud-minister en voormalig burgemeester van Den Haag Deetman deed het onderzoek op verzoek van de Tweede Kamer. Eerder al onderzocht de commissie-Deetman seksueel misbruik van minderjarige mannen binnen de Rooms-Katholieke Kerk.

Naast een analyse van de meldingen worden ook ervaringen van de slachtoffers beschreven. Voor het onderzoek zijn gesprekken gevoerd met een aantal melders, deskundigen en vertegenwoordigers van lotgenoten en met bestuurlijk verantwoordelijken. Ook zijn archieven onderzocht.

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Catholic Church must accept charges of hypocrisy, admits official spokesman

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

THE Catholic Church in Scotland have been rightly accused of hypocrisy, their official spokesman admitted yesterday.

And the Church have failed to support people struggling with their sexuality, Peter Kearney, director of the Scottish Catholic media office, said in the most frank comments by a Church official yet about the downfall of Cardinal Keith O’Brien.

After a gruelling fortnight for the Church, which saw O’Brien, their most senior cleric, admit sexual misconduct, Kearney admitted the Church rightly faced charges of being hypocritical.

Archbishop Philip Tartaglia – who replaced O’Brien – said last week the Church had been accused of hypocrisy “for obvious reasons”.

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Father Marcial Maciel And The Popes He Stained

UNITED STATES
The Daily Beast

by Jason Berry
Mar 11, 2013

Marcial Maciel Degollado, a priest from Mexico with an extravagant name, was the greatest fundraiser for the postwar Catholic Church and equally its greatest criminal.

“A life … out of moral bounds,” is how Pope Benedict XVI described Maciel in a 2010 interview, two years after Maciel’s death. A “wasted, twisted life.”

And a life that exposed shocking flaws in the Vatican and the papacy. The saga of Father Maciel opens a rare view onto the flow of money in the Roman Curia across the last half century, a time during which his rise to power and late-life crash into scandal stained the campaign for John Paul II’s sainthood and became a quagmire for Benedict XVI.

In the late 1940s, Maciel began sexually plundering teenage seminarians in the religious order he founded, the Legion of Christ. He also shuttled between Mexico, Venezuela, and Spain, courting benefactors like a senator with silk between the fingers, portraying his Legionaries as a force of resurgent orthodoxy, himself a fearless foe of communism.

That message had booming resonance in Mexico, a heavily Catholic country seared by memories of lethal anticlerical persecutions set in motion by the Calles regime in the 1930s, a milieu powerfully evoked in Graham Greene’s novel The Power and the Glory. Maciel won government support for seminary scholarships in Madrid, after the Spanish Civil War cemented ties between Francisco Franco’s dictatorship and the Catholic hierarchy. Wealthy industrialists and patricians from the Spanish-speaking world poured money into Maciel’s fledgling order.

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The Church That the New Pope Will Govern

ROME
Chiesa

It will be a Church with two thirds of the faithful in the southern hemisphere. With more Catholics in Manila than in Holland. With the West in a decline of faith. And with the United States at the center of the new geography

by Sandro Magister

ROME, March 11, 2013 – The pope whom the cardinals are preparing to elect will guide a Church that over the past century has experienced the most impetuous numeric growth of its history, and at the same time a very strong change in its geographic dislocation. With the United States as the focal point of the shift.

Catholics were and remain one sixth of the global population. They were and remain half of all Christians. But in absolute numbers they have quadrupled. In 1910 they were 291 million. In 2010 1.1 billion.

What is most arresting, however, is the geographical revolution. This has been presented by the Washington-based Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life in a recent survey:

> The Global Catholic Population

A century ago, 70 percent of Catholics lived in Europe and North America. Today just 32 percent, less than one third of the total.

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Die US-Katholiken bedienen sich in der “Cafeteria Gottes”

VEREINIGTE STAATEN
Die Presse

Boston. Jeder vierte Amerikaner ist Katholik, sieben von hundert Katholiken weltweit sind Amerikaner: Die römische Kirche ist in den Vereinigten Staaten nach mehr als 200 vorwiegend protestantisch geprägten Jahren eine etablierte Größe. Im Jahr 1910 waren 16 Prozent der US-Bürger katholisch, 2010 waren es 26 Prozent.

Und die Kirche dürfte trotz der wie überall im Westen fortschreitenden Verweltlichung der Gesellschaft weiterhin wachsen. Denn während im 19. Jahrhundert die Einwanderer aus Irland und Italien den Katholizismus in der Neuen Welt stärkten, sorgen heute die Lateinamerikaner für frisches Blut. Zwar war laut der aktuellsten Erhebung des Pew Research Center im vergangenen Jahr nur jeder dritte amerikanische Katholik hispanisch. Doch 30 Prozent der rund 75,4 Millionen Katholiken in den USA sind im Ausland geboren. Im US-Kirchenvolk gibt es somit mehr als doppelt so viele Einwanderer wie in der gesamten Bevölkerung. Die hispanischen Katholiken sind jung, die Hälfte ist unter 40 Jahre.

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Papst-Leitfaden: Drei Schritte zum Erfolg

OSTERREICH
Der Standard

Bringen wir das in wenigen Stunden beginnende Konklave auf den Boden der Realität: Es geht weniger darum, den Richtigen zu finden, als vielmehr darum, den Falschen zu vermeiden! Die Bekenntnisse des Kardinal O’Brien müssen für seine Amtsbrüder ein Schock sein. Fast wäre er in die Sixtinische Kapelle mit eingezogen. Kürzlich hat er sich zu sexuellen Übergriffen bekannt. Ist er der Einzige, der diesbezüglich etwas auf dem Kerbholz hat? Vermutlich nein. Gerade der konservative Flügel muss sich vor der Formel fürchten: je konservativer, desto Groër.

Aber es geht nicht nur um dieses Thema. In der römisch-katholischen Kirchengeschichte war stets die Dreifaltigkeit von Sex, Macht und Geld präsent. Geld: Wer von den Kardinälen ist in den internationalen Finanz-Schlamassel der Vatikanbank involviert? Macht: Wer ist politisch belastet, weil er in seinem Heimatland hinter den Kulissen zu sehr in politische Machenschaften involviert ist? Eine Frage vor allem für demokratisch wenig entwickelte Länder.

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NH Catholics talk about the kind of Pope the church needs

NEW HAMPSHIRE
New Hampshire Union Leader

By KATHRYN MARCHOCKI
New Hampshire Union Leader

The next Pope needs to be much more than a holy man, teacher and shepherd to the estimated 1.2 billion Roman Catholics worldwide and a better manager of the Vatican’s internal bureaucracy than his predecessor, several New Hampshire Catholics said.

But Pope Benedict XVI’s successor must be much more.

The new pontiff must continue to address the clergy sexual abuse crisis and – perhaps most importantly – confront what several clerics call the “godless” agenda of the primarily secular Western world that threatens to strip people of their humanity and seeks to silence the voice of religion. …

Clergy sexual abuse

While Catholics hold widely varying opinions on qualities the next Pope should have, most agree he must be committed to resolving the clergy sexual abuse crisis.

“It’s paramount,” Frontiero said. Benedict, he said, made “some progress in the accountability of bishops.”

“That progress needs to continue and there needs to be transparency … We can’t evade these things any more. We’ve got to handle them directly. Accountability, especially among the bishops, is critical,” he added.

Guevin added that “we need a Pope who would continue to address the clergy abuse scandal to make it clear to the bishops that … they really try to make it a priority to protect children.”

Longtime advocate of abuse victims, Carolyn Disco of Merrimack, said the only viable candidate for the post is Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin.

“There is a zero chance for his election, but he ‘gets it’,” Disco said in an e-mail response. Martin admitted bishops covered up clergy sexual abuse, voluntarily released church files to government-sanctioned investigators and served in the Holy See’s diplomatic corps, said Disco, who is New Hampshire Voice of the Faithful’s survivor support chairman.

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New church policy aims to curb sexual abuse

CANADA
Leader-Post

By Jason Warick, The StarPhoenix March 11, 2013

Saskatoon and area Roman Catholic priests and volunteers will soon be prohibited from meeting behind closed doors with parishioners.

The main goal of the new policy, which also mandates criminal record checks and directing those with criminal allegations to police first, is to eliminate sexual abuse, said Blake Sittler, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saskatoon’s co-ordinator of care. It should also protect priests and other workers from false allegations, he said.

“This is a major paradigm shift,” Sittler said in an interview Sunday after attending a Calgary conference on the issue.

“We do not want this (abuse) to happen. It disgusts and disappoints us as well.”

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Abuse case limits studied

NEW YORK
Albany Times Union

By Brendan J. Lyons

Updated 5:59 am, Monday, March 11, 2013

NEW YORK — A proposal to abolish New York’s statute of limitations on sex crimes involving children was the subject of a gut-wrenching Assembly hearing in Manhattan that included testimony from an attorney for two brothers who said they were raped as boys by an Albany Roman Catholic Diocese priest.

Tina M. Weber, a Philadelphia attorney, read statements from the brothers, who are now adults, about their emotionally tumultuous lives since they said they were raped repeatedly in the 1980s and 1990s by a former priest, Gary Mercure, who was convicted two years ago of forcibly raping a child in Massachussetts.

Weber implored the Assembly’s Codes Committee to push legislation that would make New York one of a growing number of states that have expanded or eliminated statutes of limitations on child sex crimes.

Variations of the measure, known as the Child Victims Act, have passed the Assembly four times but never made it to a vote in the state Senate, where Republican leaders and other lawmakers say the legislation could be financially devastating to the Catholic Church and other organizations.

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March 10, 2013

Papal odds swing into Italian’s favor: bookie

IRELAND
New York Daily News

[PaddyPower.com]

By Stephen Rex Brown / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Sunday, March 10, 2013

There’s a new favorite in the Popestakes: Italy’s Angelo Cardinal Scola is 2-1 to be the next pontiff, overtaking the previous front-runner, Ghana’s Peter Cardinal Turkson, who is at 4-1, according to Irish bookie Paddy Power.

Rory Scott, a spokesman for the legal bookmaker, said the lengthy deliberations among the cardinals last week worked in Scola’s favor, because the formal conclave this week is now likely to move faster.

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Italian paper calls O’Malley top candidate for papacy

BOSTON (MA)
NECN

(NECN: John Monahan, Boston) – There is renewed speculation that Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley is a top candidate to become Pope.

A leading Italian newspaper polled eight Vatican experts. Five of them list Cardinal O’Malley as one of their top picks to be elected during the conclave that will begin Tuesday.

Cardinal O’Malley tied a Brazillian cardinal as a top contender, but won an online reader’s poll.

Sunday, O’Malley and the other cardinals had a chance to say Mass in their honorary churches in Rome.

Cardinal O’Malley made no mention of the clamor during his Mass. Instead, he focused on praying for the best possible outcome.

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Lawsuit filed over sexual assault of girl on church property

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free Press

By Christina Hall
Detroit Free Press Staff Writer

A lawsuit has been filed against the Archdiocese of Detroit, a Mt. Clemens church, its pastor and a parishioner who was convicted of a sex crime involving a 14-year-old girl on church property.

The lawsuit, filed last week in Macomb County Circuit Court, seeks at least $25,000 in damages from the archdiocese; St. Peter’s Catholic Church and the Rev. Michael Cooney, and Michael Lentini, who was convicted of assaulting the child. It also requests a jury trial.

The lawsuit was filed by the mother of the girl. The family belonged to the church.

The suit cites negligence on the part of the archdiocese, church and Cooney for failing to ensure child abuse or suspected child abuse or inappropriate sexual behavior is reported to authorities.

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Suit: Priest failed to protect girl from molester

MICHIGAN
WOOD

MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. (AP) — A lawsuit against a priest and the Catholic church says they failed to protect a 14-year-old girl from sexual abuse by a 19-year-old man.

The Detroit Free Press (http://on.freep.com/YafjoD ) says the suit was filed last week in Macomb County Circuit Court against the Rev. Michael Cooney, St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Mount Clemens, the Archdiocese of Detroit and sexual misconduct convict Michael Lentini.

The suit says the priest and church were negligent and failed to act after getting reports of the sexual misconduct.

The archdiocese suspended Cooney in February 2012 after learning of the case, saying he apparently failed to report what he knew to police as church policy requires. He later was reinstated.

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Cardinal Marc Ouellet gives ‘bravura performance’

VATICAN CITY
Canada.com

By Matthew Fisher, Postmedia News March 10, 2013

VATICAN CITY — Cardinal Marc Ouellet ambled across St. Peter’s Square Saturday afternoon unnoticed by swarms of pilgrims, tourists and journalists.

Thirty hours later the 68-year-old Canadian, who is among the favourites to be named as the next pope, was greeted by hundreds of journalists when he celebrated mass Sunday evening in a packed church 200 metres from the Vatican.

If Ouellet is chosen to succeed Benedict XVI as the Vicar of Christ at a papal conclave that is to begin Tuesday one can only imagine how much life will change for the burly prelate from the backwoods of Quebec. At a minimum the avid hockey player and fan will never again enjoy a leisurely stroll in St. Peter’s Square or a quiet vacation with his 91-year-old mother Graziella, or hunting and fishing with friends and relatives in his birthplace of La Motte, Que., a tiny village 500 kilometres northwest of Ottawa.

Parishioners who attended Ouellet’s mass at the Santa Maria in Traspontina Church in Rome on Sunday were unanimous that he had given a bravura performance. Speaking entirely in Italian at the local church assigned to him as cardinal-priest when he became one of the princes of the church is 2003, Ouellet said during his homily that God had already decided who the next pope would be and that the cardinals would simply be naming the one that He had already chosen.

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Church is urged to release secret sex abuse files

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

By STEPHEN MCGINTY
Published on Monday 11 March 2013

THE Catholic Church in Scotland should open its “secret” files and publish an audit of abusive priests, according to the former head of the Church’s working party on child protection.

Alan Draper, who compiled a report on 22 “problem priests” as long ago as 1995, criticised the Church for paying lip service and failing to act on a second damning report in 2004, which said certain priests were not adequately monitored and “unacceptable levels of risk to children may have been and could remain present”.

The second, 27-page report was written by May Dunsmuir, then director of child protection for the Catholic Church, and has been seen by The Scotsman. It criticised Scottish bishops for failing to provide proper training, adequate supervision of problem priests and for organising “no national or diocesan collation and dissemination of child protection statistical information and analysis”.

The report, which was sent to Archbishop Keith O’Brien, then president of the Bishops’ Conference, also criticised existing policy as “silent on certain matters, eg, how to respond to allegations involving clergy or a bishop”.

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‘We must offer gay Catholics more support’

SCOTLAND
Mirror

By: Greg Christison
Published: Mon, March 11, 2013

Speaking a week after Cardinal Keith O’Brien admitted sexual misconduct, the Church’s head of media, Peter Kearney, also admitted it rightly faces claims of hypocrisy.

His comments come as a child protection expert appointed to advise the Catholic Church over abuse claims said evidence suggested that priests were “out of control sexually”.

Academic Alan Draper has been informed of 20 child sex allegations in Scots parishes during the Eighties and Nineties and revealed that not all were reported to police.

Mr Kearney admitted more needs to be done to provide support for Catholics struggling with their sexuality.

He added: “If there’s an area where the Church hasn’t been seen – frankly, because it’s not present – it’s in that area of compassionate, pastoral outreach to people who are struggling with same-sex attraction, or they’re confused about it and would love the chance to talk to someone in a compassionate, pastoral context.

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Sexual Misconduct Allegations Made Against Upstate Catholic Priest

SOUTH CAROLINA
WSPA

Sexual misconduct allegations have been made against a local Catholic Priest.

On Friday a man who was representing the catholic church approached an investigator at the Greenwood County Sheriff’s Office. He told investigators that a sexual incident involving a minor occurred years ago at Our Lady of Lourdes with Father Hayden Vaverek. Deputies say the victim now lives out of state and had someone from the catholic church meet with the Sheriff’s Office to make a report.

The Dioceses of Charleston tells 7 On Your Side that an allegation of sexual misconduct of a minor dating back more than 15 years has been made against Father Hayden Vaverek. As diocesan policy he has been put on administrative leave and his priestly faculties withdrawn.

According to Dioceses of Charleston, “The reported allegation indicates the alleged misconduct occurred while Father Vaverek was pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes in Greenwood; however, no parishioners of that parish were involved in the reported allegation.”

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Diocese of Charleston pastor faces sexual misconduct allegations

SOUTH CAROLINA
ABC 4

CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) – A spokeswoman with the Diocese of Charleston says a pastor has been placed on administrative leave amidst allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor.

The allegations against father Hayden Vaverek date back more than 15 years to his time as pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes in Greenwood.

The Diocese says it is their policy to relieve Vaverek of his priestly facilities duing the investigation.

Father Vaverek has served in several parishes and schools in South Carolina, including nearby Moncks Corner.

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Papal candidates woo Rome’s worshippers before ballot begins

ROME
The Guardian (UK)

Lizzy Davies in Rome
The Guardian, Sunday 10 March 2013

It was a mass with a difference. For one thing, there were more worshippers in the Santa Maria della Vittoria church than usual. (“Come back!” begged the excited local priest.) For another, the liturgy was led by a jovial American who joked about swiping the church’s most exquisite treasure and taking it back to Boston. What’s more, the congregation knew that by the end of the week, that man, Cardinal Seán O’Malley, could – just possibly – be pope.

He wasn’t the only one, of course. Across Rome, a similar story was being played out in many of the titular churches whose status affords them a special link with one or other of the 115 cardinals who will choose Benedict XVI’s successor. On a day of rest before the start of conclave , many of the most prominent prelates visited their Roman flocks and called on them to pray for the right choice to be made. For many, good communication skills and a solid pastoral record are top of the list of qualities needed in the next pope – a fact that may not have gone unnoticed by the cardinals who chose to spend yesterday among the people.

“The conclave is just around the corner,” said Cardinal Angelo Scola, the archbishop of Milan and a leading papabile (possible candidate). “Let us pray that the holy spirit gives the church a man who can lead her in the footsteps of the great pontiffs of the past 150 years.”

As the preparations for conclave entered the final stretch, the chimney that will emit white smoke when a pope is elected was fixed on to the roof of the Sistine chapel on Saturday. A Vatican spokesman, Federico Lombardi, announced, meanwhile, that, among other objects, Benedict XVI’s fisherman’s ring had been scratched and thus destroyed. With a hint of relief, Lombardi also announced that yesterday was – as he put it – “a holiday”.

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Former Boston Cardinal Bernard Law Says Mass In Rome Ahead Of Conclave

ROME
CBS Boston

BOSTON (CBS) – Former Boston Cardinal Bernard Law is also in Rome ahead of the Papal Conclave.

Law will not vote because he is 81 years old and not eligible to take part in the Conclave to elect a new pope. The cut off for voting is age 80.

Law celebrated Mass at The Church of Santa Susanna in Rome Sunday morning.

Amid a throng of reporters, Law stopped for just a moment when asked what he wants from a new pope.

“Whoever the Holy Spirit chooses will lead us in this year of faith,” Law said.

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Former St. Joseph’s priest accused in Greenwood

SOUTH CAROLINA
Independent Mail

By Michael Eads
Posted March 10, 2013
michael.eads@independentmail.com
864-260-1256

CHARLESTON — A former priest at Anderson’s St. Joseph’s Catholic Church has been accused of sexual misconduct with a minor.

Father Hayden Vaverek has been placed on administrative leave by the Diocese of Charleston and will be unable to conduct Mass, due to a criminal complaint filed Friday with the Greenwood County Sheriff’s Office. An unidentified man told police investigators about an incident with a minor that allegedly occurred more than 15 years ago.

“The reported allegation indicates the alleged misconduct occurred while Father Vaverek was pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes in Greenwood; however, no parishioners of that parish were involved in the reported allegation,” according to a news release issued Sunday by the diocese.

“In regards to the criminal process, law enforcement authorities will conduct their investigation and we will fully cooperate with them,” said Maria Aselage, director of media relations for diocese.

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Abuse cases still scar church’s US image

UNITED STATES
Aljazeera

Rob Reynolds

American Catholics say the clergy child sexual abuse scandal is the biggest problem confronting the church today. That’s one finding of a survey by the Pew Research Center conducted in February. The survey also shows large majorities feel Pope Benedict XVI and American bishops have done a poor job of handling the crisis and in dealing with sexual abusers in the clergy.

No one knows precisely how many boys and girls have been sexually molested by priests; one estimate says at least 100,000 children were abused in the United States alone.

Adrian Ramirez, a 38-year-old married father of two who lives in the Highland Park section of Los Angeles, spoke to Al Jazeera about the sexual abuse that blighted his childhood and affected his adult life.

From the age of 11 Ramirez was brutally and repeatedly raped- hundreds of times over the course of two years.

The abuser was a man studying for the priesthood who had been placed in charge of youth activities in the parish.

“I’m constantly reliving it,” he says quietly. “After the youth groups he would rape me in his car. He would…even at church he would do it—in the pews. He would say, ‘imagine it’s God touching you. ‘ Who does that to a kid, you know? I was 12-years-old and I’m like, ‘Really? God is saying this is OK?’”

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Priest faces sexual misconduct charge

SOUTH CAROLINA
Greenville Online

Associated Press

CHARLESTON — The Diocese of Charleston has placed a priest on administrative leave after someone made an allegation of sexual misconduct against him.

Church officials said they are cooperating fully with investigators reviewing the allegation against Hayden Vaverek.

Authorities say someone went to police last week and said Vaverek assaulted the person about 15 years ago when Vaverek was pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes in Greenwood. During his career, Vaverek has also served in parishes and schools in Greenville, Simpsonville, Anderson, Greenwood, McCormick, Myrtle Beach, Garden City, Moncks Corner, Bonneau, and Hilton Head Island.

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Conclave Cardinal Accused Of Abuse Cover Up

ROME
KL.FM (UK)

A victim of a paedophile priest has called for an Italian cardinal who will help elect the next Pope to step down, accusing him of covering up abuse.

Francesco Zanardi says he was abused by his local priest, father Nello Giraudo, when he was a young boy and is adamant Catholic Church chiefs knew of the case but failed to act.

At a press conference close to the Vatican, Mr Zanardi showed a letter dated 2003 which was written by the then Bishop of Savona in northwest Italy, Domenico Calcagno, who is now one of the 115 elector cardinals.

In the letter Bishop Calcagno wrote to Joseph Ratzinger, two years before he was elected Pope and while he was head of the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, outlining the case against Father Giraudo.

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Cardinal Sean O’Malley elected as their next pope

ROME
Irish Central

By
PATRICK COUNIHAN,
IrishCentral Staff Writer

Published Sunday, March 10, 2013

Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley is the joint favorite to win the Papal election according to Italy’s paper of record, Corriere della Sera – and their readers’ pick.

The National Catholic Reporter website reports that the well respected paper asked eight contributors, including their own Vatican reporters and noted Vatican-watchers, to name their top three picks to be the next pope.

The report says Cardinal O’Malley was mentioned by five of those eight experts, tied with Odilo Pedro Scherer of Brazil and just one mention ahead of Angelo Scola of Milan.

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O’Malley on the clerical abuse crisis

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

by John L. Allen Jr. | Mar. 10, 2013

January 2012 was the ten-year anniversary of the eruption of the clerical sexual abuse scandals in Boston, and on that occasion Cardinal Sean O’Malley sat down for an exclusive interview with NCR to discuss where things stand in Boston, across the country and around the world. He also spoke in candid terms about the toll the crisis has taken on him personally, and how the experience in Boston may have forced him to “toughen up.”

In light of the continuing buzz around O’Malley as a possible pope, it may be worth taking a second look at that interview, which can be found here: O’Malley on the sex abuse crisis: ‘It’s not behind us’

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A Capuchin Pope?

ROME
First Things

Sunday, March 10, 2013,

Kevin Staley-Joyce | @KevinSJoyce

For the small percentage they comprise of Catholics worldwide, Italians are disproportionately represented in the Roman Curia and ecclesial governance more broadly, not to mention their long history of native-born popes. And while the last memory of an Italian pope is now three decades old, today’s populus Romanus has not let go of its special concern for the Roman pontiff. If the Corriere della Sera‘s polling can be trusted, a strong current of Italians (it claims nearly forty percent) has expressed admiration for Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley among the field of papabile cardinals. Along with his pastoral and theological strengths are qualities that resonate profoundly with the loyalties and hopes of many Italians. He is a Capuchin Franciscan like the nation’s beloved Padre Pio. He speaks Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese flawlessly, and strikes most as humble and consummately apolitical.

Today O’Malley offered Mass at his titular church, Santa Maria della Vittoria, the Roman landmark famed as the home of Bernini’s masterwork, St. Theresa in Ecstasy. The church has received much attention of late, if perhaps for indecorous reasons, being a stop on the city’s Angels and Demons tour. But at least Dan Brown’s fantasy manages to commit the irony of bringing tourists into churches instead of away from them.

The aged Carmelite friars who serve as the church’s caretakers excitedly said they had never in recent memory witnessed a crowd of today’s size. Perhaps forty print journalists, cameramen, and reporters packed into the transepts of the diminutive space, one of them having to be pulled away to allow O’Malley to process to the altar. A large congregation also attended, most of them natives, judging by their laughter when O’Malley joked in Italian of his desire to take the Bernini statue back to Boston. The press were largely Italian as well, save a number from Boston news outlets.

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O’Malley shrugs off papal aspirations at Roman Mass

ROME
Wisconsin Rapids Tribune

by Marco della Cava, USA TODAY

ROME – Applause is not what you commonly hear at a solemn Catholic Mass. And yet there it was, clear as the blue sky overhead.

The 100-odd parishioners packed inside Santa Maria della Vittoria, a gleaming jewel box of a Baroque edifice near this city’s central train station, directed their clapping Sunday toward U.S. Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, who had come to say Mass at his titular church. Every cardinal has a titular church in Rome designated to him where he preaches when he’s in town.

The gesture was in response to an introduction by Father Rocco Visca, who in Italian had said, “May this be your last visit here as cardinal, and may we be the first church you visit as the next pope.”

Seated nearby, O’Malley, 68, allowed himself the briefest of smiles.

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Cardinal Sean O’Malley: Fact and Fiction about his Papability

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Catholic Insider

The international buzz about Cardinal Sean O’Malley has a few facts correct and a lot of them missing or wrong. In this post, we try to lay out everything as best we can, so you, the reader, can separate fact from fiction. This post will emerge by the end as a summary of the experiences in Boston over the recent years of his tenure.

We start with a discussion about what folks are saying the Catholic Church and Cardinals are looking for in the next Pope, then the positive references cited about Cardinal O’Malley, then the facts, results, and wrong or missing information about his track record in Boston in the areas of teaching and governing. Check back a few times between today and Monday morning as we add to the content.

Attributes Cardinals Say We Need in Next Pope

The key attributes we keep hearing repeatedly quoted in the press as desirable for the next pope are the following:
o Great governance, leadership and managerial skills: to shake-up and overhaul a Vatican curia tainted by internal political infighting and the “Vatileaks” scandal, restore financial transparency to the Catholic Church’s operations and assemble a solid team of people around him to support his teaching and apostolic ministry
o Great teaching skills—someone who can proclaim the Gospel and truths of our faith to all people, in-season and out-of-season, and who teaches not just by his words but also by his actions.

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Victims of sex abuse by priests protest in Montreal

CANADA
CBC News

Several dozen people who say they were sexually abused by members of Quebec’s Catholic church gathered today on the steps of St-Viateur church.

They were protesting against what they see as a lack of action in addressing sexual abuse in the church.

Some protesters wore white paper hats mimicking bishops’ mitres that read “Vote for Monseigneur Ouellet.”

They’re hoping Cardinal Marc Ouellet’s position as a possible candidate for Pope will shed some international light on their pending cases against the church.

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McCort faces tough questions amid scandal

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Kathy Mellott kmellott@tribdem.com

JOHNSTOWN — An application for notice of incorporation forming Friends and Family of Bishop McCort was shipped off to Harrisburg late last week, as Catholics in the area take another step toward coming to grips with what allegedly happened at one of their most sacred institutions – the place where they send their children to be educated.

Still reeling from the revelation two months ago of alleged sexual abuse by a Franciscan friar employed at Bishop McCort Catholic High School, parents, alumni and financial supporters of the school were shocked when principal and longtime school employee Ken Salem was placed on leave with pay.

The response has been swift and harsh.

The hope is that a formal organization will help the group, now several hundred strong and growing, get a response as they demand answers to why Salem was placed on leave and seek information about the makeup of the board of directors.

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Conclave: “Primaries” get under way

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The first voting session to elect the new Pope will take place on Tuesday 12th at 6 pm. The strongest candidates are Scola and Scherer

Andrea Tornielli
Vatican City

The Conclave’s real test, after the “extra omnes” pronounced by the Master of Ceremonies and the closure of the Sistine Chapel’s heavy wooden door, will come at around 6 pm this coming Tuesday.

The initial scrutiny for the election of Benedict XVI’s successor is the equivalent of political primaries. This is when the real candidates will shine through, those who have the strongest chances of getting majority votes. These will be the candidates who emerged as favourites in last week’s informal meetings.

The 2005 Conclave was a first for all but two cardinals. While the crowds paid their respects to Pope Wojtyla, a number of influential cardinals were subtly trying to push for the election of the strongest candidate among the cardinals: the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Joseph Ratzinger. The so-called “progressivists”, who were already at death’s door so to speak, tried to get Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini through but he only obtained 12 votes in the first scrutiny, while Ratzinger obtained a consistently high majority, with 47 votes in his favour. This time there is much more uncertainty but it is highly unlikely groups of electors will be trying to reach a consensus on the basis of a cardinals’ nationality. What has emerged from the recently held discussions is that cardinals are looking for a man with spiritual depth, who is able to govern, engage in dialogue and communicate. Even if there is no candidate who has quite the same authority and power as Ratzinger, the almost unanimous decision to bring the Conclave forward proves that something must have happened between Wednesday and Thursday.

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NYTimes candidate for pope

ROME
dotCommonweal

March 9, 2013

Posted by Margaret O’Brien Steinfels

The coverage of Archbishop Timothy Dolan in the Times over the last week is far better than he usually gets. Saturday’s love letter from Michael Paulson in Rome is quite amazing (even featuring Dolan with the kiss-a-baby photo). Just in case, he doesn’t get the big job in Rome, there is a mayoral election coming up in NYC. Wonder how he’d do? The Times would almost certainly not endorse him for that job, but probably the Post and the Daily News would.

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Cardinal Dolan charms worshippers at Rome Mass

ROME
CNN

By Chris Cuomo and Eric Marrapodi, CNN

Rome (CNN) – Crowds lined the walls and spilled out the front door of the Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Monte Mario on Sunday to catch a glimpse of the gregarious American Cardinal Timothy Dolan, archbishop of New York, who smiled broadly as he came into the church, stopping to wave to photographers and kiss a baby whose parents were holding him up.

Dolan has made the short lists of some Vatican watchers as a likely choice to be elected as the next pope by the College of Cardinals, a designation called “papabili” in Italian.

A local officiant began the service by saying it was great to have Dolan at the church close to Easter.

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Cardinal Dolan in Rome: popular if not papabile

ROME
Religion News Service

David Gibson | Mar 10, 2013

ROME (RNS) If ordinary Romans still had in a say in selecting their bishop – also known as the pope – the way they did in the early centuries of the church, then Cardinal Timothy Dolan might already be pontiff.

On Sunday the archbishop of New York continued to charm the citizens of the Eternal City (and many in the media, who probably seem him as more papabile than his fellow cardinals do) as he celebrated mass at the parish of Our Lady of Guadalupe in a middle-class Roman neighborhood.

“What a great crowd – let’s take two collections!” Dolan quipped, deploying his workman-like Italian in an unabashedly American accent, and drawing laughs and applause throughout the liturgy.

Two days before they go into the conclave to begin voting for a new pope, Dolan and many of the other 115 cardinal-electors meeting here took a pause from their pre-election deliberations to visit what are called their titular churches, or parishes that they are given ceremonial title to when they are given a red hat.

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SC priest faces sexual misconduct charges

SOUTH CAROLINA
WMBF

By WMBF News Staff

HORRY COUNTY, SC (WMBF) – A catholic priest who once served in Myrtle Beach faces an allegation of sexual misconduct of a minor, according to a news release from The Diocese of Charleston on Sunday afternoon.

The reported allegation indicated the misconduct took place more than 15 years ago when Father Hayden Vaverek was a pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes in Greenwood, SC. The diocese says no parishioners of that parish were involved in the reported allegations.

Father Vaverek served at several parishes and schools in South Carolina including Myrtle Beach, Garden City, Greenwood, Greenville, Simpsonville, Anderson, McCormick, Moncks Corner, Bonneau and Hilton Head Island.

Law enforcement authorities have been notified of the allegations, according to diocesan officials. Father Vaverek has been placed on administrative leave and his priestly faculties withdrawn.

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Slowenien: Opfer des Pädophilen-Priesters bekommt das Entschädigungsgeld

SLOWENIEN
Stimme Russlands

Sloweniens Katholische Kirche zahlt ein Entschädigungsgeld in Höhe von knapp 80.000 Euro dem Opfer des Priesters, der der Pädophilie bezichtigt wird und am Vorabend der Urteilsverkündung verstorben ist.

Insgesamt wurde der Priester Karl Jošt, der in einer der Pfarreien der Erzdiözese Maribor diente, knapp 16 Mal wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs der Mädchen unter 15 Jahren, denen er die Religion unterrichtete, angeklagt. Der Fall wurde wegen Todes des Angeklagten geschlossen, aber ein der Opfer verlangt in einem separaten Gerichtsverfahren von der Kirche für den moralischen Schaden nach dem Entschädigungsgeld.

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Das „dreckige Dutzend“ Kardinäle und die Profiteure des sexuellen Mißbrauchsskandals

ROM
Katholisches

(Rom) Das in Österreich umgangssprachliche gebrauchte Wort Schmäh, trifft die Sache am besten. Im Ausdruck Schmäh hat sich das mittelhochdeutsche Wort smaehe erhalten und meint Beschimpfung und verächtliche Behandlung. Um eine solche verächtliche Behandlung handelte es sich bei der Meldung vom „schmutzigen“ oder „dreckigen Dutzend“. Jener Liste mit den Namen von zwölf Kardinälen, die „Freunde der Pädophilen“ seien, weil sie angeblich pädophile Priester gedeckt oder nicht rechtzeitig entfernt hätten.

Die Liste wurde von der amerikanischen Vereinigung SNAP verbreitet. SNAP steht für Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (Netz der Überlebenden, die von Priestern mißbraucht wurden). Veröffentlicht wurde sie kurz vor Beginn des Konklave und enthält – siehe da – den Großteil jener, die in den Medien, ob zu recht oder zu unrecht, als „Papabili“ genannt werden. Hinter der Aktion verbirgt sich blankes Profitdenken.

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Ezzati responde a críticas por visitar a Fernando Karadima

CHILE
Terra

El Arzobispo de Santiago, Ricardo Ezzati, se refirió a los casos de abuso sexual que se le imputan al sacerdote Fernando Karadima. “Me criticaron por visitarlo, pero es mi deber acompañar a los que sufren”, sostuvo.A lo anterior, agregó: “Cómo no van a doler los casos que hemos tenido de problemas que tocan a los muchachos, a los niños situaciones como esa duelen muchísimo. El dolor más grande que he tenido en dos años son estos casos, sobre todo por las personas que han sido ofendidas. Siento vergüenza por ello, pero también siento que he actuado como debía actuar”, sostuvo.

Del mismo modo, se refirió a las críticas que recibió por parte de diversos sectores por reunirse con Karadima, a lo que el prelado respondió: “Lo visité en vísperas de navidad. Como pastor, yo tengo que visitar a todos los que sufren. Voy a la cárcel, a los hospitales. No por visitar a una persona quiere decir que apoye lo que ha hecho”.

“Él se declara inocente”

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Department of Justice says 1,000 calls have been made to Magdalene laundries fund

IRELAND
RTE News

The Department of Justice said it has received around 1,000 calls about the fund which is to be set up for former residents of Magdalene laundries.

Mr Justice John Quirke, who is carrying out a review to devise recommendations on payments and support, has been meeting Magdalene Survivor representative groups this week.

He met the Magdalene Survivors Together group, and the UK-based Irish Womens Survivors Support Network, to discuss the fund.

The Government is asking the four religious orders concerned to make what it calls an appropriate contribution to the fund, and the Department said contact is ongoing with the Orders about the issue.

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Tainted Pell out of race after lobbying

AUSTRALIA
Mudgee Guardian

By Barney Zwartz
March 11, 2013,

Cardinal George Pell, tainted by sex abuse scandals, has no chance of becoming the 266th pope after Australian critics campaigned to publicise allegations that have long dogged him to Italian media and voting cardinals, according to Australian commentator Paul Collins.

Following traditionalist guardians quick to report Australian infractions to Rome, progressive Catholics have lobbied overseas journalists and cardinals to make sure they are aware of the 2002 inquiry into allegations the Sydney Archbishop molested a 12-year-old boy several times in 1961.

Retired Supreme Court judge A. J. Southwell was ”not satisfied the complaint was established” but said he was impressed by the testimony of both the complainant and the cardinal.

”The judge never cleared Pell and that has rendered Pell irrelevant. He has no chance,” Dr Collins, a former priest, said.

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Peggy Noonan: Europe’s view of a U.S. decline raises possibility of an American pope [VIDEO]

UNITED STATES
Daily Caller

On Sunday’s broadcast of “Face the Nation” on CBS, the Wall Street Journal’s Peggy Noonan explained why the next pope might just be an American.

“Look, it is a divine and yet profoundly human institution, the Vatican,” Noonan said. “Sally [Quinn], you quote Jesus Christ well, but remember, he said to Saint Peter, before he was called Saint Peter, ‘On this rock I will build my church,’ and he said ‘even the fires of hell will not prevail against it.’ Sometimes the cardinals get a little frustrating because they act like, ‘Oh, good, it doesn’t matter what we do. It will always continue.’ I don’t think that’s probably the correct message to have been taken out of that, but the church has been around for a long time. It will be around for a long time.”

As for who will lead the Catholic Church, Noonan said the possibility of an American pope has been elevated, since Europeans no longer view the United States as a superpower.

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Top contenders to be the next pope

VATICAN CITY
Deseret News

Associated Press
Published: Sunday, March 10 2013

VATICAN CITY — Cardinals from around the world gather this week in a conclave to elect a new pope following the stunning resignation of Benedict XVI. In the secretive world of the Vatican, there is no way to know who is in the running, and history has yielded plenty of surprises. Yet several names have come up time repeatedly as strong contenders for the job. Here is a look at who they are:

CARDINAL ANGELO SCOLA: Scola is seen as Italy’s best chance at reclaiming the papacy, following back-to-back pontiffs from outside the country that had a lock on the job for centuries. He’s also one of the top names among all of the papal contenders. Scola, 71, has commanded both the pulpits of Milan’s Duomo as archbishop and Venice’s St. Mark’s Cathedral as patriarch, two extremely prestigious church positions that together gave the world five popes during the 20th century. Scola was widely viewed as a papal contender when Benedict was elected eight years ago. His promotion to Milan, Italy’s largest and most influential diocese, has been seen as a tipping point in making him one of the leading papal candidates. He is known as a doctrinal conservative who is also at ease quoting Jack Kerouac and Cormac McCarthy.

CARDINAL ODILO SCHERER: Scherer is known for prolific tweeting, appearances on Brazil’s most popular late-night talk show and squeezing into the subway for morning commutes. Brazil’s best hope to supply the next pontiff is increasingly being touted as one of the top overall contenders for the job. At the relatively young age of 63, he enthusiastically embraces all new methods for reaching believers, while staying true to a conservative line of Roman Catholic doctrine and hardline positions on social issues such as rejection of same-sex marriage. Scherer joined Twitter in 2011 and in his second tweet said: “If Jesus preached the gospel today, he would also use print media, radio, TV, the Internet and Twitter. Give Him a chance!” Scherer became the Sao Paulo archbishop in 2007 and was named a cardinal later the same year.

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New Pope Expected by Friday With Conclave Beginning Tuesday

VATICAN CITY
Christian Post

By Anugrah Kumar, Christian Post Contributor

March 10, 2013

With the Vatican’s announcement that the Roman Catholic Church will begin voting for the new leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics Tuesday, it is expected that Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s successor will be elected by Friday.

There’s “no reason to believe it will take long” to elect the new pope, Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Fredrico Lombardi, told reporters Saturday, the day after the Vatican said in a release the Conclave will begin on Tuesday, March 12.

The last six popes were all elected within four days, and the election of Benedict in 2005 took less than 24 hours.

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BC-Vatican-Pope, ADVISORY

VATICAN CITY
NECN

Mar 10, 2013

Editors,

The cardinals have set Tuesday as the start date for the conclave to select a new pope. The first vote is scheduled for Tuesday afternoon, following a morning Mass. Here are the AP’s multiformat plans for the days leading up to the first vote.

Sunday, March 10

Spot coverage: Cardinals hold Mass in their titular churches in Rome. All formats covering.

Tour of Sistine Chapel for photo.

— CROWD CONTROL — What are the crowd control challenges for the conclave? We speak with the Rome deputy mayor in charge of logistics. All formats covering. Text by Fran D’Emilio.

— VATICAN-CARDINALS — A series profiling the men who could be pope. Text thumbnails of the profiles with photos.

Cardinals who have been featured in the Vatican-Cardinal “papabili” series: Filipino Antonio Tagle, Sri Lankan Malcolm Ranjith, Italian Angelo Scola, Canadian Marc Ouellet, Honduran Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga, American Timothy Dolan, Argentinians Jorge Mario Bergoglio and Leonardo Sandri, Austrian Christoph Schoenborn, Ghanian Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, Hungarian Peter Erdo, Brazilian Odilo Scherer, Italian Gianfranco Ravasi .

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‘The will of God is not entirely clear’: Cardinal hints at tough task facing church

ROME
NBC News

By Alastair Jamieson, Keir Simmons and Yuka Tachibana, NBC News

ROME — An American cardinal in Rome hinted Sunday hinted at the difficulty of deciding who should be the next pope, saying the papal conclave was a time when “the will of God is not entirely clear.”

Chicago’s archbishop, Cardinal Francis George, asked for “help and prayers” as he and 114 other cardinals prepared to enter the papal conclave to elect a successor to Pope Benedict XVI.

“I ask you for your prayer to help the Holy Spirit to be present among us to open our hearts and our minds to what is the will of God for his people throughout the world,” he told reporters after saying mass at the local church assigned to him during his stay in Rome.

He added: “This is a momentous occasion, when perhaps the will of God isn’t entirely clear to many of us.”

Vatican observers say the choice is wider than it has been in modern memory, with no emerging consensus on who should be the next leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

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Der lange Atem des Norbert Denef

DEUTSCHLAND
LN Online

Von Susanne Peyronnet

Scharbeutz. „Wer nichts tut und wegschaut, ist mit schuldig an diesem Verbrechen.“ Norbert Denef aus Scharbeutz gibt nicht auf. Er ist Sprecher von Netzwerk-B, dem größten Zusammenschluss von deutschen Missbrauchsopfern. Das Wegschauen wirft er der Politik und dem „Runden Tisch Sexueller Kindesmissbrauch“ vor, der im Februar nach drei Jahren die Arbeit einstellte. Nach Denefs Ansicht hat der nichts gebracht. „Der Runde Tisch hat nur drei Jahre Zeit vertan, mehr ist nicht geschehen.“ Die Opfer seien nichts als Marionetten gewesen, die „verdrängende Arroganz“ derer am Runden Tisch sei der Größe des Verbrechens nicht gerecht geworden.

„Ich renne überall gegen Wände“, beschreibt Denef seine Situation. Von den 64 000 Unterschriften, die er im vergangenen November an den SPD-Landesvorsitzenden Ralf Stegner übergab, hat er nie wieder etwas gehört. „64 000 Unterschriften kann man doch nicht unter den Tisch fallen lassen.“ Die Unterzeichner sprechen sich dafür aus, die Verjährungsfristen für sexualisierte Gewalt aufzuheben.

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Billion Dollar Christ & Apostles in Red now playing in Vatican.

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

Updated March 8, 2013 International Women’s Day http://www.internationalwomensday.com/

Today is International Women’s Day and there should have been a women’s march in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican – to protest the zero tolerance for women – by the all-male mysogynist Papal Conclave at the gay infested Vatican Titanic.

SNAP list “Dirty Dozen” worst papal candidates, see news updates below. SNAP says Cardinals who are members of the Vatican Curia (not Roman Curia) must not be elected pope.

The picture says a thousand words – Canada’s TV priest Thomas Rosica sits besides Vatican spokeperson Lombardi – which proves the Vatican has prepared and chosen Cardinal Ouellet as its leading papal horse, see news and photo updates below.

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Questions swirling after Catholic teacher’s sudden resignation

TEXAS
KHOU

[with video]

by Drew Karedes / KHOU 11 News

HOUSTON — A well-known Catholic teacher at St. Thomas High School has resigned after allegations of misconduct. Father Jack Hanna was been with the all-boys school since 1981.

The school would not answer questions on camera, nor would they elaborate on the nature of the allegations.

St. Thomas says Rev. Hanna has entered a therapeutic center for priests. A spokesperson released a brief statement to KHOU 11 News.

“He has acknowledged that he behaved inappropriately and will be receiving extensive residential treatment at the facility. He has expressed deep regret for any harm caused by his behavior,” the statement said in part.

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Message to St Thomas High School alumni re Father Jack Hanna csb

TEXAS
Sylvia’s Site

From: St. Thomas High School [mailto:alumni@sths.org]
Sent: Friday, March 08, 2013 7:58 AM
To:
Subject: Important Message from Frs. Storey and Fulton

Dear Alumni,
Approximately three weeks ago, you were informed that an allegation of misconduct was made by an adult against Father Jack Hanna. Immediately upon receipt of the allegation, Father Hanna agreed to undergo an assessment at a therapeutic center for priests. He has acknowledged that he behaved inappropriately and will be receiving extensive residential treatment at the facility. He has expressed deep regret for any harm caused by his behavior and believes it is best that he resign his position at St. Thomas High School so that he may focus on his treatment.
We wish to express our sincere appreciation to you for your concern for Father Hanna and ask you to please keep him in your prayers during this difficult time.
Yours in Christ,
Fr. Kevin Storey, C.S.B.
Fr. Patrick Fulton, C.S.B.

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Basilian priest-teacher suspended in Houston – Canadian connections

TEXAS
Sylvia’s Site

A Basilian priest in Houston, Texas, Father Jack Hanna, has been suspended following an allegation of “misconduct.”

The following email was sent to alumni of St. Thomas High School in Houston Texas:

February 11, 2013

Dear Alumni,
This weekend, the Basilian Fathers were contacted by the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston and informed that there is an allegation of misconduct against Fr. Jack Hanna, C.S.B.. The allegation involves an adult who is neither a student nor an employee at St. Thomas High School. At the direction of the Superior-General of the Basilian Fathers, while this matter is under investigation, Fr. Hanna will not be engaged in teaching or any priestly ministry. Please keep the St. Thomas community in your prayers during this time, Yours in Christ, Fr. Kevin Storey, C.S.B

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St. Thomas teacher resigns due to misconduct

TEXAS
Houston Chronicle

By Allan Turner | March 8, 2013

The Rev. Jack Hanna, a Spanish and art history teacher at Houston’s Catholic St. Thomas High School, has resigned and entered treatment at a therapeutic center for priests, school officials said on Friday.

In a statement issued by the Rev. Kevin Storey, school president, and the Rev. Patrick Fulton, principal, the school said Hanna had been accused of unspecified misconduct. School officials said the complainant was an adult.

Hanna, a 1962 graduate of the school, operated by the Congregation of St. Basil, taught introductory and advanced placement Spanish classes and art history. He had been a member of the faculty since 1981.

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Former priest facing charges of sexual misconduct

SOUTH CAROLINA
Gwd Today

Brian King
News Editor

A former priest at Our Lady of Lourdes in Greenwood has been placed on administrative leave after allegations of sexual misconduct were made to the Diocese of Charleston.

According to officials with the Diocese of Charleston, Father Hayden Vavarek has been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation. The alleged misconduct took place at Our Lady of Lourdes about 15 years ago.

Officials with the Greenwood County Sheriff’s Office say that a criminal investigation has not yet begun, as the victims are located out of state.

Vavarek served at various parishes in the upstate, including Greenville, Anderson and Simpsonville.

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Priest with deep Upstate ties faces sexual misconduct allegations

SOUTH CAROLINA
Fox Carolina

Posted: Mar 10, 2013

By Derek Dellinger

GREENVILLE, SC (FOX Carolina) –
A Catholic priest with some deep ties to the Upstate is in administrative leave following allegations of sexual misconduct.

Father Hayden Vaverek had “his priestly faculties withdrawn,” according to the Diocese of Charleston.

FOX Carolina obtained a letter sent from St. Joseph’s Catholic School to parents regarding the allegations. The letter said the allegations of sexual misconduct involve a minor and date back more than 15 years. The misconduct allegedly occurred while Vaverek was pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Greenwood, but “no parishioners of that parish were involved in the reported allegation,” the diocese said. The school said Vaverek had previously served on the Board of Trustees at St. Joseph’s Catholic School in Greenville.

Vaverek also served at several parishes across the Upstate, including Simpsonville, Anderson and Greenwood.

In 2011, he began working for the Catholic Near East Welfare Association based in New York City.

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Missbrauch in 148 Fällen

DEUTSCHLAND
Stadt Zeitung

In der Diözese Augsburg wurden in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten 148 Kinder und Jugendliche missbraucht, 99 von ihnen sexuell. Das geht aus dem Arbeitsbericht hervor, den der scheidende Missbrauchsbeauftragte Otto Kocherscheidt nun vorgelegt hat.

Der ehemalige Richter hatte sein Amt im März 2010 angetreten. Damals ging eine Flut von Hinweisen ein. Das habe zunächst den Eindruck vermittelt, körperliche Gewalt und sexueller Missbrauch seien in kirchlichen Einrichtungen eine systembedingte Begleiterscheinung. Tatsächlich aber handle es sich „um eine erschreckende Zahl von Einzelfällen, die teilweise Jahrzehnte unentdeckt geblieben sind“, resümiert Kocherscheidt.

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Papstwahl ohne Mitwisser von Pädophilie – Aktivisten fordern Ausschluss von Kardinälen

MEXIKO
Neopresse

Von Emilio Godoy

Mexiko-Stadt, 6. März (IPS) – Während sich 117 katholische Kardinäle auf das Konklave zur Wahl eines neuen Papstes vorbereiten, sorgen die Fälle von Pädophilie innerhalb der Kirche weiterhin weltweit für Empörung. Opfer und Menschenrechtsaktivisten dringen darauf, dass kirchliche Würdenträger, die direkt oder indirekt an sexuellem Missbrauch beteiligt waren, nicht über den Nachfolger des am 28. Februar zurückgetretenen Benedikt XVI. abstimmen dürfen.

Mindestens fünf Kardinäle, die der Pädophilie beschuldigte Priester schützten, stehen unter dem Druck der Öffentlichkeit. Einer von ihnen ist Norberto Rivas aus Mexiko. “Damit die Kirche ihre moralische Statur wiedererlangen und zu dem werden kann, was sie einmal war, muss der neue Papst von Menschen gewählt werden, die sich moralisch einwandfrei verhalten”, sagte der mexikanische Aktivist Joaquín Aguilar, der in Mexiko das Netzwerk von Missbrauchsopfern von Priestern (SNAP) leitet.

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