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.

July 27, 2022

Canadian Indigenous grateful for papal apology, but they want more

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 26, 2022

By Elise Ann Allen

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Survivors of Canada’s residential school system who were present for Pope Francis’s apology on Monday described the moment as historic and “bittersweet,” but said that the highly anticipated mea culpa will only be meaningful if it’s followed by concrete action.

Speaking during a press conference after the pope’s apology, Samson Cree Nation Chief Vernon Saddleback said, “Words cannot describe how important today is for the healing journey for a lot of First Nations people.”

“I’m really grateful for this event to happen,” he said, calling the pope’s apology a historic moment not only for Canada, but for all First Nations communities. “It was an amazing day, a historic day…words fail me to say what this means to my people.”

Similarly, Frog Leg Cree Nation Chief Greg Desjarlais voiced gratitude that a papal apology finally happened in Canada, saying, “today is a bittersweet day.”

“It’s bitter in some people’s minds and hearts, some…

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Indigenous people react to Pope’s apology

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
Canada's National Observer

July 26, 2022

By The Canadian Press

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Pope Francis delivered on Monday an apology for the Roman Catholic Church’s role in residential schools, saying many Christians supported the colonization of Indigenous people. He made the remarks at the former site of the Ermineskin Indian Residential School in community of Maskwacis, south of Edmonton.

Here is some of the reaction to the historic apology:

“Pope Francis’s words today and in Rome this spring represent a journey that has taken more than 180 years — from the time the doors of these so-called schools opened to the challenges First Nations people live today. By apologizing for the abuses of the past, Pope Francis has helped to open the door for survivors and their families to walk together with the church for a present and future of forgiveness and healing. I accept and choose this path.” — Former Assembly of First Nations Chief Phil Fontaine, who attended two Manitoba residential…

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Canada asks France to extradite accused priest -French diplomatic source

PARIS (FRANCE)
Reuters [London, England]

July 26, 2022

By Mathieu Rosemain

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France has received a request from Canada to extradite retired Roman Catholic priest Johannes Rivoire so he can face a charge of sexual abuse from when he worked in Canada’s North, a French diplomatic source said.

Canada’s northern indigenous people, the Inuit, plan to press the Pope Francis while he is on a visit on Friday to help return Rivoire to Canada.

“An extradition request concerning Mr. Johannes Rivoire has been transmitted to France by Canada’s judicial authorities,” the diplomatic source told Reuters. “This request is currently being processed by the Ministry of Justice, which has asked Canadian authorities for additional information.”

It was not clear what information France is seeking or when Canada made the request.

Canada’s justice department could not be immediately reached for comment. It has previously declined to comment on whether it asked France to extradite Rivoire, saying such requests are confidential.

The extradition treaty between…

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July 26, 2022

Pope Francis visited a cemetery n Maskwacis, Alberta, on Monday where local Indigenous people believe children were buried in unmarked graves. Credit...Ian Willms for The New York Times

Pope Apologizes in Canada for Schools That Abused Indigenous Children

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
New York Times [New York NY]

July 25, 2022

By Jason Horowitz and Ian Austen

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[Photo above: Pope Francis visited a cemetery in Maskwacis, Alberta, on Monday where local Indigenous people believe children were buried in unmarked graves. Credit — Ian Willms for The New York Times]

Francis, responding to longtime pleas from Indigenous people, begged forgiveness for schools where children were forced to assimilate, many were sexually or physically abused and some died.

Pope Francis offered a sweeping apology directly to Indigenous people on their land in Canada on Monday, fulfilling a critical demand of many of the survivors of church-run residential schools that became gruesome centers of abuse, forced assimilation, cultural devastation and death for over a century.

“I humbly beg forgiveness for the evil committed by so many Christians against the Indigenous peoples,” Francis said to a large crowd made up largely of Indigenous people, some wearing traditional clothing and headdresses, in Alberta, near the site of a former residential school.

The pope…

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Catholic Church’s promise to help bring Johannes Rivoire to justice still lacks detail

(CANADA)
Nunatsiaq News [Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada]

July 25, 2022

By Randi Beers

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As Pope Francis’ visit to Iqaluit looms, accused priest remains sheltered from charge in France

The Catholic Church has promised to help bring one of its priests charged with sexually assaulting Inuit children to justice, but whether that priest ever steps into a courtroom is likely up to him alone.

Johannes Rivoire, 91, spent more than 30 years in Nunavut, mostly in Arviat and Naujaat, between 1960 and 1992.

While his name often comes up in the context of residential schools, he never worked within the residential school system.

Rivoire’s responsibilities were those of a parish priest: He performed mass, taught catechism, presided over funerals, officiated weddings. In his free time, he kept a greenhouse, growing lettuce and radishes in soil cultivated from seaweed.

He is also accused of sexually assaulting boys and girls during that time, some as young six years old.

Rivoire left Canada in 1993, saying…

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Fmr. Shelby Township Priest Sent to Prison for Sex Abuse

LANSING (MI)
Department of Attorney General - Michigan [Lansing MI]

July 26, 2022

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former Macomb County priest will spend years in prison after being convicted of sex abuse, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced today.

Judge Diane Druzinski sentenced Neil Kalina, 67, to up to 15 years in prison after the former priest was convicted on two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC) by a jury in Macomb County Circuit Court last month.  Kalina was a priest at St. Kiernan Catholic Church in Shelby Township from 1982-1985.

“This is a victory for the survivors who fought to see their abusers held accountable,” said Nessel.  “Regardless of how much time has passed or how difficult a case may be, my prosecutors are committed to securing justice for the victims of clergy abuse.  Adults who prey upon and subject children to abuse belong in prison.”

Kalina was first charged in May 2019 and arrested in Littlerock, California. The jury was also presented first-degree CSC…

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Former Macomb County priest sentenced to 7-15 years in prison for sex abuse

SHELBY TOWNSHIP (MI)
Fox 2 Detroit (WJBK-TV)

July 26, 2022

By Amber Ainsworth

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A former Macomb County priest was sentenced to prison this week for sex abuse in the 80s.

Neil Kalina received a 7-15 year sentence, with credit for 215 days served. 

He was a priest at St. Kiernan Catholic Church in Shelby Township from 1982-1985. He was first charged in 2019 and arrested in Littlerock, Calif. 

Last month, a jury found him guilty of two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct.

“This conviction marks the sixth one secured by my clergy abuse team,” Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said. “It’s also a reminder of our ongoing commitment to this investigation and the survivors in these cases. We will continue to fight for justice.”

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‘We won’t forget’: Manitoba residential school survivors respond to Pope Francis’ apology

HEADINGLEY (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 26, 2022

By Rachel Bergen

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WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

Christina Kitchekesik couldn’t travel to Maskwacis, Alta., to see Pope Francis apologize to survivors of residential schools, but felt emotional watching the televised program alongside others at a viewing event in Winnipeg on Monday.

“It’ll always affect us for the rest of our lives. We won’t forget, but we have to learn to live with it by healing yourself, going through ceremonies,” said Kitchekesik, who is from Tataskweyak Cree Nation, about 900 kilometres north of Winnipeg.

She is one of a number of Manitoba residential school survivors — although she now considers herself a “thriver” — who watched the Pope address thousands of Indigenous people in Canada.

Pope Francis apologized for members of the Catholic Church who co-operated with Canada’s “devastating” policy of Indigenous residential schools, saying the forced assimilation of Indigenous peoples into Christian society destroyed their cultures, severed their families and marginalized generations in ways still being…

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Pope’s apology doesn’t acknowledge church’s role as ‘co-author’ of dark chapter: Murray Sinclair

EDMONTON (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 26, 2022

By Rachel Bergen

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The former Manitoba senator who chaired the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada says there’s a “deep hole” in the apology issued by Pope Francis Monday for the role Catholics played in Canada’s residential school system.

Murray Sinclair says the historic apology, although meaningful to many residential school survivors and their families, fell short of Call to Action 58 in the final report. 

It specifically called on the Pope to issue an apology “for the Roman Catholic Church’s role in the spiritual, cultural, emotional, physical, and sexual abuse of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis children in Catholic-run residential schools.”

In a written statement Tuesday, Sinclair said the intent was that survivors would not only hear remorse, “but an acceptance of responsibility for what they were put through at the hands of the church and other institutions.”

While he called it a “historic apology,” he said the Pope’s statement “has left a deep hole…

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Pope apologizes for ‘deplorable evil’ of Canadian indigenous schools

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
Reuters [London, England]

July 25, 2022

By Philip Pullella and Tim Johnson

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Pope Francis apologized on Monday to Canada’s native people on their land for the Church’s role in schools where indigenous children were abused, calling their forced cultural assimilation a “deplorable evil” and “disastrous error.”

Speaking near the site of two former schools in Maskwacis, Alberta, Francis apologized for Christian support of the “colonizing mentality” of the times and called for a “serious” investigation of the schools to help survivors and descendants heal.

“With shame and unambiguously, I humbly beg forgiveness for the evil committed by so many Christians against the indigenous peoples,” said Francis, who arrived and left in a wheelchair due to a fractured knee.

The address to the First Nations, Metis and Inuit people was the first apology on Canadian soil by the pope as a part of tour to heal deep wounds that rose to the fore after the discovery of unmarked graves at residential schools last…

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How the Vatican encouraged the colonization of Indigenous lands – and enabled the Crown to keep them

OTTAWA (CANADA)
The Globe and Mail [Toronto, Canada]

July 22, 2022

By Patrick White

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An abridged trip through 500 years of papal and legal history to understand why Pope Francis faces calls to renounce the Doctrine of Discovery, which underpins Europe’s heist of the Americas and a mass dispossession of Indigenous peoples that remains foundational to Canadian sovereignty

Before Rodrigo Borgia donned the papal tiara in 1492 and became Pope Alexander VI, he’d had multiple mistresses and fathered at least eight children. He favoured debauched parties with dancing prostitutes and used the papacy to enrich his Spanish family.

Upon his death, likely by poisoning, subsequent popes sealed off the Vatican apartments where Pope Alexander and his family had lived, as a prophylactic against the ghosts of his orgiastic reign.

And this is where many biographical entries end, prioritizing titillation over the substance of his rule, which still haunts the world despite the efforts of Vatican ghostbusters.

Abridged accounts of his life tend to exclude…

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Pope begs forgiveness from Canada’s Indigenous for Church role in ‘cultural destruction’

EDMONTON (CANADA)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 25, 2022

By Elise Ann Allen

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Rome, Italy – In his first public event in Canada after landing in Edmonton yesterday, Pope Francis met with members of different Indigenous communities, offering a highly-anticipated apology for the Catholic Church’s role in what’s been described as a “cultural genocide” associated with the country’s residential school system.

Speaking to members of the First Nations, Métis and Inuit communities on the grounds of the former Ermineskin residential school in Maskwacis, Alberta, Pope Francis Monday said the land he was standing on “preserves the scars of still open wounds.”

“I am here because the first step of my penitential pilgrimage among you is that of again asking forgiveness, of telling you once more that I am deeply sorry,” he said, and apologized “for the ways in which, regrettably, many Christians supported the colonizing mentality of the powers that oppressed the Indigenous peoples. I am sorry.”

Francis asked…

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Pope Francis: Pontiff says he is ‘deeply sorry’ to Canadian residential school survivors

EDMONTON (CANADA)
BBC [London, England]

July 26, 2022

By Nadine Yousif

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In his first public remarks in Canada, Pope Francis has asked indigenous residential school survivors for forgiveness.

“I am deeply sorry,” the Pope said on the grounds of a former residential school in Maskwacis, near Edmonton.

He said his apology is a first step, and that a “serious investigation” into abuses must occur to foster healing.

The pontiff is in Canada to apologise for the Church’s role in schools meant to assimilate indigenous children.

The government-funded schools were part of a policy meant to destroy indigenous cultures and languages.

The papal apology was received by applause from survivors in the audience, some of whom travelled far to hear the Pope speak.

Pope Francis expressed “sorrow, indignation and shame” for the actions of many members of the Roman Catholic Church, who ran and operated majority of residential schools in Canada.

The 85-year-old Pope called the schools system a “disastrous error” and…

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Pope’s Canada Visit Highlights Complex Relationship Between Catholicism and Indigenous Cultures

EDMONTON (CANADA)
Wall Street Journal [New York NY]

July 26, 2022

By Francis X. Rocca

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Pontiff to take part in a lakeside ceremony that incorporates indigenous elements

Pope Francis’ visit to Canada, which he has described as a penitential pilgrimage, took a more celebratory turn on Tuesday when he presided at Mass in an Edmonton stadium before taking part in a traditional lakeside ceremony with indigenous Catholics.

Although organizers of the papal visit and the pope himself have made it clear that its purpose is to apologize for Catholics’ role in what Francis called government-sponsored “projects of cultural destruction and forced assimilation,” his public appearances on his second full day in the country will highlight a more harmonious legacy of the church’s relationship with indigenous Canadians.

On Monday, the pope apologized repeatedly for Catholic participation in the country’s system of residential schools which, for more than a century, assimilated indigenous children to white culture. On Tuesday, he will point to the…

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In Canada, Pope Francis tells Indigenous people he is ‘deeply sorry’ for abusive schools

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

July 25, 2022

By Christopher White

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Pope Francis on July 25 said he was “deeply sorry” for the Catholic Church’s “catastrophic” involvement in the “cultural destruction” of Canada’s Indigenous peoples through its participation in running the country’s residential schools.

“I humbly beg forgiveness for the evil committed by so many Christians against the Indigenous peoples,” Francis said during a solemn meeting with Indigenous representatives, while visiting the former site of one of the largest residential schools in the country.

The pope’s remarks — his first since arriving in the country on Sunday, July 24 — fulfill a demand from the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which since 2015 has called on the pope to formally issue an apology on Canadian soil for the “spiritual, cultural, emotional, physical and sexual abuse of First Nations, Inuit and Métis children in Catholic-run residential schools.”

“I am sorry,” said Francis. “I ask forgiveness, in particular, for the ways…

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Pope Francis condemns forced assimilation of Canada’s residential schools as ‘incompatible with the Gospel’

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
America [New York NY]

July 25, 2022

By Gerard O’Connell

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In a historic apology, Pope Francis condemned Canada’s residential school system as “a deplorable evil” and asked forgiveness of the Indigenous Peoples for Christians participation in it.

“I am here because the first step of my penitential pilgrimage among you is that of again asking forgiveness, of telling you once more that I am deeply sorry,” the pope told the more than 2,000 Indigenous leaders and survivors that had come from all over the country, representing the 1.7 million members of Canada’s First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples.

Speaking in Spanish, at Maskwacis, 60 miles from Edmonton near the site of Ermineskin—one of Canada’s largest residential schools—Pope Francis gave a historic, long awaited, unequivocal apology to these Indigenous Peoples. He condemned the entire system of “cultural destruction” and “forced assimilation” through the residential schools as “a deplorable evil” and “a disastrous error” that is “incompatible with the Gospel of Jesus…

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Analysis: Pope Francis apologized to the Indigenous Peoples in Canada. Was it enough?

(CANADA)
America [New York NY]

July 25, 2022

By Ricardo da Silva, S.J.

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The excited and continuous beating of drums filled the circular, tented space at Ermineskin Cree Nation territory in Maskwacis, Alberta. Pope Francis waited—with a sense of gravity and solemnity clearly visible on his face—as he sat on stage for proceedings to begin at Muskwa Park, the site of one of Canada’s former Catholic Church-run residential schools, and a place that today is also a sacred meeting ground for the Cree Nation. Here, the pope was expected to make a long-awaited and promised apology for the Catholic Church’s involvement in residential schools and the abuses perpetrated there for more than a century by priests and consecrated religious women and men.

“I am here because the first step of my penitential pilgrimage among you is that of again asking forgiveness, of telling you once more that I am deeply sorry,” the pope said, as he addressed the assembly minutes later, flanked by…

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Other times popes have apologized for the sins of the Catholic Church

(CANADA)
Washington Post

July 25, 2022

By Erin Cunningham

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Pope Francis on Monday apologized to Canada’s Indigenous community for the role the Catholic Church played in overseeing decades of abuse at some of the nation’s residential schools. The schools, which were run by both churches and Canada’s federal government, removed about 150,000 Indigenous children from their families — and used hunger, sexual violence and religious indoctrination to forcibly assimilate the students.

But it wasn’t the first time Francis — or even his predecessors — has asked forgiveness for the church’s crimes and transgressions. In fact, his remarks were the latest in a string of papal apologies in recent years.

Not all of the pleas have fully implicated the church, instead blaming individuals for wrongdoing or misconduct. Here are some of the apologies the various heads of the Catholic Church have given in recent years.

Pope Francis

Francis is in Canada this week on the first papal visit…

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The Pope went to Canada to apologize. For some indigenous school survivors, he triggered more pain

WINNIPEG (CANADA)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

July 25, 2022

By Hira Humayun, Lindsay Isaac and Paula Newton

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Victoria McIntosh unfurls a little girl’s white winter coat from her handbag and smooths it out on the table.

Her grandmother sewed it for her when she was four years old, she says, before she was sent to Fort Alexander residential school in the 1960s. But a nun took the coat from her, she remembers.”That nun took it off of me and threw it at my mom,” she told CNN. Then the nun called her mother a ‘savage” — an incident she said foreshadowed years of abuse.

McIntosh was sexually assaulted by a priest at that school for years, she says. “He violated me in ways that no child should ever go through. And I would break down and I would cry. Thinking about it, what he’d done. And I wonder why. What did I do to you?”

She has identified the priest as the now-retired…

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Pope apologizes for ‘catastrophic’ school policy in Canada

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 26, 2022

By Nicole Winfield and Peter Smith

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Pope Francis issued a historic apology Monday for the Catholic Church’s cooperation with Canada’s “catastrophic” policy of Indigenous residential schools, saying the forced assimilation of Native peoples into Christian society destroyed their cultures, severed families and marginalized generations.

“I am deeply sorry,” Francis said to applause from school survivors and Indigenous community members gathered at a former residential school south of Edmonton, Alberta. He called the school policy a “disastrous error” that was incompatible with the Gospel and said further investigation and healing is needed.

“I humbly beg forgiveness for the evil committed by so many Christians against the Indigenous peoples,” Francis said.

In the first event of his weeklong “penitential pilgrimage,” Francis traveled to the lands of four Cree nations to pray at a cemetery and then deliver the long-sought apology at nearby powwow ceremonial grounds. Four chiefs escorted the pontiff in a wheelchair to the site near the…

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July 25, 2022

The spotlight shifts in the clergy sex abuse scandal

(ITALY)
Washington Post

July 25, 2022

By The Editorial Board

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For too long, the Catholic Church ignored and even hid the problem of sexual abuse by its clergy. Pope Francis, to his credit, has instituted reforms that are more far-reaching than his predecessors’. But a disturbing article in The Post by Chico Harlan and Alain Uaykani suggests that the church still has a long way to go in protecting children from predatory clerics and the bishops who enable them — particularly in less developed countries, far from the glare of effective judiciaries and unstinting journalism. There, as the authors write, “the scale of abuse remains both a mystery and a cause for trepidation.”

In one case they describe, a teenage nun-in-training said she had been raped by a priest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, an incident that resulted in no serious discipline for the accused assailant owing to what an array of sources described to an…

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Should the Pope reverse a 500-year old Church law on his trip to Canada?

EDMONTON (CANADA)
The Globe and Mail [Toronto, Canada]

July 25, 2022

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[AUDIO]

It is largely anticipated that Pope Francis will deliver another apology to Indigenous people while in Canada this week. But are there actions he could take while here to further reconciliation?

Many Indigenous people would like the Pope to publicly renounce the Doctrine of DiscoveryBruce McIvor is one of them. He is a lawyer, a historian and the author of Standoff: Why Reconciliation Fails Indigenous People and How to Fix It. He explains what this doctrine is, how it went from a papal edict to a legal principle in Canada and why renouncing it would be a meaningful action for the Pope to take while here.

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Pope apologizes for ‘deplorable evil’ of Indigenous abuse in Canadian Catholic residential schools

EDMONTON (CANADA)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

July 25, 2022

By Jack Guy

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Pope apologizes to Indigenous people of Canada“I ask forgiveness, in particular, for the ways in which many members of the Church and of religious communities cooperated, not least through their indifference, in projects of cultural destruction and forced assimilation promoted by the governments of that time, which culminated in the system of residential schools,” the pontiff said.

Last year, hundreds of unmarked graves were discovered on the grounds of former residential schools in British Columbia and Saskatchewan.

Pope Francis makes remarks as he gives an apology for the treatment of First Nations children in Canada’s Residential School system, during his visit on Monday.And Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission has reported that more than 4,000 Indigenous children died either from neglect or abuse in residential schools, many of which were run by the Catholic Church.

Pope Francis visiting Canada to apologize for Indigenous abuse in Catholic residential…

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Meeting with Indigenous Peoples, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit: Remarks by Pope Francis

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

July 25, 2022

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS 

___________________________________

Madam Governor General,
Mr Prime Minister,
Dear indigenous peoples of Maskwacis and of this land of Canada,
Dear brothers and sisters!

I have been waiting to come here and be with you! Here, from this place associated with painful memories, I would like to begin what I consider a pilgrimage, a penitential pilgrimage. I have come to your native lands to tell you in person of my sorrow, to implore God’s forgiveness, healing and reconciliation, to express my closeness and to pray with you and for you.

I recall the meetings we had in Rome four months ago. At that time, I was given two pairs of moccasins as a sign of the suffering endured by indigenous children, particularly those who, unfortunately, never came back from the residential schools. I was asked to return the moccasins when I came to Canada; I brought them, and I will return…

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Researcher hopes trove of rare residential school photos can help identify missing children

ROMA (ITALY)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 20, 2022

By Olivia Stefanovich

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Images from the early 20th century sent to Rome by priests in Canada

About 1,000 black-and-white photos from the early days of Canada’s residential school system have been discovered in the archives of a Roman Catholic order in Rome.

Raymond Frogner, head of archives at the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) in Winnipeg, found the photographs earlier this month when he was given exclusive access to the Oblate General Archives to identify residential school records.

He said the images are part of an early 20th century photo series sent by priests from various institutions in Canada — including the former Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia, where the discovery of more than 200 suspected unmarked graves was reported in May 2021.

“The photos would give some indication of children who perhaps might have been known to be lost,” Frogner said. 

“If the photos are dated, we can actually…

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Pope’s Canada trip overshadowed by Indigenous suffering, church abuse

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Deutsche Welle [Bonn, Germany]

July 24, 2022

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Pope Francis’ 38th trip abroad takes him to Canada. He wants to “meet and embrace” Indigenous people and draw attention to their suffering, to which the Catholic Church contributed. But will he also take responsibility?

“We expect an apology from Pope Francis,” 64-year-old Evelyn Korkmaz told DW, looking ahead to the Catholic Church leader’s visit to Canada, which begins Sunday.

More than 50 years ago, Korkmaz experienced suffering at the hands of the Catholic Church. Her plight was shared by tens of thousands of children of the First Nations, Canada’s Indigenous people.

As a 10-year-old, Evelyn Korkmaz enrolled at St. Anne’s Residential School in Fort Albany in the north of Ontario, close to several First Nation reservations. There, she endured four years of abuse. There was, she remembers, “an electric chair” at her school and children were put in straitjackets. They experienced abuse, rape and even death. View Cache

Pope lands in Canada, set for apologies to Indigenous groups

EDMONTON (CANADA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 25, 2022

By Nicole Winfield, Rob Gillies and Peter Smith

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Pope Francis began a historic visit to Canada on Sunday to apologize to Indigenous peoples for abuses by missionaries at residential schools, a key step in the Catholic Church’s efforts to reconcile with Native communities and help them heal from generations of trauma.

Francis kissed the hand of a residential school survivor as he was greeted at the Edmonton, Alberta, airport by Indigenous representatives, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mary Simon, an Inuk who is Canada’s first Indigenous governor general.

The gesture set the tone of what Francis has said is a “penitential pilgrimage” to atone for the role of Catholic missionaries in the forced assimilation of generations of Native children — a visit that has stirred mixed emotions across Canada as survivors and their families cope with the trauma of their losses and receive a long-sought papal apology.

Francis had no official events scheduled Sunday, giving him time…

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Pope: ‘If I resign one day, I’ll hear confessions and visit the sick’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 13, 2022

By Inés San Martín

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In yet another wide-ranging interview, Pope Francis said Monday that he doesn’t plan to step down anytime soon, though he prays for the strength to do so when the time is right.

If the day comes when he does resign, the pontiff said he would prefer to be considered the “bishop emeritus of Rome rather than pope emeritus” and to dedicate his time to the confession of the faithful, the practice of charity, and visiting the sick in some Italian parish.

“If I survive after resignation, I would like to do one thing: confess and go to see the sick,” he said.

On other fronts, the pope said pro-choice Catholic politicians should “talk to their pastor” about their “incoherence” with church teaching, and he repeated a familiar warning about the risks of a third world war.

Francis also answered – and, to some extent, dodged – questions about Ukraine, the…

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Pope Francis visiting Canada to apologize for Indigenous abuse in Catholic residential schools

EDMONTON (CANADA)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

July 24, 2022

By Rob Picheta, Livia Borghese and Cecilia Armstrong

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Pope Francis departed Rome on Sunday for a week-long trip to Edmonton, Canada, where he’s set to apologize for the Catholic Church’s role in the abuse of Canadian Indigenous children in residential schools.

The Vatican has called the trip a “penitential pilgrimage,” and the Pope will be welcomed in Edmonton on Sunday by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mary Simon, the Governor General of Canada.

While in the country he will meet with Indigenous groups and address the scandal of abuse and erasure of indigenous culture in the country’s residential schools.

Indigenous leaders have long called for a papal apology for the harm inflicted for decades on Indigenous children. Last year, hundreds of unmarked graves were discovered on the grounds of former residential schools in British Columbia and Saskatchewan.

Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission has reported that more than 4,000 Indigenous children died…

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Pope Francis to Atone for Catholic Abuse of Indigenous Children in Canada

EDMONTON (CANADA)
Wall Street Journal [New York NY]

July 25, 2022

By Francis X. Rocca

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Pontiff to visit site of former school where indigenous children were assimilated to white culture

Pope Francis will visit the site of a former residential school for indigenous Canadian children on Monday morning, seeking to atone for the Catholic Church’s part in what a government-funded report has described as a system of cultural genocide.

The pope’s visit to Maskwacis, 60 miles from Edmonton, will be his first public appearance since his arrival in Canada on Sunday. His nearly weeklong visit to the country, which ends Friday, will be dedicated to asking forgiveness and seeking to reconcile his church with Canada’s indigenous people.

Pope Francis has made public apologies before, including for the Catholic Church’s persecution of Protestants and its failure to protect minors from sexual abuse by priests. But he has never framed an entire trip around an apology until his visit to Canada, which  View Cache

Pope in Canada to apologise for abuse of Indigenous children in church schools

EDMONTON (CANADA)
The Guardian [London, England]

July 24, 2022

By Reuters

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‘This is a trip of penance,’ says Pope Francis, ahead of mass to be held during five-day trip

Pope Francis landed in Canada on Sunday to kick off a five-day trip that will centre around his apology on behalf of the Roman Catholic Church for the abuse that Indigenous children endured at mostly church-run residential schools.

“This is a trip of penance. Let’s say that is its spirit,” the pope told reporters after his flight took off from Rome.

He touched down in Edmonton in the western province of Alberta, where he will visit a former residential school and meet with Indigenous people on Monday. He is also visiting Quebec City and Iqaluit, the capital of the territory of Nunavut. He will depart on Friday.

The pope said he yearned to visit Ukraine in his efforts to try to bring an end to the five-month-old war that…

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Factbox: Key facts on Pope’s Canada visit to apologize for residential school abuse

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Reuters [London, England]

July 20, 2022

By Nia Williams

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Pope Francis arrives in Canada on Sunday to apologize for the wrongs done to indigenous people by Roman Catholic priests and nuns who ran abusive residential schools.

Here are key things to know about the Pope’s week-long visit. 

WHAT HAPPENED IN CANADA’S RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS?

Between 1831 and 1996, more than 150,000 indigenous children were taken from their homes and put into residential schools run primarily by Christian churches, predominantly the Catholic church, on behalf of the government. The stated aim of the schools was to assimilate indigenous children.

Many children were subjected to rape, abuse and malnutrition in what Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2015 called “cultural genocide”.

HOW DID THE POPE’S TRIP COME ABOUT?

In May 2021, the Tk̓emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation, near Kamloops, British Columbia, said they had found the suspected remains of 215 people, some as young as three years old, on the grounds of…

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Creen Que Son Más De 30 Los Abusos Sexuales Cometidos Por Un Cura En Un Colegio Jesuita

(ARGENTINA)
Canal 9 Televida, ElNueve.com [Mendoza, Argentina]

July 22, 2022

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Ya son tres los alumnos que denunciaron públicamente los hechos que habrían ocurrido en 2002, pero varios compañeros se comunicaron con ellos para contar que también fueron víctimas del párroco.

Dos exalumnos del colegio porteño El Salvador, perteneciente a la congregación Jesuita, denunciaron públicamente que fueron víctimas de abuso sexual en 2002, cuando estaban en sexto grado por el cura que en ese momento era el tutor del colegio, César Fretes, hoy muerto

Los jóvenes, que hoy tienen 31 años, presentaron un reclamo administrativo al colegio por los abusos sexuales que Fretes habría cometido cuando cursaban sexto grado, a sus 10-11 años. El objetivo es recibir una reparación por los daños psicológicos y morales causados.

Los que hicieron pública la denuncia fueron Pablo Vio y Gonzalo Elizondo hace unos días. Luego, otro exalumno, Francisco Segovia (32), los contactó para contarles que había sido víctima de Fretes en 2001.

Los tres jóvenes aseguran que más de 30 compañeros se…

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July 24, 2022

Pope Francis’ visit to Canada: A CNA explainer

(CANADA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 23, 2022

By Jonah McKeown

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Pope Francis is set to arrive in Canada on July 24, arriving back in Rome on July 30. During his trip, he’s expected to meet with and apologize to indigenous Canadians for abuses committed at Church-run residential schools in the 20th century. 

Why this trip, and why now? Here’s what to know:

Where in Canada is Pope Francis going?

The pope’s itinerary includes stops in Edmonton, Quebec City, and Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut; there’s a depiction below. As you can see, the distances involved are nothing to sneeze at.

In Edmonton, Francis will meet with members of the First Nations, Métis, and Inuit peoples, as well as with indigenous Catholics at Sacred Heart parish

Later, in Quebec City, he will meet with civil authorities, representatives of indigenous peoples, and members of the diplomatic corps. Then, the pope will depart Quebec and fly some five hours north…

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Pope heads to Canada as Indigenous groups seek full apology

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 24, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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Pope Francis began a fraught visit to Canada on Sunday to apologize to Indigenous peoples for abuses by missionaries at residential schools, a key step in the Catholic Church’s efforts to reconcile with Native communities and help them heal from generations of trauma.

Francis was flying to Edmonton, Alberta, where he was to be greeted on the tarmac by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mary May Simon, an Inuk who is Canada’s first Indigenous governor general. Francis had no official events scheduled Sunday, giving him time to rest before his meeting Monday with survivors near the site of a former residential school in Maskwacis, where he is expected to deliver an apology.

Indigenous groups are seeking more than just words, though, as they press for access to church archives to learn the fate of children who never returned home from the residential schools. They also want justice for…

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Pope’s Indigenous tour signals a rethink of mission legacy

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 23, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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Pope Francis’ trip to Canada to apologize for the horrors of church-run Indigenous residential schools marks a radical rethink of the Catholic Church’s missionary legacy, spurred on by the first pope from the Americas and the discovery of hundreds of probable graves at the school sites.

Francis has said his weeklong visit, which begins Sunday, is a “penitential pilgrimage” to beg forgiveness on Canadian soil for the “evil” done to Native peoples by Catholic missionaries. It follows his April 1 apology in the Vatican for the generations of trauma Indigenous peoples suffered as a result of a church-enforced policy to eliminate their culture and assimilate them into Canadian, Christian society.

Francis’ tone of personal repentance has signaled a notable shift for the papacy, which has long acknowledged abuses in the residential schools and strongly asserted the rights and dignity of Indigenous peoples. But past popes have also hailed the sacrifice…

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Indigenous Canadians wary, hopeful as pope prepares apology

MASKWACIS (CANADA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 22, 2022

By Peter Smith

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To this day, Flo Buffalo doesn’t drink milk — not since two nuns force-fed her the sour milk she had refused at the Catholic-run Ermineskin Indian Residential School for Indigenous children that she attended in the 1960s.

Holding out her right hand, she showed how she has never been able to fully straighten it out since a nun severely beat her with a stick.

“The nuns, they were real mean,” Buffalo said.

With international attention focusing on the former school in the prairie town of Maskwacis as Pope Francis visits Monday to apologize for abuses in a system designed to sever Native children from their tribal, family and religious bonds, Indigenous Canadians such as Buffalo are voicing a range of skepticism, wariness and hope.

Buffalo, a member of the Samson Cree First Nation in central Alberta, doesn’t often talk about her two years at the school. But ahead of the…

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Canadian Priest Lays Out Catholic Church’s Path to Reconciliation With First Nations

(CANADA)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

July 23, 2022

By Peter Jesserer Smith

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When Pope Francis arrives in Canada Sunday on his “pilgrimage of penance” to be with Canada’s Indigenous people — the First Nations, Métis and Inuit — he will take a major step toward the Church’s reconciliation for all the harms done during the residential-school era.

Father Dean Henderson, a priest of the Diocese of Victoria, British Columbia, told the Register that he started working locally on healing and reconciliation after serving First Nations people in the Yukon 10 years ago. But any lasting impact of the Pope’s visit, he indicates, will depend on how the Church’s clergy and lay faithful respond by forming real, personal relationships with Indigenous people and exercising, above all, a ministry of presence in their lives. 

What are your thoughts about the Pope’s visit to Canada’s First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples and his hope to address the history of the Church’s involvement in the government’s…

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HOROWITZ LAW FILES NEW ABUSE LAWSUIT AGAINST THE EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF COLORADO

DENVER (CO)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

July 22, 2022

By Admin

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The lawsuit alleges child sexual abuse by Rev. Jerry McKenzie beginning in 1995 at a local Denver church and a well-known Diocesan camp for kids   The suit is believed to be among the first filed against the Episcopal Diocese under a new Colorado law allowing survivors of sexual abuse access to the courthouse for a limited time 

On July 21, 2022, Horowitz Law attorneys Adam Horowitz and Jessica Arbour filed a new child sexual abuse and coverup lawsuit against the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado.  Arbour announced the court filing in a news conference held on the steps of the Denver District Court, where she was joined by our Colorado teammate, Zach Elsner of Wilhite, Rose, McClure & Sawaya, P.C. in Denver.

According to the Complaint, the Plaintiff, identified as John HA Doe, was sexually abused by Rev. Jerry McKenzie, a former priest of the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado, starting in…

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How abusive rabbis prey on their own congregants: ‘No one is safe’

(NY)
New York Post

July 23, 2022

By Amy Klein

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Michal was 21 when she went for help with infertility to Rabbi Ezra Sheinberg — an Israeli kabbalist who had a massive following of people seeking blessings and supernatural healings. After a year of counseling, the rabbi began hitting on Michal. “You are not holy enough,” he said, when she refused his advances. “Maybe I made a mistake trying to help you. I thought you were on a higher level.” In 2018 he was convicted of sexually molesting eight women, but gained early release in 2021.

Michal’s story is one of more than 80 anecdotes of abuse and harassment in the new book by Dr. Elana Sztokman, “When Rabbis Abuse: Power, Gender, and Status in the Dynamics of Sexual Abuse in Jewish Culture”  (Lioness Press).

Sztokman never set out to write a book about sexually abusive rabbis. But when the anthropologist, who grew up Modern Orthodox in Flatbush,…

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Imam arrested for alleged sexual abuse of 7 children in western Turkey

BALıKESIR (TURKEY)
Turkish Minute [Germany]

July 16, 2022

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An imam appointed by Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet) to a mosque in the western province of Balıkesir has been arrested on allegations of sexually abusing four boys and three girls between the ages of eight and 12, the Cumhuriyet daily reported on Saturday.

The man, who was appointed by the Diyanet as imam of a mosque in Dursunbey’s Ericek neighborhood, was arrested after an investigation was launched into him on July 7. He was detained the day after over claims that he had sexually abused seven children two months ago.

The imam, who was arrested pending trial and sent to Kepsut Prison in Balıkesir, was appointed to the post by the Balıkesir provincial director of the Diyanet three months earlier, Cumhuriyet said.

Commenting on the development, Muhammet Karakoyun, president of the Balıkesir Street Children’s Association, said it was “extremely serious and worrying,” adding that they would follow the…

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Brampton imam charged in sexual assault investigation

BRAMPTON (CANADA)
Toronto Star [Toronto, Canada]

June 30, 2022

By Sabrina Gamrot

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A 41-year-old Brampton religious leader faces a charge of sexual assault related to an alleged incident in May.

Peel Regional Police allege that on May 25, around 12 a.m., the victim was at her Brampton home when a man known to her, attended her residence.

It is further alleged that the man sexually assaulted the victim at this time.

That same day, officers from the force’s Special Victims Unit (SVU) charged a man with break and enter and commit an indictable offence and sexual assault.

The man served as an imam at a religious centre in Brampton, said police.about:blank

This is an ongoing investigaton with police believing there could be additional victims.

Anyone with information on this incident or any similar ones can contact the SVU at 905-453-2121 ext. 3460.

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July 23, 2022

The Church must do more for survivors of sexual abuse, Vatican official says

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 22, 2022

By Andrea Gagliarducci

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The Church must do more for anyone affected by sexual abuse, “even when the Church can appear tarnished because of these scandals,” and no matter what the local conditions are, according to Father Andrew Small. 

The English priest is the interim secretary of the Pontifical Commission for the Safeguarding of Minors, which provides recommendations and support to dioceses around the world.

In a speech delivered last week to AMECEA, the Association of Members of the Episcopal Conferences in Eastern Africa, he spoke about what this means for local communities and churches in Africa. 

Dealing with potential cases and safeguarding against sexual violence in the future is a moral obligation and global challenge for the Catholic Church. It spans cultures and continents, jurisdictions and authorities, and in meeting this challenge, the Church should always strive to set standards and lead by example, according to Small. 

The AMECEA plenary…

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Canadian Indigenous welcome pope, but object to process and warn it’s only a start

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 23, 2022

By Elise Ann Allen

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For many survivors of Canada’s former residential school system, the apology Pope Francis is expected to deliver for the Church’s role in the abuse they endured during his visit to the country next week marks a milestone in their journey of healing.

Speaking to Crux, Steve Sutherland, a spokesman for the Métis National Council, said an apology from Pope Francis on Canadian soil will be “a significant moment.”

“It would mark the beginning of what we hope would be a renewed commitment from the Catholic Church to walking the path of truth, reconciliation, justice, and healing with the Métis Nation and all Indigenous peoples across Canada,” he said.

Similarly, Grand Chief George Arcand Jr. of the Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations, and Chief of the Alexander First Nation, told journalists during a July 21 press conference that “this apology is a way forward for our people in healing.”

“My mind…

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Pope Francis entrusts Canada trip to the Blessed Virgin Mary

ROME (ITALY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 22, 2022

By Courtney Mares

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Pope Francis visited a Roman basilica on Friday to ask for the Virgin Mary’s intercession and protection ahead of his week-long trip to Canada.

The pope prayed in front of the Marian icon of Salus Populi Romani in Santa Maria Maggiore on the morning of July 22.

A photo released by the Vatican showed the pope seated in a wheelchair below the icon of Mary, Protection of the Roman People, which has been revered in the Eternal City for centuries. 

The Holy See press office said that the pope went to the basilica to entrust the Virgin Mary with his upcoming trip to Canada.

The pope is scheduled to travel to the Canadian cities of Edmonton, Quebec City, and Iqaluit from July 24-29. There he will meet members of Canadian indigenous groups, residential school abuse survivors, and Catholics.

Pope Francis is expected to issue an apology in Canada on behalf…

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Understanding Pope Francis’ Historic Voyage of Reconciliation to Canada’s Indigenous People

TORONTO (CANADA)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

July 22, 2022

By Father Raymond J. de Souza

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COMMENTARY: The last papal trip to Canada was by Pope St. John Paul II in 1984.

On Sunday, Pope Francis will begin a papal trip utterly unique in the nearly 50 years of overseas papal travel. 

It will be a pilgrimage not to the entire Church in Canada, but tightly focused on Indigenous peoples. It will have a “penitential” character, as the Holy Father characterized it at the Angelus address last Sunday. And while most papal trips have multiple themes — history, family, youth, evangelization, justice, etc. — this one is exclusively intended to foster “reconciliation” as that term has come to be understood in Canadian politics.  

A little history is in order. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Canadians began to hear Indigenous voices speak about “Indian residential schools,” a part of Canadian history that had remained largely hidden.  

(Over recent decades the term “Indian” —…

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‘Astonished’ German leaders take issue with Holy See’s latest warning about the ‘Synodal Way’

FRANKFURT AN DER ODER (GERMANY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 22, 2022

By AC Wimmer/CNA

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The latest warning by the Holy See about the risk of a new schism from Germany arising from the “Synodal Way” has been rejected and met with “astonishment” by its organizers, who in turn accused Rome of not acting like a synodal Church.

However, at least one German bishop and a reform group welcomed the new intervention from the Vatican, reported CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner.

Following the statement by the Holy See on Thursday, the presidents of the German Bishops’ Conference and the Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK) said they were stunned by the intervention.

“In our understanding, a synodal Church is something else!” Bishop Georg Bätzing of Limburg and Irme Stetter-Karp declared in response to the Vatican’s intervention. “This also applies to the way today’s communication has been handled, which has been a source of astonishment for us.”

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What the Holy See Didn’t Critique About Germany’s Synodal Way

FRANKFURT AN DER ODER (GERMANY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

July 22, 2022

By Jonathan Liedl

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By criticizing the procedure — but not the substance — of the Church in Germany’s push for radical departures from Catholic teaching, this week’s Vatican statement left deeper concerns unaddressed.

A clear and decisive rebuke of the German Church’s “Synodal Way” is perhaps needed now more than ever, as the process continues to hurtle toward the point of schism.  

The Synodal Way has been exposed as little more than a bald-faced attempt to subvert Church teaching in order to keep with the times — in fact, its leadership has explicitly said as much, describing it as “a conscious statement against the current Catholic catechism” that “still reproaches homosexual activity as sin.” And with the head of the German bishops’ conference publicly expressing his disappointment in Pope Francis over the Holy Father’s reticence to endorse the Synodal Way’s proposals, what’s happening in Germany…

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Former Episcopal priest sexually abused teen, lawsuit says

DENVER (CO)
KUSA - NBC 9News [Denver CO]

July 22, 2022

By Janet Oravetz (9News), Courtney Yuen

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The victim said the abuse started in 1995 when he was 16 and occurred at St. Michael & All Angels Church, Camp Ilium, and a cabin near Nederland.

A new lawsuit claims a former priest of the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado sexually abused a teenaged boy.

According to the complaint, the victim identified as John HA Doe, was sexually abused by the Rev. Jerry McKenzie starting in 1995 when the victim was 16. The plaintiff is now in his 40s and does private social services work in the Denver area.

“What we do know is that during the period when this abuse started and continued, that there was an ongoing practice to ignore these types of allegations, to cover them up, to threaten and silence victims, to withhold information from the people who had the ability to protect these children and to basically protect themselves in closed ranks,”…

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Canadian Catholic archdiocese sells 43 properties to pay sex abuse victims in settlement

ST. JOHN'S (CANADA)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

July 21, 2022

By Michael Gryboski

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A Canadian court has approved the sale of 43 Catholic Church properties as part of a financial settlement with victims of sex abuse, with more sales expected to come later.

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. John’s, based in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, will sell the properties, including 13 church properties, after the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador approved the measure.

The archdiocese directed The Christian Post to a report by Ernst & Young, a law firm that served as a court-appointed monitor for selling the properties.

In its second report, the monitor noted that there were “42 sub-parcel sales” of the properties to various entities, including the Basilica Heritage Foundation Inc., Rocky Hill Holdings Inc. and Emerald Atlantic Group Inc.

Nineteen of the properties were listed as “vacant land,” with one going to the Nature Conservatory of Canada, while another went to…

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Diocese of Green Bay’s New Policy Compares Being Transgender to Sexual Abuse

GREEN BAY (WI)
New Ways Ministry [Mount Rainier MD]

July 20, 2022

By Robert Shine, Managing Editor

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Another U.S. diocese has issued new restrictive policies regarding LGBTQ issues in Catholic schools, and the new directives compare being openly transgender with sexual abuse.

The Diocese of Green Bay, Wisconsin, led by Bishop David Ricken, included the gender policy in its “Education Policy Manual” for the upcoming school year. The manual includes detailed instructions for how to restrict the full participation in Catholic education of trans students, staff, volunteers, and ally parents. The document also includes a section on the theology upon which they these policies are based.

Preceding most of the manual’s content is a section titled “Catholic Principles of Human Sexuality,” which promotes the idea of complementarity of the sexes, denies the legitimacy of trans identities, and supports heterosexuality as the norm. Emphasizing chastity, this section at one point compares being LGBTQ to sexual abuse:

“Behaviors that are contrary to Catholic morality and the expectations of…

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A Congo teen alleged rape by a priest. She had to flee. He can still say Mass.

KINSHASA (DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO)
Washington Post

July 15, 2022

By Chico Harlan and Alain Uaykani

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The 14-year-old girl returned on the back of a motorbike to the convent where she lived and studied. Sobbing and in pain, she pulled aside a nun.

The girl said she’d just been raped by the priest who dropped her off.

The nun, Henriette Okitanunga, tried to comfort the girl. She said she then followed the new rule laid out by Pope Francis for handling such a report: She alerted her superior to a possible crime.

“Your Excellency,” the nun recalled texting to Nicolas Djomo, the local bishop.

After clerical abuse scandals that have rocked much of the Catholic world — generally in nations with the resources to pressure and expose the church — attention is turning to regions where the scale of abuse remains both a mystery and a cause for trepidation. The Vatican’s hope is that bishops in the developing world, trained in new guidelines, can avoid the…

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July 22, 2022

German Catholic leaders ‘astonished’ at Vatican warning about ‘Synodal Path’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 22, 2022

By Elise Ann Allen

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After a warning from the Vatican Thursday to German bishops against stoking division through their ongoing “Synodal Path” consultation process, pioneers of the initiative have hit back, saying they were “astonished” by the rebuke and hope to discuss contentious matters in a more formal setting.

In a statement Thursday, the Vatican said Germany’s Synodal Path is a threat to Church unity at a universal level and stressed that the undertaking lacks the authority to compel bishops to make changes on doctrine or morality.

RELATED: Vatican says Germany’s ‘synodal path’ has no power to change doctrine

“In order to protect the freedom of the People of God and the exercise of episcopal ministry, it seems necessary to specify that the ‘Synodal Way’ in Germany has no power to oblige the bishops and the faithful to adopt new ways of governing and new approaches to doctrine and morals,” the Vatican said…

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Vatican Warning: Germany’s ‘Synodal Way’ Poses ‘Threat to the Unity of the Church’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

July 21, 2022

By AC Wimmer/CNA

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The Vatican issued an official statement published in Italian and German on Thursday.

The Vatican has issued another warning of a new schism from Germany coming out of the “Synodal Way.”

“The ‘Synodal Way’ in Germany does not have the power to compel bishops and the faithful to adopt new forms of governance and new orientations of doctrine and morals,” the Vatican said in an official statement published in Italian and German on Thursday.

The Holy See said it seemed “necessary to clarify” this, in order to “safeguard the freedom of the People of God and the exercise of the episcopal ministry.” 

The Vatican warned: “It would not be permissible to introduce new official structures or doctrines in dioceses before an agreement had been reached at the level of the universal Church, which would constitute a violation of ecclesial communion and a threat to the unity of the Church.”

The “Synodal…

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True reconciliation will require forgiveness, says former AFN national chief ahead of Pope’s visit

(CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 20, 2022

By Written by Padraig Moran. Produced by Ines Colabrese.

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Phil Fontaine says Pope Francis must offer expanded apology during visit to Canada next week

Phil Fontaine says Pope Francis must expand on his apology for residential schools when he visits Canada next week.

But the former national chief of the Assembly of First Nations also wants people to know that an apology is not “the end of the story, it’s just the beginning.”

“We still have so much work to do to heal the past and to bring about true reconciliation. We ourselves have to forgive. Otherwise, the story never ends,” said Fontaine, who was AFN national chief from 1997 to 2000 and from 2003 to 2009.

“And I believe that many, many people want to see this story end on a more positive note,” he told The Current’s guest host Duncan McCue.

The Pope will visit Canada next week, in what he recently described as a “pilgrimage of penance” through…

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Pope’s Penitential Pilgrimage to Canada to reconcile and heal

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

July 20, 2022

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

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Pope Francis is set to fly to Canada on Sunday for his 37th Apostolic Visit abroad. He’ll be travelling to the Canadian cities of Edmonton, Quebec, and Iqaluit, where the Holy Father will bring his closeness to indigenous peoples who suffered from attempts to erase their culture, especially in the residential schools system.

Pope Francis’ imminent Apostolic Visit to Canada will be first of all a penitential pilgrimage geared at healing and reconciliation with the nation’s indigenous peoples, suggests the Director of the Holy See Press Office, Matteo Bruni, noting this follows the Pontiff’s five encounters with the aboriginal peoples in Rome in April.

During a briefing at the Press Office on Wednesday, the Director presented the Pope’s 37th Apostolic Visit abroad. The North American nation will be the 56th country he’s visited. Pope Francis is following in the footsteps of his predecessor, St. John Paul II who visited Canada three…

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US congregations face their complicity in trauma of Native boarding schools

NEW ODANAH (WI)
Global Sisters Report [Kansas City, MO]

July 21, 2022

By Dan Stockman

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Sr. Eileen McKenzie had always been proud of her congregation’s nearly nine decades of ministering to Indigenous people through their school in northern Wisconsin.

But in the summer of 2020, McKenzie, the president of the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, got an email from the La Crosse County Historical Society saying its magazine was going to publish a story about the school’s legacy. St. Mary’s Catholic Indian Boarding School operated on a reservation in Odanah, Wisconsin, from 1883 to 1969. The historical society wanted to let McKenzie know about the article because the topic was so sensitive.

“I went, ‘What? This is sensitive?’ ” McKenzie recalled. “I went online and Googled it, and the first article was … about St. Mary’s. I was like, ‘Oh my God.’ “

The 2019 story, “Death by Civilization,” details the trauma the…

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Indigenous Canadians hope Pope Francis will do more than apologize

(CANADA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

July 21, 2022

By Katie Collins Scott

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First Nations leaders call for financial support, release of records, return of artifacts

Marie-Anne Day Walker-Pelletier, a former chief of the Okanese First Nation in Saskatchewan, will be attentive to Pope Francis’ words during his trip to Canada and to the church’s actions in the wake of the historic visit. She’ll also be watchful for one simple act.

This spring, Walker-Pelletier was part of the delegation of Indigenous Canadians who traveled to the Vatican and met the pope. While there, she gave Francis two pairs of small moccasins. “He knows he needs to bring them back when he apologizes here,” the 68-year-old Walker-Pelletier told NCR.

“It’s not about the moccasins. It’s about the graves of the children who were never found, the kids who were abused, raped and died at residential schools, the babies who were incinerated.” The shoes “are a symbol of the children who never came…

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Pope Francis set to embark for Canada, on a one-of-a-kind papal visit

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

July 20, 2022

By Christopher White

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When pope touches down in Edmonton, the first hands he shakes will be those of Indigenous people

In 2010, the headline “Why Being Pope Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry,” splashed across the cover of Time magazine, exploring the general reluctance of popes to own up to the Catholic Church’s past wrongs.

But on July 24, Pope Francis will travel some 5,000 miles from Rome to Canada to do just that.

As Francis prepares to embark on his 37th international trip as pope, a very different kind of visit is being planned for this high-stakes journey, where he is expected to apologize to the country’s Indigenous peoples for abuses at Catholic-run residential schools.

When he touches down in Edmonton, Alberta, Francis will find a dramatically altered scene than that of past airport arrivals. Gone will be the jubilant sights and sounds of marching bands and…

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Pope hopes Canada trip will help heal ‘evil’ done to indigenous people

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Reuters [London, England]

July 19, 2022

By Philip Pullella

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Pope Francis said on Sunday his trip to Canada next week will be a “pilgrimage of penance” that he hopes can help heal the wrongs done to indigenous people by Roman Catholic priests and nuns who ran abusive residential schools.

The July 24-30 trip will include at least five encounters with native people as Francis makes good on a promise to apologise on their home territory for the Church’s role in the state-sanctioned schools, which sought to erase indigenous cultures.

“Unfortunately in Canada many Christians, including some members of religious orders, contributed to the policies of cultural assimilation that in the past gravely damaged native populations in various ways,” Francis said at his weekly address to people in St. Peter’s Square.

About 150,000 children were taken from their homes. Many were subjected to abuse, rape and malnutrition in what Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2015 called “cultural genocide”.

The…

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Brock experts say actions must accompany Pope’s expected apology to Indigenous communities

ST. CATHARINES (CANADA)
The Brock News [St. Catharines, CA]

July 21, 2022

By The Brock News

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When Pope Francis arrives in Canada Sunday to continue reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples, he must deliver more than an apology for the Catholic Church’s role in the residential school system, say Brock University experts.

The Pope will meet with Indigenous communities in Alberta, Quebec and Nunavut from July 24 to 29 and is expected to issue an apology while on Canadian soil — one of 94 Calls to Action laid out by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

“Action must follow words,” says Brock University Assistant Professor of Education Stanley ‘Bobby’ Henry, a member of the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory community.

“It’s a repeating pattern for organizations, agencies and governments to follow an apology with concrete action that results in meaningful change, but this has not always been the case,” he says. “Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized on behalf of Canada and Canadians but later argued that Canada…

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Sask. First Nations ‘deeply concerned’ by lack of consultation on Pope visit to Canada

(CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 11, 2022

By Alexander Quon

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Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations says visit has been poorly co-ordinated

Warning: This story contains distressing details

The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) says it is “deeply concerned” over a lack of consultation on Pope Francis’s upcoming visit to Canada.

The Pope will be in Canada from July 24 to July 29 and will stop in Edmonton, Quebec City and Iqaluit. The trip is focused on healing and reconciliation with First Nations, Inuit and Métis people for harm caused by the Roman Catholic Church’s operation of government-funded residential schools. 

FSIN, which represents Saskatchewan’s 74 First Nations, said in a statement issued Monday that the visit has been poorly co-ordinated by Canada and the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB). 

“We had zero consultation on his pilgrimage to ground zero on our own lands. Many survivors don’t have the agency, money or even technology to attend the Pope’s visit,” said FSIN Chief…

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Dene Nation seeks approval to search 15 residential school sites for unmarked graves

YELLOWKNIFE (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 20, 2022

By Avery Zingel

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Project would take two years, consult Elders and archives to identify sites

Warning: This story discusses children missing at residential schools. 

Dene Nation is proposing to search 15 residential school sites in the North for unmarked burial sites, a plan which brought up complicated and difficult emotions about what this undertaking will mean for survivors and the family of missing children.

Elder and former Tulita chief Paul Andrew told the Dene Nation assembly, gathered just outside of Yellowknife this week, that he hopes the project brings closure to his family.

Andrew was at residential school for seven years, and his grandmother passed away without knowing what happened to her two daughters.

“I have often wondered what happened to them. Is it possible I have cousins somewhere in the world? Or is that it?”

“It’s very possible that it will settle my soul if we are able to answer some of those questions,”…

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N.W.T. communities urged to apply for residential school survivors commemoration funding

(CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 8, 2022

By CBC News, with files from Dodie Malegana

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Edna Elias would like to see Arctic communities participate in project

Nunavut educator and politician Edna Elias wants Arctic groups to apply to a government fund dedicated to monuments honouring residential school survivors, and children who never returned home. 

Elias, from Kugluktuk, N.W.T., works with the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation and is involved in administering a new grant, funded through the federal government, that allows communities to apply for money to design and create memorials honouring community histories of residential schools. 

The grant is called the Na-mi-quai-ni-mak Community Support Fund. Na-mi-quai-ni-mak is Anishinaabemowin and means “I remember them.”

With this funding — up to $10,000 — communities can design and create any sort of commemorative marker honouring survivors, families and those who did not make it home. 

Elias listed monuments and peace gardens as ideas for applications. 

She said that any Indigenous government, band council or survivor group in Canada can…

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Why the Pope’s visit is important to all Canadians

OTTAWA (CANADA)
The Conversation [Waltham MA]

July 21, 2022

By Marie-Pierre Bousquet

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For whom did Pope Francis really organize his July 24-29 trip to Canada?

In general, these papal visits primarily concern Catholics and may not hold much interest for the general population. With stops in Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré, Que., Edmonton, Maskwacis, Alta., and Iqaluit, this tour appears to be aimed primarily at Indigenous peoples: its purpose is to apologize on behalf of the Catholic Church for its involvement in Indian Residential Schools.

Indeed, of the 139 residential schools recognized by the legal definition of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA), approximately 60 per cent were run by Catholics. It makes sense, then, for Indigenous communities to be the primary audience for this visit.

Should the rest of Canada overlook the visit? On the contrary, I believe the whole country should be concerned by what’s at stake. I have every reason to to feel concerned: I am an anthropologist and have been doing…

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Hurts and healing: Papal visit stirs emotions of First Nation members in Alberta

(CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 21, 2022

By Stephen Cook

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Three Cree sons and daughters of survivors share their perspectives

WARNING: This story contains details some readers may find distressing.

Deep-seated hurt and pockets of hope. 

These are among the complicated emotions rippling through an Indigenous community in central Alberta where Pope Francis is expected to deliver an apology for the Catholic Church’s role in Canada’s residential schools.

“For the amount of trauma … some of us maybe put deep down in ourselves and didn’t want to deal with it and now it’s all coming back out,” said Luci Johnson, a member of the Samson Cree Nation who helps people navigate the court system around Maskwacis, Alta.

“And those are the things that no ‘sorry’ — [a] five-letter word — is ever going to make us heal.”

Pope Francis will be in Canada from July 24 to 29. 

On Monday, the first full day of his trip, the Pope will…

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N.W.T. residential school survivors, descendants head to Edmonton for papal visit

(CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 21, 2022

By Rose Danen

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‘A way for us to reconcile a path that was filled with hurts,’ says one woman heading south

The residential school system has been a large part of Mabel Brown’s family story.

At six years old, her mother was sent to St. Peter’s Indian Residential School in Hay River, N.W.T.

Brown herself also attended residential schools along with her eight siblings. She bounced around from Stringer Hall in Inuvik to Bompas Hall in Fort Simpson, and then to Akaitcho Hall in Yellowknife where she eventually graduated.

And that has left a lasting impact on her family to this day, according to the Inuvik resident.

“When I got triggered, it went on to my daughter and then trickled down to my grandson who is 25 right now,” said Brown who is Gwich’in.

“So the evidence is there. You can see the way we are, our behaviours and how we walk through…

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Indigenous church rededicated in preparation for papal visit to Edmonton

EDMONTON (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 17, 2022

By Samantha Schwientek

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Sacred Heart Church of the First Peoples was rededicated this weekend following a fire nearly 2 years ago

A historic Catholic church in Edmonton is ready for a visit from Pope Francis following a devastating fire two years ago.

With just a week before the Pope is scheduled to arrive, Sacred Heart Church of the First Peoples reopened its doors for the first time in two years. 

The church celebrated the rededication on Sunday and held its first mass since August 2020 to the delight of parishioners and clergy alike.

Father Cristino Bouvette, national liturgical co-ordinator for the papal visit, said he was amazed at how quickly the work was done. 

“The first day I saw it, compared to what it looks like now that it’s been dedicated, is nothing short of a miracle,” said Bouvette,…

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Vatican says they’re gifts; Indigenous groups want them back

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 21, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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The Vatican Museums are home to some of the most magnificent artworks in the world, from Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel to ancient Egyptian antiquities and a pavilion full of papal chariots. But one of the museum’s least-visited collections is becoming its most contested before Pope Francis’ trip to Canada.

The Vatican’s Anima Mundi Ethnological Museum, located near the food court and right before the main exit, houses tens of thousands of artifacts and art made by Indigenous peoples from around the world, much of it sent to Rome by Catholic missionaries for a 1925 exhibition in the Vatican gardens.

The Vatican says the feathered headdresses, carved walrus tusks, masks and embroidered animal skins were gifts to Pope Pius XI, who wanted to celebrate the Church’s global reach, its missionaries and the lives of the Indigenous peoples they evangelized.

But Indigenous groups from Canada, who were shown a few items in the…

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July 21, 2022

Indigenous woman says she feels heard as accused priest has first court appearance

WINNIPEG (CANADA)
The Canadian Press [Toronto, Canada]

July 20, 2022

By Kelly Geraldine Malone

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A First Nations woman says she is disappointed a 92-year-old priest accused of assaulting her when she was a student at a former residential school did not attend his first court appearance.

“What a coward,” said Victoria McIntosh, 63, outside a legion hall where court was held in Powerview-Pine Falls, north of Winnipeg, on Wednesday. 

“I don’t care how old you are. You could have made it here if you wanted to.”

Arthur Masse faces one count of indecent assault from when the woman was 10 and attended the Fort Alexander Residential School in Manitoba.

His lawyer appeared in court on his behalf, which is not uncommon for a first appearance, and the Crown said the priest’s age was a factor. A next court date was set for Aug. 17. 

McIntosh said she had hoped Masse would be there so she could face him for the first time in more…

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Residential schools, the Jesuits of Canada and the process of reconciliation

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Aleteia [Paris, France]

July 20, 2022

By Father Gilles Mongeau, S.J.

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Days before Pope Francis visits Canada, the vice provincial of the Jesuit Province of Canada speaks candidly about reconciliation.

ho are the missing Aboriginal children? What is the reality of residential school cemeteries? What is the Church doing to promote justice and reconciliation?

Days before Pope Francis’s “penitential journey” to the country (July 24-30, 2022), the vice provincial of the Jesuit province of Canada, Father Gilles Mongeau, S.J., sheds light on the history of relations between settlers and their descendants and indigenous peoples.

How are the Jesuits involved in the process of reconciliation with the indigenous peoples?

We began the path of reconciliation in the early 1990s, when we committed ourselves to making financial restitution and making our resources available. For example, we had many dictionaries, which we made available to help indigenous communities recover their traditional languages. The destruction of indigenous languages was one of the features of the residential schools….

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Joseph Quigley: Birmingham Archdiocese saw abusive priest as ‘struggling’

BIRMINGHAM (UNITED KINGDOM)
BBC [London, England]

July 20, 2022

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A priest who assaulted children was seen by his Archdiocese as “struggling” rather than abusive, a report found.

Joseph Quigley, a former Catholic priest in the Archdiocese of Birmingham, was jailed last year.

A report by Barnado’s found the church was aware of concerns but did not listen to victims, challenge his behaviour or deal with complaints.

The authors made 18 recommendations which the Archdiocese accepted in full. It apologised for its failures.

The report said concerns had been raised about Quigley, from Staffordshire, as early as 1990.

There was evidence the church was aware of an “immoral relationship” while he was working in Warwickshire but it was not considered a safeguarding issue because the boy was 16.

“The view of [Quigley’s] behaviour, being that of a Catholic priest who had a ‘relationship’ with another adult male, rather than an abuser of an adolescent boy, persisted without any challenge,” the…

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A Bay Area priest spent 17 years protesting the Catholic Church. The Vatican finally cut him loose. He’s not going quietly

OAKLAND (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle [San Francisco CA]

July 19, 2022

By Rachel Swan

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He spent 17 years as a priest in exile, railing against what he said were the misdeeds and cover-ups of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland, until the Vatican finally cut him loose in March.

Months later, Tim Stier delivered his final salvo: a scorching “farewell letter” that condemned several bishops, criticized the Catholic clergy for retrograde attitudes toward gender equity and LGBTQ civil rights, and cited specific allegations of sexual abuse that Stier says the church ignored or tried to conceal.

His missive became a new flare-up for an institution grappling with public controversies over abortion and civil rights, and with the fallout from a painful history of abuse that has jolted parishes throughout the country.

“Dear No-Longer-Fellow Priests,” it began, “this will likely be my farewell letter to most of you, which may be glad tidings to those of you who did not enjoy hearing from me.”

In…

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Manitoba residential school survivor plans to be in court ‘every step of the way’ in sexual abuse case against retired priest

WINNIPEG (CANADA)
CTV Television Network [Toronto, Canada]

July 20, 2022

By Josh Crabb

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A Manitoba woman travelled three hours hoping to hear and see the retired priest charged with sexually abusing her at a residential school in the late 1960s appear in a small town courtroom.

“I’m going to be here every step of the way,” said Victoria McIntosh, 63 of Somerset, Man. outside the Legion Hall in Powerview-Pine Falls, Man. Wednesday which serves as the courthouse in the community. “I didn’t deserve that at 10 years old. No child does.”

McIntosh clutched a jacket her grandmother gave her on her first day of school and showed up to the court with her husband and grandson at her side.

Other supporters, including community members from the nearby Sagkeeng First Nation, gathered outside the building for a short ceremony and drumming before the court hearing began.

About 30 people filled the hall, with most in attendance to observe the court case against Arthur Masse,…

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July 20, 2022

When Pope visits Canada, indigenous people look for healing – and action

TORONTO (CANADA)
Reuters [London, England]

July 20, 2022

By Anna Mehler Paperny

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When Pope Francis travels to Canada, indigenous leaders and residential school survivors say, they are hoping for more than an apology: They want action.

Francis, who will be the first pope in nearly 20 years to visit Canada, said on Sunday he was making a “pilgrimage of penance” to help heal the wrongs done to indigenous people by Roman Catholic priests and nuns who ran abusive residential schools linked to deaths of thousands of children.

More than 150,000 children were taken from their homes and many were subjected to abuse, rape and malnutrition in what Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2015 called “cultural genocide.”

The discovery of the remains of 215 children at a former residential school in British Columbia last year brought the issue to the fore again amid calls for a formal apology from the Pope. Since then, the suspected remains of hundreds more children have been…

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Vatican bans investments in porn, weapons, other products at odds with doctrine

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 20, 2022

By Inés San Martín

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Aiming both to streamline and to reform its investment practices, the Vatican announced Tuesday that it’s banning investing in firms whose activities are contrary to the teachings of the Catholic Church, including pornography and prostitution, gambling, the arms industry, abortion services and contraception.

All organizations that are part of the Holy See or the Vatican City State are now required to opt for low-risk investments guided by ethical, social and environmental criteria.

This could easily be a description of Pope Francis right now, especially in light of the fact that a prominent American archbishop recently went on record as claiming, “I think the pope doesn’t understand the U.S., just as he doesn’t understand the Church in the U.S.”

However, it’s actually a description of the liberal American Catholic take on Pope John Paul II during the 1980s and 1990s, when the Polish pontiff appointed a series of conservatives to major…

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The sexual predators plaguing Indonesian schools

(INDONESIA)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

July 20, 2022

By Siktus Harson

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A culture of silence hinders fight against sexual abuse of children, especially in religion-based schools

The arrest of several alleged sexual predators over the past few weeks has revealed the bitter reality of sexual violence against Indonesian children, particularly at religion-based schools. 

The latest arrest last week was of a Quran teacher in East Java for allegedly raping four underage girls in his care. One of them is pregnant and will soon deliver. 

A few days earlier, police arrested Mohammad Subchi Azal Tsani for allegedly raping girls at a school founded and run by his father, a respected Muslim cleric in East Java. It took days for the police to nab him, as his supporters had declared war against the police.

Almost at the same time, authorities in East Java detained Julianto Eka Putra for allegedly harassing and raping at least 15 girls at a school he founded to help…

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Former Yakima bishop reprimanded by pope for ‘mistakes’

YAKIMA (WA)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

July 18, 2022

By The Pillar

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News: ‘Vos estis lux mundi’

The Vatican has issued a formal reprimand to the former bishop of the Diocese of Yakima, Washington, according to media reports confirmed to The Pillar by diocesan officials. 

Bishop Carlos Sevilla, SJ, was formally reprimanded by the Vatican over his handling of allegations of clerical sexual abuse in the eastern Washington diocese. Sevilla led the Yakima diocese from 1996 until his retirement in 2011, when he was succeeded by Bishop Joseph Tyson. 

The rebuke was first reported Sunday by the Yakima Herald-Republic. According to the newspaper, an investigation was conducted last year into Sevilla’s handling of cases of clerical abuse and misconduct, and into allegations that diocesan employees were subject to retaliation for raising concerns about the handling of allegations. 

The investigation into Sevilla was carried out by Archbishop Paul Etienne, who became Archbishop of Seattle, the provincial metropolitan see, in September 2019.

The Herald-Republic reported that…

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Gabriel Byrne has ‘not completely healed’ from growing up in Dublin

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

July 18, 2022

By Alison O' Reilly

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Actor Gabriel Byrne has said he has “not completely healed “ from growing up in Dublin despite leaving Ireland as a young man.

The Hollywood star, 72, added that he is still coming to terms with sexual abuse, a repressive Ireland and a tough working-class background.

The father-of-three said: “They [the Church] dealt in fear and humiliation. Some of that goes deep inside you and takes a long time to get rid of – the fear of the world, the uncertainty of life and your place with it.”

Read more: Gabriel Byrne’s hands to be immortalised outside Gaiety Theatre among the greats

Born in 1950 in Walkinstown, Co Dublin, the performer is best known for his role in The Usual Suspects. In 2010, he revealed had been sexually abused by a Catholic priest as a child, and then by another cleric in the seminary he attended in…

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Florida pastor arrested for allegedly masturbating outside Starbucks

KISSIMMEE (FL)
New York Post

June 30, 2022

By Emily Crane

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A Florida pastor has been arrested for exposing himself and masturbating outside a Starbucks, authorities said.

Enginio Dali Muniz-Colon, 39, was taken into custody Monday and charged with exposure of sexual organs.

The Osceola County Sheriff’s Office said Muniz-Colon is a pastor in Kissimmee and teaches online ministry classes.

Authorities had been investigating ever since they received a report of a man masturbating on a patio outside the Starbucks on May 9.

Deputies said they eventually identified Muniz-Colon as the suspect and determined he’d previously been charged over a similar incident at the same Starbucks.

Authorities didn’t provide any further details about the pastor’s prior arrest.

Muniz-Colon was booked into the Osceola County Jail on a $1,000 bond.

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Ahead of papal visit, Canadian bishops begin payouts to Indigenous communities

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 19, 2022

By Elise Ann Allen

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With Pope Francis’s visit to Canada just days away, the country’s bishops have announced that a special fund to support healing and reconciliation efforts with Indigenous communities has begun accepting proposals.

The Indigenous Reconciliation Fund was established in 2022 to support and advance healing and reconciliation initiatives with Indigenous communities following a pledge to do so by the Canadian bishops last year.

In September 2021, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) announced a $30 million financial pledge over the next five years to support projects aimed at healing and reconciliation given the Catholic Church’s historic role in the abuse of Indigenous children at residential schools.

A government-launched and funded initiative, the residential school system in Canada for over a century attempted to assimilate Indigenous communities to Canadian society by forcibly removing children from their families and sending them to schools where they were often punished for speaking their native…

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Pope Francis previews a ‘penitential’ pilgrimage to Canada’s Indigenous peoples

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 18, 2022

By Inés San Martín

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Seven days before he’s set to depart for what he called a “penitential” pilgrimage to Canada, Pope Francis set the tone for the journey during his Sunday Angelus. He said he will apologize, again, to Indigenous groups for abuses inflicted by the Catholic Church.

Assuming Francis does go, it will mark his first outing since troubles with his right knee forced him to cancel a series of commitments, including a trip to South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo earlier this month.

The pope began his remarks by acknowledging that he would depart Rome July 24, “God willing.”

“Dear brothers and sisters of Canada, as you know I will come among you, above all, in the name of Jesus to meet and embrace the Indigenous populations,” Francis said.

“Unfortunately, in Canada, many Christians, including some members of religious institutions, contributed to policies of cultural assimilation that, in the past,…

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Australian cardinal, archdiocese sued in alleged choirboy abuse case

(AUSTRALIA)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

July 19, 2022

By Catholic News Service

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Cardinal George Pell and the Archdiocese of Melbourne are sued by the father of a choirboy he was accused of molesting

Australian Cardinal George Pell and the Archdiocese of Melbourne are being sued by the father of a choirboy that the former Vatican official was accused of molesting, resulting in his imprisonment in 2018.

The conviction of the former Vatican official was reversed on appeal to Australia’s High Court, which found the trial jury had failed to give proper weight to witness testimony.

Cardinal Pell, the former prefect of the Vatican’s Secretariat of the Economy, was found guilty in 2018 by an Australian jury in late 2018 of molesting two choirboys in 1996 while archbishop of Melbourne. Cardinal Pell had maintained his innocence.

The cardinal’s appeal of the verdict argued that there was not enough evidence to convict him. He was released after 405 days in prison.

One of the…

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It’s past time for the Vatican to investigate these two Texas bishops

AUSTIN (TX)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

July 13, 2022

By Michael Sean Winters

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“Houston, we have a problem.” Tom Hanks’ memorable line in the movie “Apollo 13,” about the ill-fated space mission that almost ended in disaster, seems like an appropriate starting point to consider the ecclesiastical situation in the great state of Texas.

Last week, my colleague Brian Fraga reported on Fort Worth Bishop Michael Olson’s decision to sack the head of Catholic Charities in his diocese. [Full disclosure: I was in seminary with Olson many years ago.] Fraga reported:

Olson turned down NCR’s request for an interview through a diocesan spokesman, who provided a copy of a letter that the bishop sent to Plumlee. Dated April 4, Olson’s letter accused Plumlee of “obstinate defiance” and refusing to recognize the bishop’s responsibility to “teach the faith and to maintain the Catholic integrity” of the agency’s mission.

Elsewhere in the letter, Olson writes: “I also inquired if you understood that what…

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Alleged sex offender resigns in Worcester, but critic says it’s not enough

WORCESTER (MA)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 19, 2022

By John Lavenburg

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Following a diocesan investigation into allegations that for years he coerced vulnerable women into sex, the head of a parish soup kitchen in the Diocese of Worcester in Massachusetts has resigned amid complaints from at least one accuser that the diocese itself needs to take greater responsibility.

The investigation into allegations against William “Billy” Riley, former head of the St. John’s Catholic Church food program, began in mid-March. The final report was published on July 14, one day after Riley resigned from his post.

In a statement accompanying the publication of the report, the diocese doesn’t comment on Riley other than to say he resigned, and because the 72-page report is heavily redacted it’s unclear what the findings were. There are three separate complaints against Riley in the report that are almost completely redacted.

“You are allowing a perpetrator to resign and redacting all findings … taking no ownership or…

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Vatican imposes new investment policy amid financial scandal

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 18, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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The Vatican has centralized and overhauled its investment strategy after a botched deal lost tens of millions of euros, imposing a policy that prohibits investments in products such as pornography and weapons and prioritizes prudent investing in industries that promote the common good.

The new policy announced Tuesday by the Secretariat for the Economy bans speculative investments, short selling and investing in highly leveraged or complex financial products or in countries vulnerable to money laundering and terrorist financing.

Vatican offices have one year to come up with a divestment strategy if any of their investments fall under prohibited categories.

The policy follows a decade of efforts, first by Pope Benedict XVI and then Pope Francis, to try to clean up the Vatican’s murky finances and its reputation as an off-shore tax haven with little or no expertise, oversight or accountability guiding investment decisions.

The Vatican’s less-than-professional financial practices attracted a…

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July 19, 2022

Father James Jackson arrested in Kansas

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 18, 2022

By Joe Bukuras

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[Via Catholic World Report]

Father James Jackson, A Rhode Island priest who was arrested on federal and state child pornography charges in October last year, has been arrested in Kansas for allegedly violating the conditions of his release.

A court document from U.S District Court for Kansas in Kansas City shows that Jackson was arrested on Friday, July 15. Danielle Thomas, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Kansas said that he was arrested in Kansas for allegedly violating the terms of his release. He is being transported to the U.S. District Court of Rhode Island to face charges there, she said.

Thomas added that he is not being charged in Kansas. She declined further comment.

Jackson, a member of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, was the former pastor of St. Mary’s Church in Providence. He was arrested on Oct. 30 by the Rhode Island State Police after…

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What do the German synodal way’s documents actually say?

BONN (GERMANY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

July 18, 2022

By Luke Coppen

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Participants in Germany’s controversial “synodal way” will gather in Frankfurt in early September for the initiative’s next plenary session.

The meeting follows one in February that saw votes in favor of draft texts endorsing women priests, married priests, same-sex blessings, and the revision of the Catechism of the Catholic Church on sexuality.

The “synodal way” is a consultative process — its decisions do not make policy change in Germany, but, given the participation of bishops in the process, they are seen as setting a path forward for the Church in Germany.

At the fourth synodal assembly – as the event in September is known – some texts will be presented for a first reading, and then further revision, and others for a second reading and adoption as resolutions of the synodal way. 

But what do the welter of texts being considered by synodal way members actually say? Take a look.

The…

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Craig Harrison settles lawsuit against Roman Catholic Bishop of Fresno

FRESNO (CA)
Bakersfield Californian (Bakersfield.com)

July 18, 2022

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Former monsignor Craig Harrison settled a lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Bishop of Fresno and its former spokeswoman after accusing them of defamation. The case was dismissed Monday, according to the docket for the California 5th District Court of Appeal.

A Fresno County judge had first dismissed the lawsuit against the diocese and former spokeswoman Teresa Dominguez in May 2021 after Harrison claimed Dominguez’s comments during a May 2019 interview with KQED in which she talked about Harrison’s alleged victim of abuse were defamatory. Harrison then appealed the ruling, and the docket shows a notice of a settlement filed last month.

Harrison’s attorney filed a dismissal, and that request was granted Monday. The docket notes the case is “complete.”

Attorneys for both Harrison and the defendants did not return a request for comment Monday.

Harrison has denied any wrongdoing.

The diocese had argued Dominguez’s speech was protected by the First…

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Catholic bishops acknowledge concerns about power and sexual abuse

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

July 19, 2022

By Ruth Gledhill

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“The reality of warfare, hostility towards refugees and environmental recklessness are among the destructive forces at work in our world.”

Concerns about how power is exercised in the Catholic Church as well as “the devastating impact of clerical sexual abuse on survivors and within the wider Church” have been acknowledged by the Catholic bishops of England and Wales.

In a reflection on the national synthesis document which collates the submissions of parishes and dioceses, the bishops say: “The voices of those who feel marginalised or unwelcome because of their marital situation, sexual orientation or gender identity have been raised and heard sincerely. Equally, others who feel excluded from the life of the Church, or identify as being on the peripheries, have not been forgotten in our synodal process of encounter.”

The document, titled “Seeking Our Hearts’ Desire”, will with the synthesis go to the European continental synodal gathering planned next March and…

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Court approves sale of 43 Catholic church properties to settle abuse victims claims

ST. JOHN'S (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

July 18, 2022

By Heather Gillis

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All remaining churches, halls and rectories on southern Avalon, Burin Peninsula to be sold

The Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador has approved the sale of 43 properties belonging to the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of St. John’s, including 13 churches, as dozens more church property sales loom across eastern Newfoundland.

The move will reshape the landscape for Catholics in the St. John’s area and beyond as the church — which has been held liable for sexual and physical abuse at the Mount Cashel orphanage — raises money to settle victim claims from the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s. 

Information about the sales came Monday as Ernst & Young, the court-appointed monitor, presented a report to the court about the sale-by-tender process which saw bids for the properties submitted in early June.

An order from the court in bankruptcy and insolvency proceedings posted on Ernst & Young’s website sheds light on…

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July 18, 2022

The islands didn’t escape the church’s legacy of sexual abuse

(FIJI)
Stuff [Wellington, New Zealand]

July 17, 2022

By Steve Kilgallon

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The Marist Brothers and Fathers have educated prime ministers, judges, cardinals and All Blacks at their prestigious Catholic high schools. But their record of sexual abuse is horrific. Worse still was their handling of the abuse when it was exposed. In this series, The Secret History, Steve Kilgallon investigates the power, abuse and cover-ups at the heart of two highly-influential and wealthy religious groups.

This is Part 7. The remaining chapters will be published in the coming weeks.

Warning: This story may be upsetting to some.

When Bertrand Hodgkins first arrived in Fiji in March 1934 aboard the SS Monterey, he was a 21-year-old so callow he turned up without a passport and had to rely on a fellow Marist Brother to negotiate his safe landing.

While he spent 1945 to 1960 back in New Zealand, he re-established himself on his return to Fiji. He loved diving, fishing, surfing, and eschewed…

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Catholic dioceses failed in past to raise money promised to survivors. Will they now?

OTTAWA (CANADA)
The Canadian Press [Toronto, Canada]

July 18, 2022

By Stephanie Taylor

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[Via Lethbridge News]

When 48 Catholic church entities signed on to fundraise $25 million for survivors under the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement, it was spelled out they would do so through their “best efforts.”

Ken Young puts it another way. 

“It was a weasel clause,” the former Manitoba regional chief of the Assembly of First Nations said in a recent interview. 

“And they used it.”

In total, that fundraising campaign raised less than $4 million. It made up one piece of the compensation package Catholic entities agreed to pay under the settlement struck in 2006 with Ottawa, former students and Indigenous leaders.

Nine years later, a Saskatchewan judge ruled that the church bodies — who had sought to relieve themselves of their remaining obligations — could indeed walk away. 

“They said, ‘We used our best efforts and we failed,’” recalled Young, who is himself a survivor of residential schools.

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Vatican confirms ban on German lay group linked to Medjugorje

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 18, 2022

By Elise Ann Allen

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Last week the Vatican backed the decision made in fall 2021 by Bishop Felix Genn of Münster to dissolve a lay association in his diocese, whose foundations are tied to the Marian apparitions in Medjugorje, and which was charged with alleged spiritual abuse.

Recognized in 2004 by the Diocese of Münster as a private association of believers under diocesan law, the “Totus Tuus New Evangelization” group has roots going back to the 1980s and was founded by a German couple named Leon and Birgit Dolenec after the two said they experienced conversions in Medjugorje.

After visiting Medjugorje in the late 1980s, the Dolenecs formed prayer groups in Germany, and since 1994, they have organized several pilgrimages to Medjugorje each year with the aim of engaging young people in evangelization, and specifically, carrying forward the messages of Our Lady of Medjugorje.

The Marian apparitions in Medjugorje, which have not been approved…

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Rev. Marian Babjak and Christ Our Savior Parish Struthers

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
Diocese of Youngstown OH

July 17, 2022

By Justin Huyck

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The Diocese of Youngstown today announces the findings of an independent investigation concerning a November 2021 allegation against Father Marian Babjak.

In November 2021, the Diocese of Youngstown received an allegation against Father Marian Babjak of inappropriate physical contact with a minor who is now an adult. Father Babjak has served as pastor of Christ Our Savior Parish in Struthers since August 2020 and previously served as Associate Pastor at St. Paul in North Canton and St. Charles Borromeo in Boardman, as well as pastoral assignments before 2016 in Slovakia. He was ordained in 1995.

In accordance with the Diocese’s Safe Environment Policy for the Protection of Children and Vulnerable Adults and the policies of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, Father Babjak was immediately placed on Administrative Leave by the Most Rev. David J. Bonnar, Bishop of Youngstown to allow for a thorough and independent investigation, without presuming…

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Youngstown diocese releases findings in sex abuse investigation of Struthers priest

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
Mahoning Matters [Boardman OH]

July 18, 2022

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A Youngstown Catholic Diocese oversight board determined though a Struthers priest had “inappropriate physical contact” with a minor, it “did not rise to the level of sexual abuse.”

The diocese announced Sunday in a news release that board’s decision, following an independent third-party investigation into Father Marian Babjak, most recently of Christ Our Savior Parish in Struthers, who was accused in November 2021 of sexually abusing a child.

That victim is now an adult, according to the diocese.

Babjak was placed on leave, according to the news release “to allow for a thorough and independent investigation, without presuming guilt or innocence,” the release states.

The diocese’s investigators interviewed all the subjects in the case, notified local authorities and also worked with Babjak’s accuser to review that person’s legal options, according to the release.

The Diocesan Review Board — comprised of medical and legal professionals trained for child sex abuse cases,…

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Robert Fontana, director of Catholic Life Ministries of Seattle, speaks during a recent marriage enrichment workshop at a Catholic parish in Palm Desert, Calif. Courtesy photo.

Robert Fontana raised concerns about abuse during time in Yakima

YAKIMA (WA)
Yakima Herald-Republic [Yakima WA]

July 17, 2022

By Joel Donofrio

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[Photo above: Robert Fontana, director of Catholic Life Ministries of Seattle, speaks during a recent marriage enrichment workshop at a Catholic parish in Palm Desert, Calif. Courtesy photo.]

Robert Fontana worked for the Diocese of Yakima from 1991 through 2005, beginning as the director of ministry formation and deacon formation. Later his job evolved into the director of evangelization, and he also coordinated the diocesan pastoral council.

Throughout his employment with the diocese, Fontana also worked part-time for Catholic Life Ministries, supported by Yakima bishops Francis George and Carlos Sevilla.

According to its website, Catholic Life Ministries is an independent nonprofit with a focus on awakening faith, strengthening marriages and families, and building Christian community. It runs educational programs, retreats and other events for men, women and young people.

“I had a symbiotic relationship, if you will — I couldn’t stay working for the diocese without Catholic…

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Former Holy Family Parish worker recalls aftermath of finding photos on priest’s printer

YAKIMA (WA)
Yakima Herald-Republic [Yakima WA]

July 17, 2022

By Joel Donofrio

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Nearly 20 years of investigations, allegations and acrimony between lay employees, priests and Catholic Church officials — from Yakima all the way to the Vatican — began with a simple problem: A pastor’s computer wouldn’t connect to the printer.

The events started by a request for computer help in September 2003 would ultimately have a huge impact on the life of Yakima’s Frank Murray — and many others in the Yakima Diocese. And the computer checkup almost didn’t happen.

“The day I found the pictures on (Father Darell Mitchell’s) computer, I was set to go to Seattle — but my car broke down,” Murray said during a June 10 interview with the Yakima Herald-Republic. “Instead, that morning I went in to talk to Father Darell and he asked me to go to his home and check his computer, because he hadn’t been able to print anything.

“The cable from the…

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July 17, 2022

Hombre abusado sexualmente por sacerdote católico en Argentina se defiende

(ARGENTINA)
Orato [Wilmington, DE]

July 17, 2022

By Juan Martinez

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En la mesa de un pequeño bar hablé durante tres horas con [el periodista]. No miré a mi alrededor ni vi ni escuché a otras personas. Mi mundo quedó reducido a esa mesa donde saqué a la luz una historia que escondí durante más de 30 años. Por primera vez dije en voz alta y en público que Walter Avanzini abusó sexualmente de mí.

CORDOBA, Argentina ꟷ Es un sábado distinto a todos los demás. Finalmente, después de mucho tiempo, me decidí a contarles a mis hijos que fui abusado por un sacerdote cuando era adolescente.

Me acerque a la habitación de mi hijo pablo, él está sentado en su escritorio, frente a su computadora. Nos rodean pósters de Talleres, el equipo del que somos hinchas. Me siento en la cama y, sin más preámbulos, suelto todo: “¿Viste lo que le pasó a la amiga de Agus? Lo entiendo porque a…

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The Catholic Church should scrap the requirement for priestly celibacy

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Economist [London, UK]

July 14, 2022

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Let priests wed

The Pope is not in the habit of taking advice from newspapers. After all, the Roman Catholic Church takes instruction from the creator of the universe. Nonetheless, Pope Francis has opened up a process whereby all 1.4bn Catholics can have a say about the future of the faith. If they want to reduce the scourge of sexual abuse by priests, they should demand an end to the rule requiring priestly celibacy.

Were this just a theological question, The Economist would take no view. But it is not. In parish after parish, school after school, diocese after diocese, Catholic priests have abused children. America, Australia, France, Germany and Ireland, among others, have undertaken reckonings. The number of victims in France alone was estimated at 216,000 in the 70 years to 2020. Now countries such as Poland, Portugal and Spain are investigating, too. Catholic sex abuse involves not only bad apples, but…

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