News Archive

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.

February 9, 2015

Convicted ex-Christian Brother abuser Ted Dowlan faces ‘significant’ jail time

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 9, 2015

Mark Russell
Court Reporter for The Age

A former Christian Brother who was part of a notorious paedophile ring involving the clergy should be returned to jail for a “significant” period of time, a court has heard.

Ted Dowlan found himself in a Melbourne courtroom this month, nearly 20 years since his first appearance in a dock, after more of his victims came forward during the state’s parliamentary inquiry into child sex abuse last year.

Dowlan, who changed his name by deed poll to Bales in 2011, has pleaded guilty to 33 counts of indecently assaulting boys under the age of 16 and one count of gross indecency between 1971 and 1986 involving 20 victims.

Crown prosecutor Brett Sonnet told the County Court on Monday that Dowlan’s offending had involved him gratifying his own lust at the expense of his students’ welfare and he deserved a “significant” jail sentence.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Five New Ideas On How To Select Bishops

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

They are proposed by an Australian theologian and economist, in an open letter to Pope Francis. A simple and concrete contribution to the reform of the curia that is in the works

by Sandro Magister

ROME, February 9, 2015 – For three days, beginning today, the nine cardinals of the council that assists the pope in the governance of the universal Church will draw an assessment of the work done so far in the reform of the curia.

And on February 12 and 13, they will submit their proposals for the examination of the whole college of cardinals, gathered in consistory.

The consistory will be secret, but in any case it will not produce any conclusion. Pope Francis himself is taking his time and has pushed back all practical decisions until at least 2016.

The proposals that have been leaked to this point appear, in fact, to be very far from constituting an organic project. They include, for example, the consolidation of a certain number of curial officials in two new congregations, one for justice and peace and another for the family and laity, each of them subdivided into five departments, but there is no agreement on how they could actually function.

And the same uncertainty also applies to a few key existing dicasteries, like the secretariat of state, the congregation for the doctrine of the faith, and the congregation for bishops.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Day 6: Abuse victim loses scholarship

AUSTRALIA
The Australian Jewish News

A VICTIM has told the Royal Commission that he lost his Yeshivah scholarship and was effectively kicked out of the school when he told Rabbi Avrohom Glick (pictured) that he was sexually abused by David Cyprys.

The victim, who is not from Melbourne and is known as AVR to protect his identity, was raped by Cyprys five times in the early 1990s.

He said that he didn’t reveal his abuse to his mother because she had leukaemia at the time he was very unwell.

“I was embarrassed.

“My mum was sick and alone and interstate.

“I was worried about her.”

But when he was struggling to cope one day a friend found him crying in the playground.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Feldman out on a limb

AUSTRALIA
J-Wire

February 9, 2015 by J-Wire News Service

The Executive Council of Australian Jewry had distanced the community from Rabbi Yosef Feldman, the spiritual head of the Southern Sydney Synagogue who has completed giving evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing in Melbourne.

In a statement released by the ECAJ, President Robert Goot and executive director Peter Wertheim say: “Rabbi Yossi Feldman’s reported statements to the Royal Commission have shocked and appalled his fellow rabbis, the Australian Jewish community and the wider community. Amongst his other objectionable comments, it is unacceptable for any religious leader to confess ignorance of basic law relating to the crime of child sexual abuse or to suggest that there are circumstances in which instances of such abuse should not be reported to the authorities. Nobody should take the law into their own hands, or be encouraged to do so.

Yossi Feldman’s statements are repugnant to Jewish values and to Judaism, which is centred on the sanctity and dignity of individual life, especially the life of a child.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Rabbi Yosef Feldman says media hype causes ‘fake’ abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

FEBRUARY 09, 2015

Pia Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

AN orthodox rabbi has argued media “hype” causes “fake victims” to make allegations of child sexual abuse, while admitting he feared people were making false allegations against his friend, David Cyprys, who was later convicted of serious child sex offences.

Rabbi Yosef Feldman, rabbinical administrator of Bondi’s Chabad Yeshiva centre, today told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he had expressed concern when he learnt in 2011 that Beth Dins in Sydney and Melbourne were planning to make public statements encouraging abuse victims to come forward.

“Too much hype causes miscarriages of justice,” he said. “I didn’t think it was the time and place for the rabbis to come out in the media with public statements.

“I think it’s bad for the Jews.”

Rabbi Feldman wrote a series of emails to other rabbis in 2011 — when abuse allegations involving Yeshivah College in Melbourne became public amid a police investigation — arguing Jews with information about child sex abuse allegations should see a rabbi rather than police.

He said today that he would “highly encourage” Australia to change its laws to allow rabbis to assess the veracity of child sex abuse complaints before encouraging victims to alert police.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Reformed paedophiles not a threat to society, rabbi tells royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN FEBRUARY 09, 2015

A RABBI has defended paedophiles, saying some should be left alone if they haven’t offended for decades.

In a stunning outburst to the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse, Rabbi Yosef Feldman said he didn’t agree that paedophiles who had repented and not reoffended risked jail time if they were prosecuted.

“Someone who’s done teshuva (repented), ending up in jail for many years, I didn’t think is a good thing,” he said.

“Obviously we’re terribly concerned about the victims.

“Is it just a situation where we punish someone for what they did 40 years ago even though they’ve changed totally?

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Senior Jewish leader says Yeshivah rabbis should resign over abuse cover-up

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Sunday 8 February 2015

A senior leader within Victoria’s Jewish community – who is also principal of one of the state’s top schools – has called for head rabbis within the orthodox Yeshivah community to resign.

Rabbi James Kennard made the comments as two of the most senior figures within the current Yeshivah administration, Don Wolf and Rabbi Avrohom Glick, prepare to face the royal commission into institutional responses into child sex abuse this week.

The hearings before Melbourne’s county court are placing the Orthodox Jewish Yeshivah centres and colleges in Sydney and Melbourne under scrutiny for the first time since the commission began its work in 2013.

Kennard, who is principal of Mount Scopus Memorial College, said child sex abuse had been covered up and ignored by senior Yeshivah leaders for too long, and that coming out to condemn the abuse and urge victims to go to police was no longer enough.

“While anyone who held a position of leadership in the Yeshivah community in the period when these terrible mistakes were made remains in such a position today, the community is not able to say that it has learnt and it has changed,” Kennard said.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Repentant child abusers should not have to be reported, rabbi says

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Monday 9 February 2015

A victim of child sex abuse should not necessarily go to police if the perpetrator has not offended for decades and the abuser has repented to God, a senior Jewish leader has told a royal commission.

Rabbi Yosef Feldman also said rabbinical organisations issuing statements to the media in support of abuse victims might prompt “fake victims” to go to police, and proven victims to exaggerate their stories.

The royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, before Melbourne’s county court, is investigating abuse within the Orthodox Yeshivah organisations and their communities in Sydney and Melbourne for the first time.

“There should be a lot more leniency on people who have shown that they haven’t offended in the last 20 years or decades, and they’ve had psychological analyses … and if they have done repentance,” Feldman said on Monday.

“Even for victims, knowing repentance is a big thing, they would understand how repentance is the main point. They should respect that specifically – if they [the perpetrators] have repented and if they have [paedophilic] tendencies, and don’t act on that.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Rabbi Yosef Feldman tells child abuse royal commission reformed paedophiles deserve leniency

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By court reporter Peta Carlyon and wires

Paedophiles who are no longer abusing children should not have to spend their lives feeling like the “scum of the Earth”, a senior rabbi has told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Rabbi Yosef Feldman, a leader within the Sydney Yeshivah community, told the inquiry he was friends with convicted child abuser Daniel Hayman when he was arrested and charged in 2011.

He said he did not think it was fair that a member of the community should go to jail for an historical case of child abuse if they had already repented and received treatment.

“I would be asking for more leniency on people who have shown that they haven’t offended in the last 20 years or decades ago, and have psychological analyses that this is the case,” Rabbi Feldman said.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Yeshivah abuse victim says scholarship was removed after he reported rape

AUSTRALA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Monday 9 February 2015

A child sex abuse victim who was repeatedly raped by a staff member of an Orthodox Jewish school said he was stripped of his scholarship when he told the principal what happened.

The victim, identified only as AVR, said a security guard at the Yeshivah centre and college in Melbourne, David Cyprys, raped him multiple times.

Cyprys was convicted of those offences in 2013, and is in jail.

AVR told the royal commission into institutional responses to child sex abuse that he had been living in Queensland when his mother fell ill with leukaemia, and in 1990 he was sent to school at the Yeshiva college in Melbourne.

It was there that Cyprys began abusing him.

“I did not know much about sexual matters,” AVR said, adding that he had no father and that Cyprys was the only father figure he knew.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Rabbi calls for leniency for paedophiles

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A senior rabbi believes the justice system should be more lenient towards paedophiles who have stopped offending so that those who repent don’t feel like ‘scum’ forever.

Paedophiles who are no longer abusing children should not have to spend their lives feeling like the ‘scum of the earth’, Rabbi Yosef Feldman told the royal commission into child sex abuse on Monday.

‘I would be asking for more leniency on people who have shown that they haven’t offended in the last 20 years or decades ago, and have psychological analyses that this is the case,’ Rabbi Feldman said.

‘Once someone is not a pedophile any more or is showing (he) is not acting wrongly any more, that should be considered in a very strong way.’

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Catholic church must be on the side of the right — and the wronged

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sunday Times

Joseph Toal Published: 8 February 2015

LAST September, Pope Francis named Monsignor Robert Oliver as the new secretary of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. The commission — whose members include survivors of clerical sexual abuse; mental health professionals; and experts in civil and church law — is tasked with devising a pastoral approach to helping victims and preventing abuse.

The Pope established the commission to advise him directly and to propose initiatives to encourage local responsibility within the church, highlighting best practice from around the world and developing programmes of training for the whole church in this important area.

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Molestation: Judicial Custody for Pastor

INDIA
New indian Express

THRISSUR:The 35-year-old pastor who was arrested on Saturday night on charges of sexually abusing two minor girls on their house premises in Peechi, was remanded in judicial custody on Sunday. The priest, Sanal K James, a native of Kottayam, was booked under relevant sections of Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act and Section 376 of IPC (Punishment for rape).

According to police, Sanal had been sexually abusing the two minors studying in the 7th standard, for quite sometime. The sexual abuse came to light after one of the girls confided in her teacher during a student counselling programme at school. The headmaster then informed the police, who later arrested Sanal from his quarters while he was trying to flee from the spot.

The police said he used to visit the Peechi-Payakandam migrant colony and conduct religious programmes for around 12 families in the colony. Since he was a respected person in the area, people had given him the liberty to visit the houses anytime he wanted even in the absence of elders. Taking advantage of this freedom, he betrayed the trust and misused his position of a pastor by sexually abusing two girls and then threatening them with dire consequences if the matter was revealed to anyone.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Washington Man Arrested For Child Molesting

INDIANA
WBIW

Updated February 9, 2015

(WASHINGTON) – A Washington man was arrested after he allegedly abused a boy for six years.
55-year-old Armando Bruno-Morales on three felony counts of child molesting.

According to a probable cause affidavit, police began investigating the allegations after the victim contacted police. Police say there is only one victim.

The victim says the abuse began in 1008 when he was 8-years-old. The victim told police Bruno was a pastor at the Hispanic Church on West Main Street where the family attended. Bruno also had lived with the family briefly and later stayed overnight as a guest. It was during that time the alleged sexual assaults happened.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Priest sentenced 6 years for sexual abuse

SOUTH AFRICA
Jacaranda FM

09 February 2015 at 09:44 by Sapa – A German court has sentenced paedophile and former Randburg priest Georg Kerkhoff to six years in jail for more than 20 cases of sexual abuse of children, The New Age reported on Monday.

Kerkhoff, 56, was sentenced by the Krefeld district court on Friday.

He was found guilty of eight cases of sexual abuse of children under his protection, 13 cases of sexual abuse of children and four cases of severe sexual abuse of children, the newspaper reported.

The 56-year-old reportedly committed the crimes in Krefeld and Nettetal, Germany, from 2001 to 2006.

The Saturday Star reported in January that Kerkhoff used alcohol, drugs, sex toys and a parish sauna while molesting boys in Germany. When the allegations surfaced, the Catholic diocese in Germany sent him to South Africa, where he was later accused of abusing five children at a First Communion camp in Brits, in 2008.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Victims to sue church

SOUTH AFRICA
The New Age

Itumeleng Mafisa

The South African families of the victims of paedophile priest Georg Kerkhoff, 56, are preparing to seek compensation from the church after he was sentenced to six years imprisonment for sexual offences against children by a German court.

The Krefeld district court sentenced the former Randburg priest on Friday to six years in prison for eight cases of sexual abuse of children under his protection, 13 cases of sexual abuse of children and four cases of severe sexual abuse of children.

His conviction and sentencing came after he was extradited from South Africa where he faced similar charges, to face more than 20 charges in Germany his home country.

The father of a Johannesburg teenager, who claims he was abused by Kerkhoff during a church camp in 2008, said a German children’s rights group was representing some of the victims, including his son, to get compensation from the Catholic Church.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Accused priest solicits adverts for religious magazine

MALTA
Malta Today

Tim Diacono 9 February 2015

Fr Charles Fenech, the Dominican friar charged with sexually assaulting a mentally unstable patient, is soliciting people for adverts in the February issue of a religious magazine.

The magazine in question, Xandar il-Kelma, is published by the Maltese Dominican Province. An e-mail written by Fenech and seen by MaltaToday reads: “I am forwarding to you this attachment for advertising in a special edition of XK Magazine, Malta’s No 1 religious magazine distributed in households. Can you please help us by confirming an advert. Thanks, Fr. Charles Fenech OP.”

The attachment is a poster of Pope Francis, with the words Xandar il-Kelma: The No. 1 Religious Magazine in Malta: 70,000 copies’ superimposed over it.

The poster includes the advertising rates and a message from Fenech, editor-in-chief of the magazine.

“Outside Western Europe, a lot of people still believe in God,” Fenech’s message reads. “Here, we tend to regard religion as passé – something they did centuries ago, when unenlightened Europeans took the advice of burning bushes. But out beyond the EU, millions of people stubbornly continue to put their faith in the Almighty. The West may enjoy comparative power and wealth, but our attachment to secular liberalism is a minority opinion”.

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February 8, 2015

Teacher Directive Prompts Vigil at San Francisco Cathedral

CALIFORNIA
ABC News

SAN FRANCISCO — Feb 6, 2015

By LISA LEFF Associated Press

About 100 people attended a vigil outside the Roman Catholic cathedral in San Francisco on Friday to protest the local archbishop’s move to require teachers at four Catholic high schools to lead their public lives inside the classroom and out in accordance with church teachings on homosexuality, birth control and other hot-button issues.

The protest, which also included songs and prayers, came as Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone was holding mass for teachers from parochial schools throughout the three-county Archdiocese of San Francisco and then meeting with high school teachers to answer questions about changes he wants to make to their faculty handbook and employment contract.

“I chose to send my children to Catholic schools because I wanted their education to be grounded in love, compassion, and a strong sense of social justice,” said Peggy O’Grady, a parent at Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory in San Francisco. “This effort by the archbishop will do the opposite, and would run counter to all I believe and value in a Catholic education.”

Cordileone this week presented teachers at the four high schools owned by the archdiocese with a detailed statement of faith affirming that Catholic school employees “are expected to arrange and conduct their lives so as not to visibly contradict, undermine or deny” church doctrine on matters related to sexuality, marriage and human reproduction.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Grooming and Abuse – Sexual and Liturgical

UNITED STATES
Waiting for Godot to Leave

Kevin O’Brien

It was one of the worst Masses I’ve ever attended. It was almost sacrilegious.

To begin with, the tabernacle was off to the side, and in front of it were the backs of several chairs; for the focus on this church is not Jesus, but the priest. The priest, who looked resplendent in his green gown, was clearly on stage, clearly performing. He would joke with the deacon and the altar boys. While preparing for the Eucharist, for example (during the “hymn for preparation”), he was ribbing an altar boy, who was carrying a paten, making the kid smile broadly and laugh, and making me sick to my stomach.

When I got there, before the Mass began, I knelt on the floor to pray (for the pews had no kneelers). The church was packed with middle-aged to elderly people who were all talking very loudly to one another, all at once. A giddy carnival atmosphere prevailed. It was a party without the little cocktail wieners – right there, in a Catholic church, in front of the hidden (but present) Blessed Sacrament. People were laughing and talking at the top of their lungs and I was tempted to stand up and shout in my loudest voice, CAN’T YOU PEOPLE SHUT UP?

Then the band started. The band consisted of a woman singing very loudly in a stylistic cross between Broadway show tunes and full-fledged opera, with a very cultivated (and ridiculous) vibrato that she apparently thought made her sound sincere. The instrument that dominated was a cheesy 1970’s electric organ played in a very schmaltzy and annoying manner, with the volume turned up to 11. The band was right beside the altar, very much a part of the show. …

Meanwhile, a blogger on the internet is busy analyzing a case of sexual abuse and institutional failure in the Episcopalian community.

Joelle Casteix at the Worth Adversary writes (my emphasis) …

In 2003, Headmaster Nick Stoneman had a choice.

His drama teacher had been found with child pornography on a school computer. This same teacher—Lynn Seibel—had admitted to being complicit in “Naked Dance Parties” with male students in school bathrooms. Seibel was also rumored to have conducted a special AP (Advanced Placement) class in penis enlargement. What is the headmaster of one of the nation’s most elite boarding / day schools to do?

Shattuck-St. Mary’s (SSM) in Faribault, Minnesota is considered a “feeder school” for the National Hockey league. Their alumni list is a “who’s who” of the professional sport. Tuition is $29,000 a year for the day students and $43,000 for students who live at the school. There’s a lot at stake. Plus, Stoneman had no idea how many students had been “peeked at,” groomed, or molested by Seibel. He also had no idea if Seibel had created pornographic images of any of SSM’s students. …

What’s the connection between these two stories, the annoying Mass I went to on Saturday and the scandal at the Minnesota prep school?

I think there are several connections.

* When an institution does not do what it is supposed to do, it can easily get hijacked by scoundrels who use it for their own selfish purposes, whether those purposes include molesting young people, creating a personality cult, making money, etc.

* Lay Catholics have become, for the most part, “sheep without a shepherd”. While our popes have been preaching with courage and vigor, our bishops have in effect abdicated, and many of our pastors are feeding upon the flock instead of guarding it. In this way we are similar to adolescents. Teen aged boys at a boarding school can either be trained, and their energies channeled, so that they learn and are well formed and begin to mature, or they can be seduced into “naked dance parties” in the bathroom with their drama teacher. In the same way, adult parishioners can either be taught to be respectful and to be in awe of a God that they should take seriously, partaking of a Faith they should mature in, or they can be allowed to become chatty and petty and self-centered and shallow, growing queer over a man in glowing green vestments that, if he were not a priest, they shouldn’t even consider buying a used car from. Human nature cuts both ways, and people are shaped into the molds their shapers mold for them in. Allow naked dance parties in the bathroom at your boarding school, and you will get them. Allow the Mass to become a contrived and frivolous show, and you’ll get it.

* But these things don’t arise merely if they’re simply allowed or tolerated. Naked dance parties with your teachers don’t spring up on their own, and suburban parishes do not automatically slide toward the kind of garish and gaudy circle-jerk sessions that I saw on Saturday. Yes, these things will happen if you allow them to happen, and if you don’t take pains to prevent them or correct them – but they typically happen after a long process of grooming. Things get this bad deliberately, when bad people in positions of authority seduce and lead astray. I would suspect it took the drama teacher at Shattuck-St. Mary’s a long time to get his victims to a point where they would get naked for him in the bathroom. He must have put a lot of effort and manipulative skill into that. Grooming is not easy! And the kind of show the priest I saw on Saturday presided over, a show centered on him and his need for attention and adoration – this is something these parishioners likewise had to be groomed for, over the long haul. And so, while there’s always a tendency for these abuses to happen, there’s always some sort of abuser taking an active role to make them happen.

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“I will resist”: Burke affirms

FRANCE
Society of Saint Pius X

[VIDEO. Vatican : ce cardinal qui entend “résister” face au pape François.

Pour la première fois, le cardinal américain ultraconservateur Raymond Burke s’exprime devant une caméra. À la tête d’une fronde contre le pape François, ce fidèle de Benoît XVI résistera si l’évêque de Rome persistait dans sa voie d’ouverture. Une exclusivité de “13h15 le dimanche”. – France TV Info]

Some frank answers from Cardinal Burke during a French TV interview that will be broadcasted on Sunday, February 8th.

We present here some extracts of Cardinal Raymond Burke’s comments given during an interview conducted by Lionel Feuerstein, Karine Comazzi, Patrice Brugeres, Nicolas Berthelos and Claire Aubinais for the “13H15 le dimanche” episode of French Television channel, France2.

The complete interview will be broadcasted on Sunday, February 8 on FranceTV.info.

Cardinal Burke: I cannot accept that Communion can be given to a person in an irregular union because it is adultery. On the question of people of the same sex, this has nothing to do with marriage. This is an affliction suffered by some people whereby they are attracted against nature sexually to people of the same sex.

Question: If perchance the pope will persist in this direction, what will you do?
Cardinal Burke: I shall resist, I can do nothing else. There is no doubt that it is a difficult time; this is clear, this is clear.

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«Ils étaient comme mes enfants»

CANADA
Journal de Montreal

JOSÉE HAMELIN
Dimanche, 8 février 2015
MISE à JOUR Dimanche, 8 février 2015

SAINT-HYACINTHE | Un ancien frère mariste accusé d’attentat à la pudeur sur cinq garçons clame son innocence dans une entrevue exclusive accordée en attendant son procès.

Réjean Trudel, 71 ans, était le directeur adjoint du Patro Lokal, un centre d’hébergement dirigé par la communauté religieuse, qui accueillait des garçons de 12 à 17 ans ayant des problèmes familiaux.

Les présumées agressions se seraient produites de 1976 à 1982. Il a été arrêté en novembre après que cinq anciens pensionnaires eurent porté plainte contre lui pour des crimes sexuels.

Selon la requête visant à déposer un recours collectif contre les Frères maristes, il y aurait eu des caresses intimes, de la masturbation et de la fellation.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Former Que. priest accused of sexual assault says he’s innocent

CANADA
Toronto Sun

JOSEE HAMELIN, QMI AGENCY

FIRST POSTED: SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 08, 2015

SAINT-HYACINTHE, Que. – A former priest accused of forcibly fondling and engaging in oral sex with several boys between 1976 and 1982 says he did nothing wrong.

Rejean Trudel, 71, was a deputy director of Patro Lokal, a shelter for 12- to 17-year-old boys with family problems in Saint-Hyacinthe, a Quebec town about 60 km east of Montreal.

The shelter was run by the Marist Brothers, an offshoot of the Catholic Church dedicated to education. He was arrested in November after five former residents of the shelter filed complaints.

Now, he’s come forward to deny any wrongdoing.

“The young people in our care were like our own children,” he said.

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CA — Manhattan Beach priest accused of abuse – Victims respond

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by Joelle Casteix of Newport Beach, SNAP Western Regional Director, jcasteix@gmail.com, (949) 322-7434 cell

We were saddened to hear of the harm caused by Los Angeles priest, Fr. Nicholas Assi, who has been accused of “inappropriate conduct” by an adult woman at American Martyrs Parish in Manhattan Beach. We applaud this brave woman for reporting to law enforcement, because we understand how difficult it is to report abuse to the police.

We believe that the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is minimizing what happened by calling the alleged incident “inappropriate conduct.” We also hope that the Archdiocese will vigorously search for anyone who may have seen or suspected abuse by any cleric, including Fr. Assi.

————————————————-

From the parish bulletin of American Martyrs Church

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has given us the following statement to place in our bulletin:
Father Nicholas Assi served as an Associate Pastor from 2008 to 2014 at American Martyrs Catholic Church in Manhattan Beach. An accusation involving an adult was brought against him in 2014 and an investigation was initiated. Father Assi was placed on administrative leave pending the investigation of this matter. The investigation has been concluded and Father will be returning to ministry with an assignment at St. Basil’s parish as a priest in good standing. We are sorry for the painful experience of this matter and we ask you to keep all impacted in prayer.

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Philippines idiots Catholics & Migrante International missed biggest protest against Pope Francis – Pope of the Richest 1% of the Globe -NOT Pope of the Poor

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

The Migrante International is one of the largest Philippine groups that keep protesting American Imperialism and its power over the Philippine’s President BS Aquino and its corrupt government and they wrote an open letter to Pope Francis asking him, “Pope of the Poor, Fight for Us”. Below is its open letter proving how stupid and idiotic Filipinos are to believe in Pope Francis who is the very same Pope – who colludes with American imperialists – therefore he is the Pope of the Rich who oppresses the Filipino people. Migrante International should have used the visit of Pope Francis to protest US Imperialism and Vatican Imperialism – after all the Philippines (was under Spaniard and the Vatican Catholic Church oppression for over 400 years) and today the Philippines continue to be controlled by the Vatican Catholic Church and the Vatican Swiss Banks continue to hoard American and European Imperialists’ loot,the late President Marcos’ loot and President Aquino’s loot from the Philippine treasury, read our related article, Hidden Heist in the Holy See.

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Victims blast Cardinal O’Malley over priest’s suspension

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Sunday, Feb. 8

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com , davidgclohessy@gmail.com )

In suspending yet another credibly accused predator priest, Boston’s Cardinal O’Malley refuses to take two key steps. We’re appalled by his unwillingness to act responsibly about the child sex allegations against Fr. Thomas P. Gillespie.

[Boston archdiocese]

First, O’Malley refuses to urge anyone with information or suspicions about Fr. Gillespie to call police immediately. Instead, in his statement today, O’Malley does what hundreds of bishops have done for decades: he asks victims to call church officials, not law enforcement officials. He’s dead wrong. This is extraordinarily irresponsible. This is precisely the approach that has enabled more than 6,300 US priests to become proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesters and hurt more than 100,000 boys and girls.

Second, O’Malley refuses to say how long he and his staff have taken to suspend Fr. Gillespie. All O’Malley will say is that the abuse report was made “recently.” That could mean nine months, nine weeks or nine days ago. This is crucial information. O’Malley has repeatedly promised “openness and transparency” in pedophile priest cases, and citizens and Catholics deserve to know whether he acts quickly or slowly when kids are at risk.

More than any prelate on the planet, O’Malley claims he’s a ‘reformer’ on abuse. He’s the pope’s top advisor on the crisis. And he’s had tons of experience with the scandal. So if any Catholic official anywhere ought to get it right, it’s him. But his refusal to take these two simple steps shows just how recalcitrant the Catholic hierarchy’s most veteran abuse “fixer” is. And it shows that even now, one of the most powerful Catholic official on earth still tries to handle child sex abuse reports “in house” instead of getting those reports promptly into the hands of the independent professionals in law enforcement.

O’Malley should visit every parish where Fr. Gillispie ever worked, imploring anyone with information or suspicions about the predator priest to call law enforcement.

O’Malley can and should use pulpit announcements, church bulletins and parish websites to beg anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered Fr. Gillespie’s crimes to call police. He should send mailings to former church members and staff who may have spent time around Fr. Gillespie, urging them to do the same. He should get out from behind his desk, shove his public relations staff aside, and personally hold a news conference pleading with parishioners and the public to step forward if they might, in any way, be able to help police and prosecutors file charges against this cleric.

In short, O’Malley should stop acting like a cold-hearted CEO and start acting more like a compassionate shepherd.

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Tebartz-van Elst erhält Posten im Vatikan

DEUTSCHLAND
Zeit Online

Zurück nach Limburg darf er nicht mehr, jetzt arbeitet Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst in Rom. Der 55-Jährige hat ein Amt als Sekretär im Vatikan übernommen – neun Monate, nachdem er als Limburger Bischof abberufen wurde. Laut Medienberichten wurde Tebartz bereits im Dezember zum Delegaten im Päpstlichen Rat für die Neuevangelisierung ernannt.

Nach einem Skandal um die extrem hohen Kosten seines neuen Amtssitzes im Limburg hatte Tebartz im März vergangenen Jahres sein Amt verloren. Eine bischöfliche Prüfungskommission kam zu dem Ergebnis, dass er kirchliche Vorschriften umgangen und die Baukosten in die Höhe getrieben hatte. Die Staatsanwaltschaft in Limburg ermittelte nicht gegen den ehemaligen Bischof wegen Untreue.

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Tebartz-van Elst erhält Posten im Vatikan

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

[A Catholic news agency learned on Saturday from a reliable source that Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz van Elst, also known as the “Bling Bishop”, has been appointed a delegate to the Pontifical Council for the New Evangelization at the Vatican. The appointment letter was signed by Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin and was transmitted by Archbishop Nicola Eterovic, the pope’s ambassador to Germany.]

Der frühere Limburger Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst hat eine neue Aufgabe in Rom erhalten. Wie die Katholische Nachrichten-Agentur am Samstag aus sicherer Quelle im Vatikan erfuhr, wurde Tebartz-van Elst im Dezember 2014 zum Delegaten im Päpstlichen Rat für die Neuevangelisierung ernannt. Das Ernennungsschreiben wurde von Kardinalstaatssekretär Pietro Parolin unterzeichnet und vom Papstbotschafter in Deutschland, Erzbischof Nicola Eterovic, übermittelt.

Tebartz-van Elst ist im Päpstlichen Rat für die Katechese zuständig und hat in dieser Funktion Ende Januar ein Referat gehalten. Ernennungen im Rang eines Delegaten werden im Vatikan traditionell nicht einzeln mitgeteilt. In der in wenigen Wochen erscheinenden Neuauflage des Päpstlichen Jahrbuchs wird der Name Tebartz-van Elst in seiner neuen Funktion aufgeführt sein.

Seit längerem wurde innerkirchlich und in Medien über eine Anschlussverwendung des Kirchenmanns spekuliert. Der Pastoraltheologe war nach dem Skandal um das Bauprojekt auf dem Limburger Domberg von seinem Amt als Diözesanbischof zurückgetreten und im September in eine Privatwohnung nach Regensburg gezogen.

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Kansas City parents react to Pope Francis’ spanking statements

KANSAS
KCTV

[with video]

By Chris Oberholtz, Multimedia Producer
By Brix Fowler, Multimedia Journalist

OVERLAND PARK, KS (KCTV/AP) –

To spank or not to spank.

It is an issue parents have dealt with for years. But now those in favor of it have a powerful supporter after Pope Francis made his stance clear being in favor of spanking.

“Spanking is a very simple form of punishment,” said Laticia Vargas.

Vargas knows about abuse. She says her biological father used to beat her, but she believes what Pope Francis is talking about is not abuse.

“I have been hit in the face by my previous male influence, and it does a lot damage. It is humiliating and it causes a lot of problems with my self-esteem,” she said.

That is why her new father figure, Larry Reyes, refuses to spank her, but he has spanked two of his other children and says it’s effective.

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Priest placed on leave amid sex abuse allegation

MASSACHUSETTS
WWLP

By Associated Press
Published: February 8, 2015

BOSTON (AP) — The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston has placed a Massachusetts priest on administrative leave after receiving an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor.

Rev. Thomas Gillespie is pastor of St. Theresa of Lisieux Parish in North Reading. The archdiocese said Sunday that the allegation concerns the priest’s conduct in the late 1970’s and was recently reported to the Archdiocese.

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Boston Archdiocese puts priest on leave

MASSACHUSETTS
Fox Boston

BOSTON (MyFoxBoston.com) – The Archdiocese of Boston announced Sunday that it has placed a North Reading priest on administrative leave after receiving an allegation of sexual abuse.

The allegation concerns Rev. Thomas M. Gillespie, who is the pastor of St. Theresa of the Lisieux Parish.

The Archdiocese said in a press release issued Sunday that the alleged misconduct involves a minor and reportedly happened decades ago. It reportedly happened in the late 1970’s, but was just recently reported to the church.

The Archdiocese said it immediately notified law enforcement of the allegation and also has initiated its own investigation into the complaint.

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North Reading Pastor On Leave After Sex Abuse Allegation From ’70s

MASSACHUSETTS
CBS Boston

NORTH READING (CBS) — The Archdiocese of Boston announced Sunday that it had put a North Reading pastor on leave after receiving an allegation of sex abuse.

Rev. Thomas M. Gillespie, a pastor at St. Theresa of Lisieux Parish, is now on an administrative leave of absence after the Archdiocese said it received an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor.

The alleged abuse occurred in the late 1970s, but was only recently reported, according to the Archdiocese.

The Archdiocese said it notified law enforcement immediately and has started its own investigation into the allegation.

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Febraury 8, 2015 – Archdiocese of Boston Places Rev. Thomas M. Gillespie on Administrative Leave of Absence

MASSACHUSETTS
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston

(Braintree, Mass.) February 8, 2015 – The Archdiocese of Boston today announced that it has placed Rev. Thomas M. Gillespie on administrative leave of absence as a result of receiving an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor. The allegation concerns conduct alleged to have occurred in the late 1970’s and was recently reported to the Archdiocese Fr. Gillespie is pastor of St. Theresa of Lisieux Parish in North Reading.

The Archdiocese immediately notified law enforcement of the allegation and has initiated a preliminary investigation into the complaint. Fr. Gillespie will remain on administrative leave without any public ministry pending the outcome of the preliminary investigation. The decision to place Fr. Gillespie on administrative leave represents the Archdiocese’s commitment to the welfare of all parties and does not represent a determination of Fr. Gillespie’s guilt or innocence as it pertains to this allegation. The Archdiocese will work to resolve this case as expeditiously as possible and in a manner that is fair to all parties.

Through its Office of Pastoral Support and Outreach, the Archdiocese continues to make counseling and other services available to survivors, their families and parishes impacted by clergy sexual abuse and by allegations of abuse by members of the clergy. Cardinal Seán encourages any person in need of pastoral assistance or support to contact the Archdiocese’s Office of Pastoral Support and Outreach by calling 617-746-5985.

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North Reading pastor removed following allegations of sexual abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
WCVB

NORTH READING, Mass. —A North Reading pastor has been put on administrative leave following accusations of sexual abuse of a minor.

Rev. Thomas M. Gillespie, pastor of St. Theresa of Lisieux Parish, was placed on leave after the Archdiocese of Boston was recently made aware of an allegation against Gillespie of sexual abuse of a minor in the late 1970s, according to a statement from the Archdiocese of Boston.

The Archdiocese notified law enforcement of the allegation and has initiated a preliminary investigation into the complaint, according to the statement.

Gillespie will remain on administrative leave pending the outcome of the preliminary investigation, according to the Archdiocese of Boston.

“The decision to place Fr. Gillespie on administrative leave represents the Archdiocese’s commitment to the welfare of all parties and does not represent a determination of Fr. Gillespie’s guilt or innocence as it pertains to this allegation,” the Archdiocese of Boston said in the statement.

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North Reading pastor placed on administrative leave …

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

North Reading pastor placed on administrative leave following allegation of abusing a minor

By Jacqueline Tempera
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT FEBRUARY 08, 2015

A North Reading priest was placed on administrative leave after allegations surfaced that he sexually abused a minor in the late 1970s, the Archdiocese of Boston disclosed Sunday.

The Rev. Thomas M. Gillespie, pastor of St. Theresa of Lisieux Parish in North Reading, was placed on leave until further notice, spokesman Terrence Donilon said in a statement.

When the Archdiocese received a complaint about Gillespie, church officials immediately notified police who launched an investigation, Donilon said.

Gillespie will remain on leave without public ministry, meaning he can not perform public masses, pending the outcome of that investigation.

“The decision to place Fr. Gillespie on administrative leave represents the Archdiocese’s commitment to the welfare of all parties, and does not represent a determination of Fr. Gillespie’s guilt or innocence as it pertains to this allegation,” Donilon wrote in the statement.

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Shattuck-St. Mary’s Part 2: The choice

MINNESOTA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on February 8, 2015

In 2003, Headmaster Nick Stoneman had a choice.

His drama teacher had been found with child pornography on a school computer. This same teacher—Lynn Seibel—had admitted to being complicit in “Naked Dace Parties” with male students in school bathrooms.

Seibel was also rumored to have conducted a special AP (Advanced Placement) class in penis enlargement. What is the headmaster of one of the nation’s most elite boarding/day schools to do? Shattuck-St. Mary’s (SSM) in Faribault, Minnesota is considered a “feeder school” for the National Hockey league.

Their alumni list is a “who’s who” of the professional sport. Tuition is $29,000 a year for the day students and $43,000 for students who live at the school. There’s a lot at stake. Plus, Stoneman had no idea how many students had been “peeked at,” groomed, or molested by Seibel. He also had no idea if Seibel had created pornographic images of any of SSM’s students.

It gets worse.

There were other teachers at the school who had molested students. While we don’t know how much Stoneman knew in 2003, but by 2012, Seibel and another teacher, Joseph Machlitt, would be criminally charged for molesting SSM students. In 2008, a third, Leonard Jones, would kill himself after one of his victims confronted Jones about the sexual abuse.

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Two Catholic priests face estafa charges

PHILIPPINES
Manila Standard Today

By Robert A. Evora | Feb. 09, 2015

SAN JOSE, Occidental Mindoro—Two Catholic priests belonging to the Apostolic Vicariate of San Jose were ordered arrested after failing to account allegedly for P670 million in church funds.

Detained since Friday are Father Ruben Villanueva, former director of Social Services Commission, and Fr. Rodrigo Salazar Jr., past director of the Vicarial Indigenous People’s Affairs Office (Vipaco).

Fr. Carlito Dimaano, the vicar-general of the San Jose diocese, filed the estafa case against them for the missing P674,800 cash.

Villanueva and Salazar yielded to authorities after Branch 46 Judge Jose Jacinto Jr. of the Regional Trial court issued an arrest warrant for estafa. Jacky LG Gaytano, vicariate finance staff, joined them in the charge sheet.

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Ohio Rabbi Remains in Jail

MARYLAND
Baltimore Jewish Times

FEBRUARY 5, 2015 – טז שבט תשעה
BY HEATHER NORRIS

New details have emerged in the case of the Ohio rabbi accused of sexually abusing a Baltimore County girl.

Reached at the seminary from which Rabbi Frederick “Ephraim” Karp, who is being held at the Baltimore County Detention Center in Towson, graduated in 1998, Rabbi Yaakov Spivak, dean of the Ayshel Avraham Rabbinical Seminary in Spring Valley, N.Y., said that Karp “was a very fine young man.”

“He was very dedicated to rabbinical work,” said Spivak, adding that Karp had a close group of friends at the school and took his studies seriously.

Though Spivak is a graduate of Loyola College and Ner Yisrael Yeshiva in Baltimore, the rabbi said he was unsure of what connection Karp had to the Jewish community in the area. Karp’s wife is a graduate of the University of Maryland and he has an aunt in Gaithersburg.

Karp made his first appearance in Baltimore County court last Thursday for a hearing at which a judge reduced his bail from $5 million to $500,000 and forbid him from any contact with his accusers, witnesses or children under the age of 18.

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New Details Emerge in Baltimore Rabbi Abuse Case

MARYLAND
The Jewish Daily Forward

New details have reportedly emerged in the case of an Ohio rabbi accused of sexually abusing a Jewish Baltimore girl.

Although his seminary rabbi called Rabbi Frederick Karp a “very fine young man,” the Baltimore Jewish Times reports he is accused of molesting a girl who is now 12 for five years — and her sisters as well.

Karp, 50, who lives in suburban Cleveland resident and is a chaplain at the Menorah Park Center for Senior Living in Beachwood, Ohio, was extradited to Maryland on Jan. 28 from New York City, where he was arrested Jan. 15 as he awaited a flight to Israel.

Karp remains behind bars on $500,000 bail.

State prosecutor Lisa Dever, who heads the Baltimore County State’s Attorney’s sex offense and child abuse division, said the alleged victim came into contact with Karp through a close relationship between the rabbi and her family, the paper reported.

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Germany jails ex-SA priest for sex abuse

SOUTH AFRICA/GERMANY
IOL

February 8 2015
By Staff Reporter

AFP

Dussledorf – German Catholic priest Georg Kerkhoff, who is alleged to have been inolved in paedophilia in South Africa, has been sentenced in Germany to six years in jail on 25 counts of sexually abusing boys.

Judge Herbert Luczak, sitting in the Krefeld district court near Dusseldorf, gave Kerkhoff, 56, a harsher sentence than the five and a half years that the prosecutor had sought.

Kerkhoff’s victims in his parishes in the Lower Rhine included his godson, whom he sexually molested for five years from 2001, when the boy was 11.

The charges included aggravated sexual abuse, child abuse and abuse of wards.

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Vatikan-Kommission: Bischöfe müssen Missbrauch streng ahnden

VATIKAN
kath.net

Fast alle Bischofskonferenzen weltweit haben Richtlinien zum Umgang mit Missbrauchsfällen erarbeitet – Britisches Missbrauchsopfer Saunders: Kirche muss im Umgang mit pflichtvergessenen Bischöfen “einen besseren Job machen” – Kein Platz fü

Vatikanstadt (kath.net/KAP) Die päpstliche Kinderschutzkommission drängt auf schärfere Konsequenzen für Bischöfe, die sexuellen Missbrauch in ihren Diözesen nicht hart genug ahnden. “Das muss Folgen haben”, sagte der Leiter des Gremiums, der Bostoner Kardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, am Samstag im Vatikan. Die Kommission könne zwar keine konkreten Vorschläge machen, doch die Frage nach dem Umgang mit Bischöfen, die ihrer Pflicht nicht nachkämen, sei ein wichtiger Punkt. Das von Papst Franziskus eingerichtete Gremium aus Laien und Geistlichen tagt seit Freitag bis Sonntag im Vatikan. Es soll Vorschläge und Initiativen für einen wirksameren Kampf gegen sexuellen Missbrauch von Minderjährigen im kirchlichen Raum entwickeln.

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Vatikan: Bischöfe müssen Missbrauch ahnden

VATIKAN
Katholisch

Die päpstliche Kinderschutzkommission drängt auf schärfere Konsequenzen für Bischöfe, die sexuellen Missbrauch in ihren Diözesen nicht hart genug ahnden. “Das muss Folgen haben”, sagte der Leiter des Gremiums, der Bostoner Kardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, am Samstag im Vatikan. Die Kommission könne zwar keine konkreten Vorschläge machen, doch die Frage nach dem Umgang mit Bischöfen, die ihrer Pflicht nicht nachkämen, sei ein wichtiger Punkt.

Das von Papst Franziskus eingerichtete Gremium aus Laien und Geistlichen tagt seit Freitag bis Sonntag im Vatikan. Es soll Vorschläge und Initiativen für einen wirksameren Kampf gegen sexuellen Missbrauch von Minderjährigen im kirchlichen Raum entwickeln.

Das britische Missbrauchsopfer und Kommissionsmitglied Peter Saunders erklärte, die Kirche müsse im Umgang mit pflichtvergessenen Bischöfen “einen besseren Job machen”. Er wünsche sich auch eine intensivere Debatte über die Motive von Missbrauchstätern. Das Etikett “pädophil” reiche zur Erklärung nicht aus. Seines Erachtens spielen der Zölibat und die Einsamkeit von Priestern eine Rolle. Saunders war als Jugendlicher von einem Priester seiner Schule missbraucht worden.

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Vatican moves to clarify Pope’s comments on smacking children

VATICAN CITY
Newstalk (Ireland)

Richard Chambers

The Vatican has moved to clarify remarks from the Pope about smacking, saying the Pontiff was not encouraging parents to hit their children.

Last week, Pope Francis praised a father he met who said he hit his children if they behaved badly – but never in the face so as not to humiliate them.

A spokesperson for the Holy See says the Pope was speaking about “correcting without humiliating” with love and respect for dignity.

Fr Federico Lombardi said: “I wish to only point out that the Pope was speaking about the responsibility of parents to “correct without humiliating”, or rather, to assume the responsibility of keeping their children on the right track and to help them grow up well”.

“Finding the right way to “correct without humiliating” is part of the responsibility of good parents in a variety of situations”.

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Archpriest allegedly punches woman in church on her birthday

MALTA
Malta Independent

Rachel Attard
Sunday, 8 February 2015

An archpriest has been accused of slightly injuring a woman after he punched her in church.

The archpriest has also been charged with breaching the peace.

The vice-archpriest of the same community, who witnessed the incident, has also been charged with breaching the peace and insulting the woman with the utterance: “itilqu lill-Arċipriet, m’hawnx qassis li ma tisfrattaħx u ma tistax tara qassis…” (Leave the archpriest alone, you cannot set eyes on a single priest without leading him astray).

The woman has, in turn, been charged with harassing the archpriest himself.

She first got to know him a few months before the incident, which took place on 8 November, the woman’s birthday. She had turned to him for spiritual guidance following a bad break-up and started attending mass daily at the parish church.

The woman was eventually asked by the archpriest to start giving catechism lessons to children at the parish.

But later, the two had a falling out and when the woman sought an explanation for his distinct change in attitude toward her, the archpriest became angry and allegedly punched her. The incident was witnessed by the vice-archpriest who, according to the criminal complaint filed, had also insulted the woman.

The victim immediately filed a police report at the locality’s police station and was examined at a polyclinic, where she was certified to have suffered slight injuries to one of her shoulders and her neck.

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Peter Saunders & Marie Collins Should Quit Pope’s Abuse Commission, No?

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

* Pope Francis, a reportedly very hands on manager, apparently selected the members of his advisory sex abuse commission to deal, slowly it seems, with his biggest challenge, the scandal of sexual predatory priests and their unaccountable bishop accomplices.

* The pope has been facing for some time building governmental pressure in Australia. He now faces it in the UK as well (as reported here, [Mirror] and here, [BBC News]), and will probably face it in the USA soon enough. Francis selected two well respected priest abuse survivors, Ireland’s Marie Collins and the UK’s Peter Saunders, as commission members. After their initial commission meeting recently, these two survivors both reportedly stated that, in their view, the Vatican has a year or two at most to implement child protection policies with teeth, otherwise they will leave, that is, they would resign from the commission.

* Why wait, Marie Collins and Peter Saunders? They should consider seriously resigning now. Their empty public resignation threats after two years clearly suggest they have seen enough already. They must have serious reservations about the commission, which has done so little now after two years into Pope Francis’ papacy. Francis and his commission staff have generally stalled for two years until now, intentionally, it seems. They now will have two more years to “study” — likely then a full four years to change nothing of substance. Meanwhile, Pope Francis continues to honor disgraced Cardinals, including Law, Rigali and Danneels, who have poor records on dealing with priest sexual abuse. Have Marie Collins and Peter Saunders failed to notice this?

* Marie Collins had already waited a year, after her initial commission appointment more than a year ago, for the first full commission meeting. Peter Saunders has acknowledged the advocacy leadership of the international abuse survivor group, SNAP, and knows that SNAP’s leader had serious reservations about the pope’s commission even befor the poor commission start. Both Marie Collins and Peter Saunders must know well what a really independent commission looks like, having seen several in Ireland and watched close up the recent struggle to establish the new independent UK commission. They both must also be well aware by now that the Vatican’s commission is far from independent, which is essential for an effective commission.

* Pope Francis will probably retire in two years at 80 years old, having by then the all important 2016 US presidential elections behind him. His biggest fear, as best I can tell, has to be if either President Obama or, after 2016, another Democratic US President, Hillary Clinton, were to set up an Australian type institutional child sex abuse commission in the USA. Please see “Catholic Right Still Tied to Big-Money Republicans“, here, [Church and State]. Pope Francis’ new “go slow study commission” now gives him considerable ‘cover’ until after these very important US elections, with his likely hoped for new “allies”, Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz.

* The pope’s commission staff, presumably under disgraced Boston Cardinal Law’s former canon lawyer, Fr. Robert Oliver, has reportedly split up the sex abuse commission’s subject matter assignments, which permits the staff to “cherrypick” assignments and assign “study group members”, etc. Incidentally, it is unlikely that Marie Collins, then a commission member, had any real say on Fr. Oliver’s appointment. The commission reportedly will now meet as a group only four times in the next two years, it appears. That is clearly inadequate to get real results, sooner rather than later, in my view in light of my extensive professional experience.

* I am confident that both Marie Collins and Peter Saunders, very brave survivors, are trying their best, but from my professional perspective, they both seem to be being exploited. They would have more impact, it appears to me, if they resigned now. They are giving the commission by their presence a legitimacy the commission has not earned on its merits, and likely as currently structured never will earn. This can have serious negative repercussions for other abuse survivors worldwide, including quite desperate ones in bankrupt USA dioceses, especially Milwaukee and Minneapolis. Hopefully, other survivors are giving Marie Collins and Peter Saunders their input directly. A lot is at stake for all of them with this commission.

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Insurance policies play major role in archdiocese bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: February 7, 2015

Insurance companies have paid up to 85 percent of abuse settlements nationally. They’re the invisible, powerful players.

The $45 million listed as assets by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis does not count a critical but invisible “asset” still being determined — the value of its insurance.

Dusty policies stored in church archives and basements have played a huge role in clergy abuse settlements nationally. Insurance covered two-thirds of the $75 million archdiocese bankruptcy settlement in Portland, Ore., for example, and $19 million of the $37 million bankruptcy settlement in Davenport, Iowa.

With the stakes so high, coverage also is fiercely contested, as evidenced by the archdiocese’s lawsuit against 20-some insurers to try to force them to cover their liabilities for clergy abuse claims.

As the archdiocese and its creditors enter their third week of bankruptcy court mediation, attorneys for the insurance companies are the biggest group entering the doors of the federal courthouse in Minneapolis.

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Exclusive: Family Representative Speaks for Alleged Sex Abuse Victim

CALIFORNIA
Fox 40

[with video]

FEBRUARY 7, 2015, BY RINA NAKANO

SACRAMENTO-
A family representative of an alleged child sex abuse victim spoke exclusively to FOX40, after the alleged abuser appeared in Sacramento County Court earlier this week.

Kareem Abdul Mitchell, 42, is the minister of music for the New Testament Baptist Church Choir in North Highlands. He is accused of sodomy, oral copulation, and other sex acts on a then 16-year-old boy between 2005 and 2008.

A woman who said she is representing the victim’s family told us Mitchell allegedly has a “type.”

“They are usually good looking African American children, males, and usually there is not a father present in the home, and those were the type of kids he targeted,” the woman said.

She said the victim’s father had passed away at an early age, and he sought after a father figure.

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The Royal Commission: Sentiments without action are not enough

AUSTRALIA
J-Wire

February 8, 2015 by J-Wire Staff

Rabbi James Kennard, principal of Mount Scopus Memorial College in Melbourne has issued a statement on the current hearing at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse….declaring “sentiments without action are not enough”.

Rabbi Kennard has called for resignations and change…”already long overdue”.

His full statement:

“In October 2013 I resigned from the Executive of the Rabbinical Council of Victoria (RCV) and subsequently from the Council itself. At the time I made no comment on my action, since any publicity would have served no purpose.

But that is no longer the case.

As the orthodox community is being engulfed in the terrible chilul Hashem (desecration of G-d’s name) that is revealed each day at the Royal Commission; as the media coverage has made “rabbi” a mark of shame and “orthodox Jew” a byword for the cover-up of child abuse, it is time to speak out.

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Senior rabbi calls on Yeshivah leaders to resign following royal commission hearings

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 8, 2015

Steve Lillebuen

The head of Victoria’s largest Jewish school has criticised ultra-Orthodox leaders who remained silent over child sex abuse allegations, saying only their resignations and a new watchdog for rabbis can restore faith in the community.

Rabbi James Kennard, principal of Mount Scopus Memorial College, said the royal commission on child sex abuse had revealed painful and horrific details about Yeshivah Melbourne and the organisation’s Sydney chapter.

Those who were in charge when historical abuse claims were made must be removed from leadership positions, or the community would never be able to move on, he said.

“The resignations that are required need not be an acceptance of personal responsibility, but an acknowledgement that if abuse, or a failure to deal properly with abusers, took place on an individual’s ‘watch’ then it is honourable and right for such an individual to step down,” he said on Sunday.

The royal commission has been examining Yeshivah Melbourne and Yeshiva Bondi’s response to abuse allegations against former employees Daniel Hayman, David Kramer and David Cyprys, who was convicted of sexually abusing children.

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Pope Francis criticised by his own sex abuse commission

VATICAN CITY
euronews

A member of Pope Francis’ newly-established sex abuse commission has sharply rebuked a remark made by the pontiff, which seemed to encourage smacking children, as long as their dignity is respected.

Commission member Peter Saunders was sexually abused by a priest as a teen. He said:
“He’s (Pope Francis) never had to raise children and he doesn’t know much about that. And again I think it’s a perfect illustration of why he’s asked the commission, which is a mixed bag of people – some of us parents, some of us not – to advice him on these matters.”

“I think that we need to talk to the pope about this issue, because there are millions of children around the world who are physically beaten on a daily basis. And, you know, it might start off as a light tap, (but) actually the whole idea of hitting children is about inflicting pain. That’s what it is about, and there is no place in this day and age for having physical punishment, inflicting pain in terms of how you discipline your children.”

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O’Malley calls on bishops to meet with abuse victims

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By Inés San Martín
Vatican correspondent February 7, 2015

ROME — Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston, in his capacity as president of a papal commission on sexual abuse, has called on bishops around the world to meet with victims of clerical abuse and also has asked every bishops’ conference to designate a contact person to coordinate anti-abuse efforts.

Speaking in a Vatican briefing on Saturday, O’Malley said that meeting with victims was a life-changing experience for him and also an eye-opener on how little the Church had done on the issue by 1993, when he first encountered it.

O’Malley said “there have to be consequences” for bishops who don’t respond appropriately to reports of abuse, including procedures that allow these cases to be handled efficiently and not in an “open-ended way.”

Commission members also criticized Pope Francis’ remarks that it’s okay for parents to spank their children, saying there is no place for physical discipline. The panel plans to make recommendations to him about protecting kids from corporal punishment.

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Vatican panel tackles sex abuse issues

VATICAN CITY
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

February 8, 2015

By Philip Pullella / Reuters

VATICAN CITY — A commission advising Pope Francis on how to root out sexual abuse of children by clergy in the Roman Catholic Church is studying sanctions for bishops suspected of cover-ups or of failing to prevent abuse, members said Saturday.

“There have to be consequences,” Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, the head of the commission, told a news conference.

Victims groups have been urging the Vatican for years to make bishops more accountable for abuse in their dioceses even if they were not directly responsible for it. …

However, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, which has long campaigned for bishops to be held accountable, called Cardinal O’Malley’s comments “insulting and deceptive” to victims and demanded immediate action.

“O’Malley knows that the church has plenty of ways, right now, to respond when bishops are complicit in clergy sex crimes and cover ups. The pope can oust them,” the U.S.-based group said in a statement.

Mr. Saunders also criticized Pope Francis on Saturday for appearing to endorse parents who spanked their children.

“Children don’t need to be hit. We need to talk about positive parenting … physical violence has no part in modern-day child upbringing,” Mr. Saunders said.

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Forget spanking; bishop accountability is the big pope story

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor February 7, 2015

A new Vatican commission created to lead the charge for reform on the Catholic Church’s child sexual abuse scandals met this weekend in Rome, with a couple of members making headlines by protesting recent comments by Pope Francis on spanking.

In truth, however, it was a different gauntlet commission members threw down in front of the pontiff that’s likely to prove far more consequential.

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors was created by Pope Francis in March 2014, and features Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston as president. It has 17 members from around the world, including two abuse survivors, and its mandate is to advise the pope and Church leaders around the world on best practices in anti-abuse efforts.

Two days before the group assembled in Rome, Pope Francis stirred controversy by casually opining during a Wednesday General Audience that it’s okay for parents to use corporal punishment as long as the “dignity” of their children is maintained.

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February 7, 2015

Federal sex-crimes trial for accused Johnstown priest delayed until fall

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

February 7, 2015 7:17 PM

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The federal trial of a Johnstown-area priest accused of traveling to Honduras for sex with young boys has been pushed back from next month to September and is expected to last four weeks or longer.

U.S. District Judge Kim Gibson on Friday ordered the trial of Rev. Joseph Maurizio, 69, delayed until the fall trial term in Johnstown.

The trial had been scheduled for March 9 but both sides said they needed more time to prepare.

The judge said the trial is expected to last three or four weeks, and possibly take a fifth week, because many of the witnesses don’t speak English and will need an interpreter.

Rev. Maurizio remains jailed pending trial as a danger to the community and a risk to flee, especially considering his apparent wealth. Although he told a pre-trial services officer that his net worth was $107,000, the IRS Criminal Investigation Division found that it was really about $1 million.

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Rabbi Kennard: Glick must go

AUSTRALIA
The Australian Jewish News

Rabbi James Kennard, principal of the largest Jewish school in Melbourne and former executive member of the Rabbinical Council of Victoria (RCV), has called on Rabbi Avrohom Glick to stand down from his senior position at the Yeshivah Centre.

Rabbi Glick was principal of Yeshivah in Melbourne when allegations of child sexual abuse were brought to the attention of rabbis, but not reported to police, in the 1980s.

He remains in a senior position at the Yeshivah Centre and has refused to step down but after a horrific week at the Royal Commission into the Institution Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Rabbi Kennard has had enough and is demanding action.

“While anyone who held a position of leadership in the Yeshivah community in the period when these terrible mistakes were made remains in such a position today, the community is not able to say that it has learnt and it has changed,” Rabbi Kennard said.

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5 Things Pope Francis Can Do Now to Get an “Incisive Female Presence” Pope Urges More Widespread and Incisive Female Presence”

UNITED STATES
Bridget Mary’s Blog

1. Hire women in leadership positions in the Vatican, dioceses and parishes. Set up fair labor practices and protection from firing for disagreeing with hierarchy. Make the goal 50% and give women decision-making power and job protection.

2. Hire top notch theologians, especially feminist theologians, who are critical of centuries of sexism in the church and invite all Catholic Universities to do so immediately.

3. Drop the excommunications against Roman Catholic Women Priests and our supporters and begin a dialogue on a renewed priestly ministry as a blessing to the church.

4. Return decision making power to local churches throughout the world, mandate 50% of parish councils, diocesan councils be women in all pastoral positions.

5. Recognize that women are fully capable as moral agents to make decisions about their bodies and relationships in light of their consciences. Drop the ban on artificial birth control.

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Is priestly celibacy the cause of clerical sex abuse? Not likely, victim says

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

By Elise Harris

Vatican City, Feb 7, 2015 / 12:47 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- One survivor of priestly sexual abuse says that despite a common perception that clerical celibacy can lead to sex abuse of minors, most perpetrators likely had issues before entering the seminary.

“People don’t enter the priesthood and become child abusers, I don’t think that’s the case. I think that they had serious issues before entering Holy Orders,” Peter Saunders told journalists in a Feb. 7 press briefing.

Although there are “far too many” clerics who have committed sexual abuse of minors, “the vast majority of priests and religious will never hurt a child. I think it’s important to acknowledge that.”

Saunders said that the term “pedophile” is overused, and that the priests who abused him, rather than having any illness, “were very lonely.”

One of the 17 members of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, Saunders spoke alongside the commission’s head, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, giving journalists an update on the work they’re doing during their Feb. 6-8 meeting in Rome.

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Pope Francis’ remarks on spanking challenged by child abuse experts

VATICAN CITY
Los Angeles Times

By TOM KINGTON

A group of child abuse experts summoned by Pope Francis to help tackle priestly abuse in the Roman Catholic Church has criticized remarks made by the pope himself in which he suggested that it was permissible for parents to spank their wayward children.

Two members of the 17-strong commission, holding its first full meeting at the Vatican, said Saturday they objected to Francis’ comments, made last Wednesday, in which he backed corporal punishment.

Leading British anti-abuse campaigner Peter Saunders, abused by two Catholic priests as a child, said the committee would ask the pope to reconsider his remarks.

“It might start off as a light tap, but actually the whole idea about hitting children is about inflicting pain,” Saunders said at a news conference at the Vatican.

“That’s what it’s about and there is no place in this day and age for having physical punishment, for inflicting pain, in terms of how you discipline your children,” he said.

Fellow commission member Dr. Krysten Winter-Green, a New Zealand native who works in the U.S. with young abuse victims, said any physical punishment of children was unacceptable. “There has to be positive parenting, in a different way,” she was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.

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Iowa lawmakers could open window for child sex abuse lawsuits

IOWA
Des Moines Register

William Petroski, bpetrosk@dmreg.com February 7, 2015

Victims in decades-old cases of alleged sexual abuse could bring new lawsuits under proposed legislation that church and school officials say could leave their organizations vulnerable to huge legal liabilities.

The bill would undoubtedly have its biggest effect on clergy abuse lawsuits involving the Catholic Church, which has paid out more than $2.5 billion in damages nationwide because of past incidents involving more than 16,500 victims allegedly abused by religious members.

The Iowa proposal, Senate File 107, is strongly supported by victim advocates, including the Iowa Coalition Against Sexual Assault, which says the crimes are often psychologically repressed for decades.

“This really becomes kind of a no-brainer when you look at it. It is putting first the children of Iowa and the children who have been victimized,” said an adult man only identified as “John,” who spoke before the Senate panel about his experience as a victim of child sexual abuse.

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Sacerdote protegido del Obispo Romano es acusado de homosexual y violador

GUADALAJARA (MEXICO)
Blog Santa & Pecadora [Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico]

February 7, 2015

Read original article

Esta es una de las razones por las cuales suspendieron al Obispo auxiliar Miguel Romano. Por encubrir y proteger a Seminaristas y Sacerdotes homosexuales y pederastas. Muchos hablaron de difamación, pero cuando llego a Roma el Dossier informativo detono en lo que ya todos en México conocen.

Se trata del Sacerdote Eduardo Pajarito González de 32 años, originario de la colonia El Rosario en Tonala,  Guadalajara. Fue ordenado Sacerdote el 26 de diciembre de 2009, después de haber pasado  unos años a la espectativa por que no lo ordenaban.

Conocido como Pajarito, en alusión a su apellido,  amante del fútbol y de la buena vida ha sido una fichita desde que era Seminarista, siempre cobijado bajo las sombras de Miguel Romano, cuando este era Rector. Solapandole su doble vida, que ahora sigue teniendo como Sacerdote. En su grupo existen varios que ahora son Sacerdotes y practican la homosexualidad abiertamente desde que eran Seminaristas.
A Pajarito le gustan los buenos vinos, las comidas, vestir bien y todo lo que tenga que ver con un estilo de vida pudiente. 
Su único destino después de ordenarse  ha sido la Parroquia de Getsemani de la Cruz,  siempre auspiciado, protegido y solapado  por el Obispo renunciado, cargo que empezó a ocupar desde el 15 de enero de 2010. Desde luego ya hemos hablado de esa comunidad y de su nefasto Párroco.

Actualmente asesora un movimiento juvenil, por lo que su cercanía con jóvenes es muy evidente, su modo de operar es primero  granjearselos e invitarlos al cine, al fútbol, a la playa y a su casa con engaños. Se rodea de jóvenes homosexuales y asiste a lugares no propios de un Sacerdote
A finales del año pasado invito a un joven  con engaños  a cenar a su casa y  ahí mismo  con  abuso de el. La victima cuenta que al parecer  fue sedado, oportunidad que el mismo Sacerdote aprovecho  para abusar del joven.

El joven ha iniciado una demanda civil contra el Sacerdote, apoyado por su familia y otras personas, lo único que solicita es que se atienda el caso por la vía civil  y que en el fuero religioso sea retirado del Sacerdocio, puesto que es un peligro para la juventud.

Cómo prueba del dato, después de que el Sacerdote violo al joven, este como pudo tomo fotografías del cuarto del clérigo, para tener una evidencia del acoso y violación. Hay pruebas y testigos, sin duda la punta del Iceberg de varios casos delicados en la Arquidiocesis de Guadalajara.

Pajarito González gracias a la cercanía con Romano Gómez, su amigo, chofer y protector, siempre ha dicho que tiene poder, incluso se sabe entre sus mismos compañeros, que presume su cercanía con el Obispo.

No se trata de una difamación, sino de un caso de impunidad, pruebas las ahí y la fiscalia responsable esta investigando. La víctima ha escrito al Papa y varios medios de comunicación en México ya tienen el dato, sin duda un escándalo más que  cimbrara a la Arquidiocesis de Guadalajara.

Fotos del cuarto del Sacerdote  donde abusó de la victima y a quien llevo dopado y  con engaños.

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Bishops’ accountability is key concern for pope’s child protection commission

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Bishops who do not comply with the child protection norms adopted by their bishops’ conferences and approved by the Vatican must face real consequences, said Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston, president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.

The commission, he said, “is very, very concerned about this whole area of (bishops’) accountability” and has a working group drawing up recommendations for Pope Francis.

The proposed new norms, the cardinal told reporters at the Vatican Feb. 7, “would allow the church to respond in an expeditious way when a bishop has not fulfilled his obligations.”

“We think we have come up with some very practical recommendations that would help to remedy the situation that is such a source of anxiety to everybody” on the pontifical commission, he said. The recommendations will be presented to Pope Francis.

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Child abuse: Commission to study issue of bishop accountability

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The Pontifical Commission for Child Protection is holding its first meeting in the Vatican with all members present. Two former victims of sexual abuse by priests said that if pastors are not held accountable we’re leaving. A day of prayer and guidelines for Bishops’ Conferences are currently being considered

IACOPO SCARAMUZZI
VATICAN CITY

The Vatican Commission for Child Protection created by Pope Francis is holding its first meeting in the Vatican, with all members present. The Commission expressed its deep concern about the accountability of bishops, about whether they will admit responsibility before faithful, whether they will react with negligence in the face of paedophilia charges made against a priest in their diocese. The Commission’s members expressed this concern at a briefing in the Vatican, announcing that they are “working on policy recommendations for the Holy Father’s approval.” The two members of the Commission that were sexually abused by priests as children have stated that if things do not change over the next couple of years they will hand in their resignation.

The Child Protection Commission is “very, very concerned” about accountability of bishops and working on policy recommendations for the Holy Father’s approval, said the Commission’s president, the Archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, one of the Pope’s nine cardinal advisors. The body has and will continue discussing procedures that can be introduced in cases where a bishop does not take accusations relating to the sexual abuse of children by a priest seriously: “There needs to be procedures that will allow these cases to be dealt with in an expeditious way, rather than just having things open-ended,” the cardinal said, “all members of the Commission are well aware of this”. Sister Kayula Gertrude Lesa from Zambia and Peter Saunders from England also gave statements during the briefing. Saunders, who was abused by a paedophile priest as a child, was received by the Pope last summer, but almost all members of the Commission were present in the newsroom. “If in a year or two there isn’t some firm action on those matters, then I don’t think I’ll be sitting here talking to you,” Saunders said. “I think it’s not disputed that there have been far too many cover ups, there have been far too many clergy protected, moved from place to place,” Saunders added, stressing the need for Church leaders to report those who are guilty to civil justice.

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El Vaticano castigará a los obispos negligentes ante el abuso sexual de menores

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO
ABC

Dos días después de que el Papa indicase a los obispos de todo el mundo que estén atentos a las directrices de la nueva Comisión Pontificia de Protección de Menores, su presidente, el cardenal de Boston Sean O’Malley, anunció que la Comisión propondrá al Papa medidas de castigo a los obispos negligentes y tendrá un enlace en cada conferencia episcopal.

Los 17 miembros de la Comisión, formada por mujeres y hombres expertos en la materia, acudieron este sábado a una conferencia de prensa en el Vaticano para confirmar el empeño en convertirse en punto de referencia mundial en la prevención del abuso sexual de menores.

Junto al cardenal O’Malley, tomó la palabra Peter Saunders, de 57 años, víctima de abusos sexuales por sacerdotes en su colegio de Wimbledon y fundador de la NAPAC, que ayuda a superar los traumas. Les acompañaba la irlandesa Marie Collins, víctima de abusos del capellán del hospital en que estaba ingresada en Dublín.

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Catholics hit by backlash over O’Brien sex scandal

SCOTLAND
The Times

Michael Glackin
Published February 7 2015

A sharp fall in donations to the Catholic Church since the Cardinal O’Brien sex scandal broke has plunged its finances into crisis and will force it to close a number of parishes across Scotland.

The Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh, which encompasses an area from Perthshire to The Borders, has announced plans to reduce the number of its parishes by more than two thirds — from 109 to 30 – in an effort to tackle the collapse of funds.

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Cardinal Müller on Reform of the Roman Curia and the Church

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

by Edward Pentin 02/07/2015

Pope Francis, in his approach to reforming the Roman Curia and the Church, is pursuing a “spiritual cleansing of the temple, at the same time both painful and liberating, so the glory of God can shine in the Church, the light of all mankind,” the Vatican’s doctrinal chief has said.

In an article in tomorrow’s L’Osservatore Romano, Cardinal Gerhard Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, addresses the theological criteria for a reform of the Church and the Roman Curia, laying out what he believes should be the basis of the changes.

The publication of the piece is timed to coincide with a meeting from Monday to Wednesday next week of the C9 Council of Cardinals who are to evaluate progress on the reforms. Their conclusions are to be presented at a consistory of the College of Cardinals, scheduled for 12 and 13 February.

Cardinal Müller makes a point in the article of warning against worldliness in the Church. He argues that the Church receives “her true meaning not from social consensus” or through “political power” but through preaching salvation, especially “to the poor and those on the peripheries of life.”

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Irish advisor to Pope on child protection critical of pontiff over smacking remarks

VATICAN CITY
RTE News

Marie Collins, the Irish victim of sexual abuse who advises Pope Francis on child protection, has joined a chorus of dissent following the pontiff’s endorsement of what he called “dignified” corporal punishment in the home.

However, the Vatican spokesman has issued a statement denying that the Pope encourages parents to hit their children.

Ms Collins has sharply criticised the Catholic Church here over its cover-up of her abuse by a priest while she was a patient in Our Lady’s Children’s Hospital in Crumlin.

She is in the Vatican for a meeting of the Commission for the Protection of Minors, to which Pope Francis appointed her shortly after his election in 2013.

Speaking at a news conference she disagreed with the Pope’s remarks at a public audience on Wednesday, praising a father he had met for respecting his children’s dignity by spanking them without striking them in the face.

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“Teflon Pope” Spins Spanking, As Women & Children Suffer

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

Childless Pope Francis, and his other old bachelor cronies, have done it again. They have shown once more their extreme insensitivity and tone deafness to the protection of women and children. The pope has clearly condoned violence to children, while his subordinate Polish bishops have, in effect, condoned violence to women, it appears. Will the media, if they truly care about defenseless children and desperate women, now finally report what this “Teflon Pope” is really about? Will they end their nonstop nonsense that seemingly aims at perpetuating the myth of a “big teddy bear” pope, despite his well reported authoritarian Jesuit and “bouncer” history and his many continuously inconsistent and insensitive actions?

As Pope Francis’ illusory sex abuse commission is now being exposed as little more than another of the Vatican’s Machiavellian political ploys — a classic stall tactic in the form of an extremely unfocused, open ended, conflicted and understaffed “study commission”. The Vatican appears to be trying to use courageous, but frustrated, abuse survivor members, Ireland’s Marie Collins and the UK’s Peter Saunders, as mere window dressing, while millions of cowardly Catholics worldwide shamefully temporize and make these two martyrs, who have already suffered too much, do the heavy lifting alone. These two survivors have reportedly also voiced further concerns after the commission’s initial meeting about the Vatican’s efforts on curtailing priest child abuse. They reportedly also said the Vatican has a year or two at most to implement policies with teeth, otherwise they will leave.

Please see “Pace of Vatican child protection body frustrates Marie Collins“, here,

[Irish Times]

Meanwhile, Pope Francis, and his subordinates in Poland, once more confound the world — this time about spanking children and beating women. Please see my full discussion below and “Holy See must clarify stance on corporal punishment“, by outspoken former Irish President and canon lawyer, Mary McAleese, here,

[Irish Independent]

, and “Pope’s sex abuse commission alarmed by Francis’ comments about spanking kids, says it’s not OK” , here,

[U.S. News]

and “Clergy sexual abuse victim criticises pope over spanking remark“, here,

[Irish Independent]

and “Poland votes to ratify treaty to protect women” , here,

[Zee News]

and “Pope calls again for ‘incisive’ women’s presence in church, offers no specifics“, here,

[National Catholic Reporter]

Why do so many in the media let Pope Francis “zig and zag” so often, without calling him on it. Just follow his meandering Yellow Brick Road. Don’t breed like rabbits, just don’t use the Pill. Help the poor, but honor, like he seems to do, the crony capitalist billionaires who help keep them poor. Protect children, but don’t report priest child abuse to the police unless legally obligated to do so. Slap your kids, but do so respectfully. Protect women, but oppose treaties that seek to do so. Be nice to abuse survivors, but go bankrupt to avoid compensating them justly. Don’t judge gay folks, just ostracize them from Church institutions. Is Pope Francis really shrewd, or just opportunistic, or even duplicitous and hypocritical? Perhaps his advanced age has caught up to him? What do you think?

Pope Francis personally, and probably unintentionally, is evidently undercutting steadily the world’s respect for papal moral authority, as well as the belief of many Catholics in papal infallibility. This papal myth is the key to the modern post-1870 “supreme papacy”. Pope Francis is almost singlehandedly exposing this myth, by his unpredictable, inconsistent and even seemingly contradictory statements and actions, with respect to protecting children and women, to contraception, to treating women, divorced persons, gay folks and others with dignity, and on other significant matters as well.

Significantly, well informed and reliable, Anne Barrett Doyle, of BishopAccountability.org has responded to the pope’s sex abuse commission’s first press conference wisely and pointedly, in pertinent part as follows (in italics):

” … If Commission members are going to fulfill the vision articulated by Pope Francis earlier this week — to become an “important and effective means” of helping the Pope “rid the Church of the scourge” of sexual assaults by clergy — we urge them to:

1. Insist on accountability measures that are tough and unambiguous. Church officials who endanger children and protect dangerous priests must be removed and censured.

2. Insist on a church abuse policy that is strict, uniform, and global. Cultural norms are not an acceptable excuse for putting children in danger. A priest who would be deemed unsafe by bishops in one country must not be allowed to work in another.

3. Take issue with Pope Francis’s instruction to church officials this week that the provisions of the CDF’s May 2011 Circular Letter be “fully implemented.” This document is more about due process for priests than protection of children. Some of its provisions are dangerously weak.

4. Ask why the Circular Letter contains NO provision regarding zero-tolerance – that is, the permanent removal of a priest guilty of an act of child sexual abuse.

5. Demand that true zero tolerance become the church’s global standard. It must be stated in every abuse policy of every bishops’ conference and religious institute.

6. Avoid recommending universal adoption of the U.S. church’s norms unless those are tightened. While stricter than the Circular Letter provisions, the U.S. norms have proved to be too lenient. They give U.S. bishops too much discretion in deciding whether to remove an accused priest.

7. Insist that bishops and religious superiors be required to: a) investigate every allegation; b) remove accused clergy during investigations; and c) submit all allegations to independent, lay review boards.

8. Insist too that every abuse policy require church officials to report allegations to civil authorities, even when not mandated to do so under local law.

9. Recommend that the following red-flag language be removed from the Circular Letter and from every Conference’s abuse policy: “the bishop has the duty to treat all his priests as father and brother.” This language belongs in documents about doctrine, not sex crimes by clergy. Bishops worldwide invoke this principle to justify not reporting child-molesting priests to secular law enforcement. Bishop Charles Scicluna confirmed this in a 2010 interview. A bishop calling the police on a priest is “a gesture comparable to that of a father denouncing his own son,” he said, and the church therefore does “not force bishops to denounce their own priests.” The abuse policy of the Philippine Church is explicit on this score: its bishops do not report priests to civil authorities, since the bishop-priest relationship is “analogous to that between father and son.”

10. Insist that the norms require transparency. Bishops and religious superiors must be required to publicly release information about credibly accused clergy, including their names, assignment histories, alleged crimes, and church files. And this transparency should begin with Pope Francis. Just as he has modeled a simple lifestyle for the world’s bishops, he could set an example of transparency, by disclosing information about credibly accused clergy he has managed during his career.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Vatican abuse commission to recommend action against bishops

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

BY PHILIP PULLELLA
VATICAN CITY Sat Feb 7, 2015

(Reuters) – A commission advising Pope Francis on how to root out sexual abuse of children by clergy in the Catholic Church is studying sanctions for bishops suspected of cover-ups or of failing to prevent abuse, members said on Saturday.

“There have to be consequences,” Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, the head of the commission, told a news conference.

Victims groups have been urging the Vatican for years to make bishops more accountable for abuse in their dioceses even if they were not directly responsible for it.

O’Malley said the commission, holding its first full meeting since it was established last year, was drafting recommendations for the pope on how to make bishops more accountable, including possible sanctions.

“We think we have come up with some practical recommendations,” he said, without giving details but adding that they would “hopefully be implemented”. Under current Church law only the pope can dismiss a bishop.

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Response to Press Conference of Cardinal Sean O’Malley and the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

February 7, 2015 – For Immediate Release

By Anne Barrett Doyle, Co-Director, BishopAccountability.org (781-439-5208 cell)

While we remain skeptical of the Commission’s ability to change the way the Catholic Church manages sexually abusive priests, we are heartened by Cardinal Sean O’Malley’s reassurance today that the Commission is going to recommend accountability measures for poor church officials. Catholic bishops and religious superiors throughout the world continue to conceal, protect, and retain sexual abusers in the priesthood. Our recent research in the Philippines confirms this. If Commission members are going to fulfill the vision articulated by Pope Francis earlier this week — to become an “important and effective means” of helping the Pope “rid the Church of the scourge” of sexual assaults by clergy — we urge them to:

1. Insist on accountability measures that are tough and unambiguous. Church officials who endanger children and protect dangerous priests must be removed and censured.

2. Insist on a church abuse policy that is strict, uniform, and global. Cultural norms are not an acceptable excuse for putting children in danger. A priest who would be deemed unsafe by bishops in one country must not be allowed to work in another.

3. Take issue with Pope Francis’s instruction to church officials this week that the provisions of the CDF’s May 2011 Circular Letter be “fully implemented.” This document is more about due process for priests than protection of children. Some of its provisions are dangerously weak.

4. Ask why the Circular Letter contains NO provision regarding zero-tolerance – that is, the permanent removal of a priest guilty of an act of child sexual abuse.

5. Demand that true zero tolerance become the church’s global standard. It must be stated in every abuse policy of every bishops’ conference and religious institute.

6. Avoid recommending universal adoption of the U.S. church’s norms unless those are tightened. While stricter than the Circular Letter provisions, the U.S. norms have proved to be too lenient. They give U.S. bishops too much discretion in deciding whether to remove an accused priest.

7. Insist that bishops and religious superiors be required to: a) investigate every allegation; b) remove accused clergy during investigations; and c) submit all allegations to independent, lay review boards.

8. Insist too that every abuse policy require church officials to report allegations to civil authorities, even when not mandated to do so under local law.

9. Recommend that the following red-flag language be removed from the Circular Letter and from every Conference’s abuse policy: “the bishop has the duty to treat all his priests as father and brother.” This language belongs in documents about doctrine, not sex crimes by clergy. Bishops worldwide invoke this principle to justify not reporting child-molesting priests to secular law enforcement. Bishop Charles Scicluna confirmed this in a 2010 interview. A bishop calling the police on a priest is “a gesture comparable to that of a father denouncing his own son,” he said, and the church therefore does “not force bishops to denounce their own priests.” The abuse policy of the Philippine Church is explicit on this score: its bishops do not report priests to civil authorities, since the bishop-priest relationship is “analogous to that between father and son.”

10. Insist that the norms require transparency. Bishops and religious superiors must be required to publicly release information about credibly accused clergy, including their names, assignment histories, alleged crimes, and church files. And this transparency should begin with Pope Francis. Just as he has modeled a simple lifestyle for the world’s bishops, he could set an example of transparency, by disclosing information about credibly accused clergy he has managed during his career.

About BishopAccountability.org

Founded in 2003 and based near Boston, Massachusetts, USA, BishopAccountability.org is a large online archive of documents, reports, and news articles documenting the global abuse crisis in the Roman Catholic Church. An independent non-profit, it is not a victims’ advocacy group and is not affiliated with any church, reform, or victims’ organization. In 2014, its website hosted 1.5 million unique visitors.

Contact for BishopAccountability.org

Anne Barrett Doyle, Co-Director, barrett.doyle@comcast.net, 781-439-5208 cell
Terence McKiernan, President and Co-Director, mckiernan1@comcast.net, 508-479-9304

Related Links

Letter of Pope Francis to Catholic Church Officials Concerning the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, February 2, 2015

Circular Letter to Assist Episcopal Conferences in Developing Guidelines for Dealing with Cases of Sexual Abuses of Minors Perpetrated By Clerics

Essential Norms for Diocesan/ Eparchial Policies Dealing with Allegations of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Priests or Deacons, USCCB

Letter from Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos to Bayeux-Lisieux Bishop Pierre Pican, September 8, 2001

Interview of Msgr. Charles Scicluna conducted by Gianni Cardinale on the Strictness of the Church in Cases of Paedophilia , March 13, 2010

Pastoral Guidelines on Sexual Abuses and Misconduct by the Clergy, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, 2003:

Letter to Gabriel Dy-Liacco, Ph.D., Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, from BishopAccountability.org, February 3, 2015

Sexual Misconduct among Priest in the Philippines: Key Cases [Special Report by BishopAccountability.org]

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Papal commission on clergy sex abuse targets bishops, seeks to convince skeptics

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

David Gibson | February 7, 2015

VATICAN CITY (RNS) A papal commission on clergy sex abuse is close to giving Pope Francis recommendations on how to punish bishops who shield priests suspected of misconduct, one of several moves announced Saturday (Feb. 7) that are encouraging the two victims on the panel who have voiced concerns about the Vatican’s efforts on this issue.

But they also said the Vatican has a year or two at most to implement policies with teeth, otherwise they will leave.

Peter Saunders of Great Britain, who was sexually assaulted as a boy by priests at his Catholic school, told a crowded news conference at the Vatican press office that he came to the meeting “with a fair degree of trepidation” that anything significant would result.

But after the initial two days with what he called a “group of quite remarkable and determined people,” including Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley, head of the commission, he said “the trepidation has kind of disappeared.”

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Pope’s sex abuse commission zeroes in on bishop’s accountability

VATICAN CITY
John Thavis

For months, I’ve heard mixed reviews of Pope Francis’ efforts to confront the sex abuse scandal in the church.

The pope generally gets high marks for two initiatives – his meeting with abuse victims last summer and his establishment of a Vatican child protection commission to strengthen and coordinate anti-abuse policies worldwide.

Critics, however, have pointed out that the commission, established late in 2013, is still getting organized and setting priorities. That makes its current three-day meeting in Rome especially important. People are waiting to see what concrete changes will emerge.

On Saturday we got a glimpse of the commission’s agenda from Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, who heads the Vatican agency. Probably the most important disclosure was that the commission is drawing up recommendations for sanctioning bishops who have covered up abuse cases.

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Ongar mum-of-three calls for progress in Church of England drugging review

UNITED KINGDOM
Guardian

Saturday 7 February 2015

by Joseph Flaig

The delayed launch of an inquiry into historic child abuse at a Church of England-run school for vulnerable girls has been criticised by one of the victims.

Teresa Cooper, 48, has campaigned for an investigation into abuse at Kendall House, a Church of England-run care home for “emotionally disturbed” teenagers that operated between 1920 and 1986 in Gravesend, Kent.

Ms Cooper, who now lives off Moreton Road in Ongar, was sent to Kendall House in 1981 when she was 14.

During the 32 months she was there, records show she was forcibly given drugs such as Valium and other tranquilisers more than 1,200 times.

She says she was sexually abused while under the effect of the drugs and has suffered ill health ever since, as have all three of her children.

In 2009, a BBC investigation found a number of other ex-residents had gone on to have children with birth defects after being forcibly given cocktails of drugs in the 1970s and 1980s.

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Victims challenge Boston prelate on abuse/cover ups

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Saturday, Feb. 7

Statement by Mary Caplan of New York City, SNAP Leader, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 917 439 4187, mcaplan682@aol.com )

Cardinal Sean O’Malley claims a church panel will recommend “methods for measuring compliance” with abuse policies. That’s unnecessary and virtually impossible.

It’s unnecessary because church abuse policies don’t impact church abuse practices. No matter what’s written on paper, in reality, every bishop deals with abuse in whatever way is most convenient and safe for him. That may sound harsh. But that’s what we continue to see after 25 years of work on this crisis.

It’s virtually impossible because “measuring compliance” means church officials will ask other church officials to voluntarily disclose whether they’re doing anything wrong. That’s not “measuring compliance.” That’s posturing.

“Measuring compliance” won’t protect kid. Enforcing compliance – by punishing bishops who endanger kids – might protect kids, if ever church officials could bring themselves to do this.

US bishops claim that for more than a dozen years they’ve had “methods for measuring compliance” with abuse policies. But not a single church official here has in any way experienced any negative consequences for NOT complying. So it’s an utterly meaningless exercise, except that it’s used to mollify parishioners and the public. (“See, we’re abiding by the guidelines we’ve adopted,” bishops claim. If they were being honest, they’d say “See, we have found ourselves ‘abiding’ by the vague, weak and unenforceable guidelines we’ve been forced to adopt by intense outside pressure and by our clever public relations consultants.”)

(And Cardinal O’Malley, by the way, has been found – by other church officials – to be ‘not in compliance’ with the US bishops abuse policies.)

O’Malley also promises a Day of Prayer on abuse. How about a Day of Action on abuse? A day on which every bishop makes public the name of even one child molesting cleric whose crimes have been hidden. A day on which every bishop lobbies secular politicians to adopt better child safety laws. A day on which every bishop demotes one church staffer who ignored, concealed or enabled child sex crimes.

O’Malley disingenuously talks again about long-promised “policies that will allow the Church to respond in an expeditious way when a bishop has not fulfilled his obligations.” This is insulting and deceptive.

O’Malley knows that the church has plenty of ways, right now, to “respond” when bishops are complicit in clergy sex crimes and cover ups. The Pope can oust them. He’s done it when bishops have “not fulfilled” their “obligations” in other ways. He refuses to do so when the wrongdoing is concealing and enabling the rape of children.

So this claim that church officials have insufficient policies to fire a bishop is a flat out lie.

Let’s keep in mind a few realities.

This panel has no power. It’s just an advisory group.

Its first members were appointed a full year into Francis’ papacy.

Its first full meeting takes place two full years into Francis’ papacy.

It’s one of hundreds of similar groups appointed by Catholic officials over the past few decades.

And over decades, thousands of individuals and organizations have given tons of advice, solid advice, to Catholic officials.

But all that advice has had very little impact. It’s been great public relations for the church hierarchy, but otherwise mostly meaningless.

Why?

Because the advice-seekers – church officials – haven’t sincerely been seeking advice. And because they don’t have to take any advice. They are the lords of their own kingdoms, answerable to no one.

Bishops pretend to seek advice because this implies that they’re genuinely trying to reform but need education. And that’s simply not the case. They know what to do. But they refuse to do it.

And since the church is a monarchy, with one pope purportedly “overseeing” 4,000 bishops, no one forces bishops to do what’s right or take advice.

Bishops know precisely how to deal with abuse and cover ups. This new panel will tell them nothing new. The panel’s recommendations will be adopted and ignored, just like the recommendations of panel after panel across the globe.

Remember this panel’s job. It has been asked to recommend changes “in (church) norms and procedures for protecting children and vulnerable adults.” Two points need to be stressed here.

First, in 2011, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith required all dioceses in the world to develop guidelines on handling allegations of abuse. But some have ignored this edict. Yesterday, in fact, in a letter to all bishops, Francis “reminded” them to do this.

[Catholic Herald]

(Of course, none of these bishops who are violating the CDF’s order of course have been punished or even exposed, which shows just how irrelevant Catholic abuse policies are.)

So if some bishops won’t even follow orders the home office, after four years, what makes anyone think they’ll follow recommendations from this new powerless panel?

If some bishops don’t even have abuse norms, why bother setting up yet another church panel to tweak the “church norms and procedures” that already exist and are changing nothing?

Second, hundreds of thousands of kids have not been sexually assaulted because of inadequate “church norms and procedures.” Again, advice and information isn’t what church officials lack. They lack the courage and compassion to do what’s right. They fear doing what’s right will derail their clerical careers. They see none of their colleagues being defrocked, demoted, or disciplined for hiding abuse. So they keep hiding abuse.

Remember the Bishop of Bling, who was quickly ousted from his German diocese because of his outrageous ostentatiousness? Francis didn’t want two years to convene a volunteer panel to recommend changing “church norms and procedures.” Francis just fired him. But he’s never done this with a single bishop who stonewalled police, deceived prosecutors, transferred predators, hidden crimes and endangered kids. Not one.

Again, as we said hours ago, if my house is filthy, I don’t need to learn “best cleaning practices.” I just need to start sweeping out the dirt.

In that same letter to the world’s bishops, Francis also wrote that priests and heads of religious communities “should be available to meet victims and their loved ones; such meetings are valuable opportunities for listening to those who have greatly suffered and for asking their forgiveness”, he wrote. How sad that Francis has to tell bishops that this is their duty.

Prodding independent and professional secular authorities – police, prosecutors, legislators – is the best way to safeguard kids, not prodding recalcitrant and self-serving Catholic figures.

[SNAP]

[SNAP]

[SNAP]

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Victims …

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

Victims of paedophile priests at Catholic seminary in Yorkshire speak of horrendous 1960s abuse as British police plead with Italian forces to extradite the last living cleric for questioning

By JENNIFER SMITH FOR MAILONLINE

The victims of paedophile priests who sexually assaulted them as young boys in a Catholic seminary have spoken out against their abusers forty years after leaving the religious Order.

The men, most of whom are now in their sixties, were given sums of money by Comboni Missionaries – formerly known as the Verona Fathers – in October last year following a lengthy civil court case.

While two of their abusers are dead, another alleged assailant is still alive and living out his final days in the Order’s Mother House in Verona.

West Yorkshire Police have implored him to return to the UK for questioning but Italian authorities have deemed him unfit to travel.

Despite compensating each of the men, Comboni Missionaries did not accept last month that all had been abused and rejected the claim that sexual assault was embedded in its culture.

Now, 40 years after leaving Mirfield Junior Seminary in Yorkshire, the men have waived their right to anonymity to tell of the depraved abuse they fell victim to.

Gerry McLaughlin, who now lives in Ireland, was taken to Mirfield in 1964 at the age of 11.
‘I’d just turned 11 in June. A priest came round the school and gave a talk, there may have been slides,’ he told MailOnline.

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Vatican presser on sexual-abuse commission.

UNITED STATES
dotCommonweal

Grant Gallicho February 7, 2015

Days after Pope Francis instructed the world’s bishops to cooperate with the commission on sexual abuse he established last year, the seventeen-member group met for the first time in Rome. During a press conference at the Vatican this morning, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, spoke about the commission’s work, which will include promoting education about child safety, suggesting best practices to dioceses, and developing methods for measuring compliance with those norms. The commission is “very concerned” with the question of accountability for bishops who fail to protect the vulnerable, O’Malley said, and would recommend consequences in time. He stopped short of suggesting what those consequences might be, but said that there must be a way of dealing with such cases “not in an open-ended way.”

The commission is working on educational programs for church leaders–including seminars for members of the Roman Curia and for newly appointed bishops who visit Rome for episcopal orientation, according to O’Malley. The cardinal also said he is asking every bishops conference to name a person who will serve as a liason between the commission and the local church. In 2011, the Vatican asked dioceses to turn in their child-protection norms. At this point, about 96 percent of dioceses have complied, O’Malley said. The commission will be in touch with the rest. Very few dioceses have not yet developed such norms, according to the cardinal. But more than a few have guidelines that are too “weak.”

O’Malley is urging Catholic funding organizations to include child-protection requirements in their funding-eligibility guidelines–and to help dioceses in poorer countries pay for abuse-prevention training.

Differences across cultures is another aspect of the crisis being examined by the commission. In Africa, for example, “there are issues of abuse that have to be addressed very urgently,” according to Fr. Hans Zollner, another member of the commission, who spoke with Vatican Radio yesterday. Zollner, who heads the Institute of Psychology at the Gregorian University in Rome, mentioned “the abuse of power in a very authoritarian way by bishops and priests, the abuse of women–including religious women–by priests, which is not so frequent in Europe or the United States,” but too common in some parts of Africa. And in some Asian cultures “the public debate on abuse does not take place because in the society at large…sexual abuse is an absolute taboo topic,” Zollner explained.

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Pope’s sex abuse commission alarmed by spanking comment

VATICAN CITY
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

[with video]

Associated Press

Members of Pope Francis’ sex abuse commission have sharply criticized his remarks that it is OK for parents to spank their children, saying there is no place for physical discipline and that the commission would be making recommendations to him about protecting kids from corporal punishment.

The commission met with its full 17 members for the first time this week and announced progress Saturday on drafting policies for holding bishops accountable when they cover up for pedophile priests. It will also be organizing educational seminars for Vatican officials and newly minted bishops on protecting children from predators.

But members got an unexpected and urgent new task when Francis told his general audience this week that it was OK for parents to spank their children if their dignity was respected.

Commission member Peter Saunders, who was sexually abused by a priest as a teen, said the committee would recommend that the pope revise his remarks, given that “millions of children around the world are physically beaten every day.”

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Clergy sexual abuse victim criticises pope over spanking remark

VATICAN CITY
Irish Independent

Philip Pullella
PUBLISHED 07/02/2015

A victim of child sexual abuse by clergy criticised Pope Francis on Saturday for appearing to endorse parents who spanked their children.

“Children don’t need to be hit. We need to talk about positive parenting … physical violence has no part in modern-day child upbringing,” said Peter Saunders, who is advising the Vatican on how to deal with its abuse crisis.

“I was hit throughout my childhood and it did me a lot of harm,” said Saunders, who was abused by a priest when he was a teenager and is one of 17 members of a Vatican commission tasked with recommending reforms in the 1.2 billion-member Church.

During a talk on fatherhood at his general audience last Wednesday, Francis departed from his prepared text to recount a conversation he once had with a father at a family encounter.

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Pope condemns female mutilation, domestic violence against women

VATICAN CITY
First Post

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Francis on Saturday condemned female mutilation and domestic violence against women, calling them degradations that had to be combated.

“The many forms of slavery, the commercialisation, and mutilation of the bodies of women, call out to us to be committed to defeat these types of degradation that reduce them to mere objects that are bought and sold …,” he told a meeting on women’s issues hosted by the Vatican’s Council for Culture.

According to the United Nations, more than 140 million girls and women have undergone some form of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) around the world, mostly in Africa and the Middle East.

He also denounced domestic violence against women.

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Pope’s sex abuse commission alarmed by Francis’ comments about spanking kids, says it’s not OK

VATICAN CITY
Fox News

Associated Press

VATICAN CITY – Members of Pope Francis’ sex abuse commission have criticized his remarks that it’s OK for parents to spank their children, saying there is no place for physical discipline and that the panel would make recommendations to him about protecting kids from corporal punishment.

The commission met with its full 17 members for the first time this week and announced progress Saturday on drafting policies to hold bishops accountable when they cover up for pedophile priests. It will also be organizing seminars for Vatican officials and newly minted bishops on protecting children.

But they got an unexpected and urgent new task when Francis told a weekly general audience that it was permissible for parents to spank their children if their dignity was respected.

Member Peter Saunders said: “You don’t hit kids.”

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Vatican Commission for protection of minors to study issue of accountability

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

[with audio]

(Vatican Radio) Making the Church a safe place for children and vulnerable adults means having proper protection procedures in place, making sure they are implemented and holding bishops accountable when they are not.

In essence, these are the priorities before the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors and Vulnerable Adults which is holding its first full Plenary Assembly since it was set up by Pope Francis in 2013.

Speaking to the press Saturday, the Commission President, Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley, said the 17 member Commission’s primary role is to help bishops conferences not just respond to accusations but also to protect minors and vulnerable adults.

To do this the Commission is setting up working groups, with outside consultants, on issues such as outreach to victims, the nature of abuse, Church law governing cases and accountability.

Card. O’ Malley stressed that key to all of the Commissions’ work is collaboration with local churches around the globe and with Vatican dicasteries. One idea being mooted is workshops for people working in the Roman Curia and for new bishops who come to Rome for orientation courses.

Referring to the Holy Father’s recent letter to Bishops and Religious Superiors on this very issue, Card. O’Malley added that each conference will be asked to name a contact person to work with the Commission for Child Protection.

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Abuse survivor says Pope is wrong to advise parents to smack their children

UNITED KINGDOM
The Tablet

07 February 2015 by Hannah Roberts in Rome

Pope Francis was wrong when he said it was acceptable to smack children, and should revise what he said, a British abuse survivor advising the Vatican on child protection has insisted.

Peter Saunders, who was invited to meet Francis last year, has been appointed to a panel of experts advising the pope on how to tackle the clerical sex abuse scandal.

All 17 members of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, met for the first time on Friday. Other members include leading British psychiatrist Baroness (Sheilla) Hollins and Irish abuse survivor and campaigner Marie Collins. At a press conference following the commission’s meeting, Mr Saunders said that the “elephant in the room” was Pope Francis’ apparent support for smacking.

Francis told the General Audience on Wednesday that parents should in certain circumstances punish their children, advising them to “do the right thing, and then move on,” as he acted out a smacking movement. He quoted a father who said he smacked his children sometimes ‘but never in the face so as to not humiliate them,’ and said he was doing the right thing.

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Pace of Vatican child protection body frustrates Marie Collins

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Paddy Agnew

Sat, Feb 7, 2015

Sex abuse survivor Marie Collins has admitted to feeling frustrated by the slow pace set by the Holy See’s Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, of which she is a member.

Ms Collins was speaking in Rome on Saturday on the sidelines of a Holy See press conference given by commission president Cardinal Sean O’Malley.

The commission, which was established in late 2013, has been having its first ever plenary meeting, attended by 17 members including French pyschologist Catherine Bonnet; former Polish prime minister and ambassador to the Holy See Hanna Suchocka; British psychiatrist Baroness Sheila Hollins; and two abuse survivors – Ms Collins and Englishman Peter Saunders.

Ms Collins said a key issue for her was the accountability of bishops.

“I have spent the last year feeling quite frustrated about the slowness,” she said. “I always knew that the church worked slowly but when you are on the inside it seems even slower. As a survivor, I am thinking of children out there today who are being abused…and accordingly, I would like to see things being moved along as fast as possible.”

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Vatican abuse commission to recommend sanctions for non-reporting bishops

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Feb. 7, 2015

VATICAN CITY The Vatican commission advising Pope Francis on clergy sexual abuse will be making recommendations to the pontiff regarding consequences for Catholic bishops who do not follow church guidelines on preventing and reporting abuse, Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley has said.

While the cardinal said the commission has yet to recommend specifically what those repercussions might be, he added: “Obviously, there has to be consequences.”

“There needs to be procedures that will allow these cases to be dealt with in an expeditious way, rather than just having things open-ended,” O’Malley continued, responding to a question at a Vatican press conference Saturday from NCR about prelates like U.S. Bishop Robert Finn who remain in place despite mishandling sexual abuse cases.

The Vatican commission on clergy sexual abuse, which the pope created to advise him on the protection of minors in all circumstances, is meeting at the Vatican for the first time this weekend with all 17 of its members.

O’Malley, who leads the group, was speaking at a conference Saturday alongside two of its other members. The issue of accountability for bishops who do not appropriately respond to reports of clergy sexual abuse came up several times at the event.

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Court upholds conviction of Archbishop Seraphim

CANADA
Orthodox Church in America

SYOSSET, NY [OCA]

On Thursday, February 6, 2015, the Court of Appeals of the Province of Manitoba affirmed the conviction of Archbishop Seraphim on one count of sexual assault. Archbishop Seraphim has begun his eight-month prison sentence imposed by the trial court in this case.

The process leading to a spiritual court will commence as mandated by the Canons of the Orthodox Church and by the Policies on Sexual Misconduct of the Orthodox Church in America, the latter of which require that clergy who have been convicted of child sexual abuse be deposed by the Holy Synod of Bishops.

The Synodal Commission investigating the case on behalf of the Synod of Bishops of the Orthodox Church in America has been directed to complete its investigation and submit its conclusions and recommendations to the Synod of Bishops for consideration and final disposition of this matter.

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The church’s cover-up of Brother Ted Dowlan – and how Broken Rites helped to expose this

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 7 February 2015)

This Broken Rites article is the most comprehensive account available about the background of Australia’s notorious paedophile Christian Brother Ted Dowlan. Despite Dowlan being jailed in 1996, the Christian Brothers did not expel him from their Order. Instead, they said that they would continue looking after him. Dowlan later changed his surname to Bales and, helped by the Christian Brothers organisation, he moved into a private residence of his own. In October 2014, after more of his earlier victims finally contacted the police, “Ted Bales” pleaded guilty to some more of his crimes and was remanded in custody to await his next sentencing procedure, which is scheduled for 27 February 2015.

It was Broken Rites that first documented the Christian Brothers policy of continuing to support any criminal member in their ranks, even after a court conviction. A senior Christian Brothers official explained this policy in the Melbourne County Court in July 1996, when Brother Edward Vernon Dowlan faced charges for indecently assaulting boys in Victorian Catholic schools. A Broken Rites researcher was present in court, day after day, taking notes during the 1996 proceedings. The following article is based on those notes.

According to submissions made in court in 1996, Dowlan was openly molesting boys (in the presence of other boys) at his first two schools (in 1971-72), and therefore the Christian Brothers’ Victoria-Tasmania administration moved him to another school, a boarding school (St Patrick’s College, Ballarat) in 1973, enabling Dowlan to commit more crimes on more boys, including boarders. The parents of at least one St Patrick’s victim confronted St Patrick’s head Christian Brother about Dowlan’s offence. The Christian Brothers’ headquarters then kept transferring Dowlan to more schools (and more victims) — until the police finally caught up with him in 1993.

During final pre-sentence submissions in court by the defence in 1996, a senior member of the Christian Brothers leadership (Brother Peter William Dowling, not to be confused with the prisoner Edward Dowlan) gave “character” evidence for Edward Dowlan. Brother Dowling, who was the Victoria-Tasmania deputy leader of the Christian Brothers in 1996, was a pupil at Melbourne’s Parade College in the 1960s, one year ahead of fellow-pupil Ted Dowlan. Peter Dowling told the court that, if there were sex-abuse complaints about Brother Ted Dowlan in the 1970s, the Christian Brothers leadership at that time would certainly have known it. But, he said, the Brothers would have regarded the sex abuse as a “moral” problem (rather than a criminal offence). He said the offender would merely have to “promise not to do it again”.

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The Message or the Messenger: A Question of Legacy

Aug 25, 2014

The recent death of Joshu Sasaki Roshi and the publication of an extensive article on John Howard Yoder raise once again the contradiction of beneficial teachings and abusive teachers. What legacies do these prominent faith leaders leave?

Joshu Sasaki Roshi was a Rinzai Zen Buddhist teacher who came to the U.S. in 1962 and taught for over 50 years. He was very influential in bringing Zen Buddhism to the U.S. and he was equally controversial because of his sexual abuse of women students. Although many people knew about Sasaki’s misconduct, no one was able to successfully challenge him or hold him accountable. Some teachers and students explained that Sasaki’s sexual touching of women students was part of his “teaching.” Others were clear that he was abusing students and some began to speak out.

In an article by Mark Oppenheimer, Bob Mammoser, a resident monk at Rinzai-ji, said that he had heard allegations about Sasaki since 1980 and did not doubt their veracity. Mammoser also said, “What’s important and is overlooked, is that, besides this aspect (italics mine), Roshi was a commanding and inspiring figure using Buddhist practice to help thousands find more peace, clarity, and happiness in their own lives.” What about the hundreds of Sasaki’s students who found chaos, confusion and suffering in their lives because of his sexual abuse?

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Pope calls again for ‘incisive’ women’s presence in church, offers no specifics

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Feb. 7, 2015

VATICAN CITY Pope Francis has called again for a more “incisive” presence of women in the leadership of the Catholic church, calling them akin to a “welcoming womb” but offering little specifics for how they might take on additional responsibilities.

The pope has also praised the role of women in the public sphere, saying they should have a “freedom of choice” between work and family roles.

“I am convinced of the urgency of offering spaces for women in the Church and to welcome them,” the pope said Saturday in a speech to the Pontifical Council of Culture.

“It is desirable,” the pontiff continued, “a feminine presence more capillary and incisive in the community, so that we can see many women involved in pastoral responsibilities, in the accompaniment of persons, families and groups, as well as in theological reflection.”

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A memoir of healing from abuse and leading a loving life

UNITED STATES
Mary Dispenzia

When a long buried memory surfaced after nearly half a century, it sent Mary Dispenza on a quest to understand how the unforgivable happens and what a person can do to survive.cover of SPLIT by Mary Dispenza

SPLIT, her courageous memoir, reveals the shocking story of her rape by the parish priest at seven years of age, an experience too horrible for the little girl to face.

Leaving the abused part of her self behind, Mary tried to live a normal life, while carrying her terrible, forgotten secret. SPLIT tells of her lifelong struggle for the intimacy, healing and love that always seemed to lay beyond her reach and the events that finally brought her to wholeness.

SPLIT is a story that leaves the reader engaged in current events, encouraged about healing and hopeful of a better future for the faithful and the church.

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Can the Church Return to the Faithful?

NEW YORK
The New York Times

Jennifer Finney Boylan

I ONCE had a friend with a boomerang. One day we took it to the Jersey Shore and I watched as he whupped it around. It was beautiful: the young man and the boomerang, the bright sun and the water. Then, late in the day, he tossed it out over the ocean, and the boomerang didn’t come back. For a while we stood together, looking out, wondering whether we might just have lost sight of it. We glanced around nervously, on the off chance that it might yet clock us on the head, returning from a direction we had not anticipated.

I thought of that long-lost boomerang recently, when the Vatican announced that Pope Francis would be visiting New York in September. It will most likely be a one-day visit, including a speech at the United Nations and probably a Mass at Madison Square Garden and a visit to St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

This pope has gotten rave reviews for his supposedly progressive views, although it may be only that he seems progressive when compared to Pope Benedict XVI, the pope whose philosophy, at times, sounded like the pastoral version of “Get off my lawn.” It is hard to imagine a pope being chosen as the Person of the Year by both Time magazine and The Advocate (a leading L.G.B.T. magazine), but Francis was, in 2013. He’s said that evolution and “the notion of creation” were not “inconsistent”; urged the church to help the poor; and asked, “Who am I to judge?” on the issue of gay priests. The best measure of the pope’s liberalness might be that Rick Santorum says he finds him “very difficult to listen to.”

Yet it’s worth remembering that Francis has not actually changed any church doctrine on these issues. And he hasn’t done a thing to walk back Benedict’s egregious comments on transgender people, which suggested that in living our lives openly, we somehow make human dignity “disappear.” Then, this week, Francis praised Slovakian pilgrims for defending the family, in a quote that appeared to give support to a referendum in their country scheduled for today that could ban marriage and adoption for same-sex and transgender couples.

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WALES SHOULD HAVE ABUSE PANEL VOICE SAYS DRAKEFORD

WALES
Care Appointments

Written by The Editorial Team

Wales’ Health and Social Services Minister, Mark Drakeford has called on the UK Government to ensure Wales is fully represented on the independent Panel Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse.

In a letter to the Home Secretary, Rt Hon Theresa May MP, the Minister has welcomed the appointment of Justice Lowell Goddard to chair the independent Panel, but has repeated calls for the appointment of members “with distinct representation from Wales.”

Mark Drakeford said: “I welcome the announcement that Justice Lowell Goddard has accepted the Home Secretary’s invitation to chair the independent Panel Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse. I also welcome the decision to place the Inquiry on a statutory basis under the Inquiries Act 2005.

“The role of the Chair and the Panel is fundamental to securing the confidence of the survivors of abuse and for demonstrating that the work of the Inquiry is both inclusive and transparent. It is equally important that clear and coherent arrangements are in place to ensure that those survivors wishing to give evidence are effectively supported and empowered both in presenting their evidence but also subsequently.

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Holy See must clarify stance on corporal punishment

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Mary McAleese

PUBLISHED 07/02/2015

The Holy See is a Signatory to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989). The Committee on the Rights of the Child, which monitors the implementation of the Convention, advocates the universal abolition of corporal punishment of children in all circumstances believing it to be a violation of their rights under the Convention (and natural law) to bodily integrity, human dignity and freedom from violence.

In 2014, the Holy See made both written and oral submissions to the Committee on this subject.

Here are the words of the Holy See’s official report to the Committee: “On the international level, the Holy See does not promote corporal punishment.[…] the overall message, which the New Testament will bring to perfection, is a forceful appeal for respect for the inviolability of physical life and the integrity of the person.[…] The 1987 Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC, 2221‑2223) recognises that parents are obliged in the first instance to educate, guide, correct, instruct and discipline their child; the terms ‘corporal punishment’ or ‘punishment’ are not used.”

On the strength of those assurances, the Concluding Observations of the Committee on the Rights of the Child said: “The Committee welcomes the statement during the interactive dialogue that the delegation of the Holy See will take the proposal of banning corporal punishment of children in all settings back for consideration.

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Mary McAleese criticises pope over smacking comment

IRELAND
The Irish Times

Paul Cullen

Sat, Feb 7, 2015

Former president Mary McAleese has criticised Pope Francis’s apparent support for parents smacking their children in the name of discipline.

Ms McAleese accused the Vatican of reversing its position on parental corporal punishment, and questioned whether the pope “has turned the clock back considerably”.

“What faith are we to have now in the Holy See’s commitment to the Convention on the Rights of the Child?” she asked in a letter to The Irish Times.

Speaking in Rome this week, Pope Francis outlined the traits of a good father – one who forgives but is able to “correct with firmness” while not discouraging the child.

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Germany hits back at Pope over comments on spanking children

GERMANY
DNA

Germany and a leading anti-corporal punishment group rejected as “unacceptable” the pope’s comments that it’s OK to spank your children to discipline them, as long as their dignity is maintained.

In his general audience this week, Pope Francis had praised a father who admitted smacking his child “but never in the face so as to not humiliate them.” Francis described the man’s comment as “beautiful,” adding: “He knows the sense of dignity! He has to punish them but does it justly and moves on.”

Verena Herb, a spokeswoman for Germany’s Families Ministry, told reporters yesterday that “there can be no dignified hitting.” “There must be no misunderstanding here, because any form of violence against children is completely unacceptable,” she said. Germany is one of several countries where corporal punishment of children is illegal.

Separately, the Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, a leading advocacy group, said it was disappointed by Francis’ comments given that other faith leaders have come out in support of prohibiting all physical punishment of children. “There is a very strong human rights consensus that children have an equal right to respect for their human dignity and physical integrity and to equal protection under the law,” the group’s Peter Newell said in an email to The Associated Press.

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The Pope says spanking is OK, but … is it?

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Kara Baskin and David Mogolov
GLOBE CORRESPONDENTS FEBRUARY 06, 2015

When I was a kid, my parents spanked us sometimes, but never much. Now that I have kids, I’m starting to think about spanking (everybody has an opinion — even Pope Francis, who says spanking is okay as long as children are not “demeaned”). I’m kind of on the fence, to be honest. Is it OK to spank?

David: In our house, kids don’t get hit or spanked, and I think that’s becoming more and more common.

The world is moving rapidly away from corporal punishment. Thirty-three nations have outlawed corporal punishment, according to the Gunderson National Child Protection Training Center. While the US isn’t one of them, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child requires all members to “take all appropriate legislative, administrative, social and educational measures to protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence,” which seems to obligate us to end the practice.

I know many parents believe in spanking, and that they see it as a traditional and effective method of discipline. Every time corporal punishment makes the news, people invariably say, “I was spanked, and it didn’t do me any harm.” Just look at the comments section or tweets related to any article about Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson’s abuse charges for evidence of this.

But I’m not convinced. The science behind corporal punishment is resoundingly anti-spanking. “The American Academy of Pediatrics strongly opposes striking a child.” This is the beginning of the organization’s statement on physical punishment. The American Academy of Child & Adult Psychiatry’s statement says, “Extensive research demonstrates that although corporal punishment may have a high rate of immediate behavior modification, it is ineffective over time, and is associated with increased aggression and decreased moral internalization of appropriate behavior.” So not only does it cause anguish, it’s ineffective.

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McAleese criticises Pope’s stance on smacking children

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Former President Mary McAleese has criticised Pope Francis’ comments on smacking children, warning it could signal a turning back of the clock in the church’s attitude to corporal punishment and children’s rights.

Earlier in the week, the Pope reaclled a conversation he had with a father who told him he sometimes hit his children, condoning the punishment.

In a letter to the Irish Independent, the former professor of law at Trinity highlights the Vatican is a signatory to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

“Is the Holy See now doing what it claimed not to be doing a year ago, namely actively and internationally promoting the corporal punishment of children,” she wrote.

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McAleese hits out at Pope over smacking of children

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

BY SARAH MACDONALD – 07 FEBRUARY 2015

Former Irish President Mary McAleese has questioned Pope Francis’s comments on smacking children, warning it could signal a turning back of the clock in the church’s attitude to corporal punishment and children’s rights.

The former Ardoyne resident who was a professor of law at Trinity is currently completing a doctorate in canon law.

She highlights that the Vatican is a signatory to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

It advocates the universal abolition of corporal punishment of children in all circumstances.

The mother-of-three refers to an exchange last year between the Holy See and the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child which claimed corporal punishment “remains widespread in some Catholic institutions” and “reached endemic levels” in Ireland as revealed by the Ryan Report.

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Court rejects lawsuits over $60M gift to Legion of Christ

RHODE ISLAND
Town Hall

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Three lawsuits filed by a woman who says her late aunt was coerced into donating $60 million to a disgraced Roman Catholic order called the Legion of Christ have been dismissed by a Rhode Island court.

The state Supreme Court justices Friday upheld a lower-court decision and ruled Mary Lou Dauray doesn’t have standing to sue the Legion of Christ in an attempt to block it from receiving the money.

Dauray’s aunt was Gabrielle Mee, of North Smithfield. Dauray says her aunt was defrauded and wouldn’t have donated the money if she knew the Legion of Christ’s founder secretly fathered three children and molested seminarians.

The late Rev. Marcial Maciel founded the Legion in 1941. Documents show Vatican officials knew about his abuse.

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Child protection symposium will address sexual abuse in the church and other institutions

MINNESOTA
William Mitchell College of Law

The Child Protection Program, in partnership with Jeff Anderson ’75, will present an all-day symposium that will examine the complicated history and current situation surrounding sexual abuse in the church and other institutions. The symposium will be held on Friday, Apr. 17, in the William Mitchell Auditorium.

“Looking Back and Moving Forward: A Critical Look at Sexual Abuse and Institutional Failure,” will feature Jeff Dion, director of The National Crime Victim Bar Association as the keynote speaker. He will be joined by the Very Rev. Charles Lachowitzer, Minnesota vicar general, and a remarkable group of local and national experts who will share messages of hope, help, and healing as they discuss policies and strategies to help institutions and survivors move forward after abuse has occurred.

Dion, who has worked for the National Center for Victims of Crime since 1998, lectures across the U.S. to foster greater understanding among crime victims and trial attorneys. He has trained advocates and attorneys in 37 states and serves on the board of directors for the Sexual Assault Victim Advocacy Service of Prince William County. He is an advisory council member for the National Association to Prevent Sexual Abuse of Children and is the recipient of the Ronald Wilson Reagan Public Policy Award, an award honoring an individual whose leadership has led to significant changes in public policy and practice to benefit crime victims.

The symposium is made possible, in part, by the generosity of Jeff Anderson, trial attorney at Jeff Anderson & Associates. A dedicated sexual abuse litigator, Anderson has represented thousands of victims and their families, trying more than 250 jury trials to verdict across the country. He was also instrumental in exposing the large scale cover-up of sexual abuse by priests in the 1980s. He frequently lectures on litigation techniques and publishes on the topic of sexual misconduct in the clergy.

Looking Back and Moving Forward: A Critical Look at Sexual Abuse and Institutional Failure
Keynote Speaker:

Jeff Dion, director of The National Crime Victim Bar Association

Speakers:

Chris Anderson, executive director, MaleSurvivor
Jeff Anderson ’75, Jeff Anderson & Associates, attorney for victims of sexual abuse
Alison Fiegh, program manager, Jacob Wetterling Resource Center
The Very Reverend Charles Lachowitzer, Minnesota vicar general
Professor Charles Reid, University of St. Thomas School of Law
Charles Rogers, Briggs and Morgan, attorney
Retired Major General Robert Shadley, author of The Game: Unraveling a Military Sex Scandal
The cost to attend the symposium, which runs from 9 am–4 pm, is $75 for general admission and $25 for public interest admission. Student admission is free. Application will be made for seven hours of CLE credit.

Learn more or register by Monday, Apr. 13.

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Poland votes to ratify treaty to protect women

POLAND
Business Recorder

WARSAW: Poland’s parliament voted Friday to ratify a treaty combatting violence against women, despite considerable opposition from the right and the country’s powerful Catholic Church.

Lawmakers voted by 254 to 175 in favour of adopting the 2011 Istanbul Convention, the world’s first binding instrument to prevent and combat violence against women, from marital rape to female genital mutilation. Eight lawmakers abstained.

Critics claim the treaty links violence to religion and tradition. The Polish episcopate said the convention is based on “extremist, neo-Marxist gender theory”.

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Garland Church Should Have Known Youth Ministers Were Child Sex Abusers, Suit Say

TEXAS
Dallas Observer

By Amy Silverstein Fri., Feb. 6 2015

Even before Joshua and Jordan Earls were formally charged with making child pornography and child molestation in 2013, it should have been obvious to the Garland church where they worked that something was awry, one of their former victims says.

Josh moved to Texas to work as a youth minister at the Arapaho Road Baptist Church in 2008, and his brother “Jordy” followed him the next year. They quickly fell into favor with the kids in the youth group and their parents. They paid particularly close attention to several teenage girls, attention that would eventually lead to criminal charges.

They gave the girls gifts and cards, one girl identified only as “Jane Doe 103” says in lawsuit, and picked the girls up from school without telling their parents. The brothers also held an exclusive “book club” meeting for the girls at the apartment they shared together and offered to give Doe private guitar lessons. From there, the brothers moved into “inappropriate full-body hugs” and other sexual touching.

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Panepinto calls for complete repeal …

NEW YORK
Niagara Frontier Publications

Panepinto calls for complete repeal of statute-of-limitations for sexual offenses against minors

Submitted

Fri, Feb 6th 2015

State Sen. Marc Panepinto, D-60, along with childhood sexual abuse victims Vanessa DeRosa and Tino Flores, and their attorneys, came together Friday to call for the complete repeal of New York’s statute-of-limitations for sexual offenses against minors. Panepinto highlighted his two pieces of co-sponsored legislation that aim to remedy this legal problem and bring reform to the justice system.

“It is unnerving and, frankly, frightening that a victim of childhood sexual abuse can be told that it is too late to bring a claim against their abuser in a court of law,” Panepinto said. “But that is the unfortunate reality in New York state, where the heinous crimes of sexual predators and abusers are shielded behind the law’s archaic statute-of-limitations code.

“The two Senate bills that I have co-sponsored aim to fix this wrong by completely repealing the statute of limitations for sexual offenses against minors. As the newest member of the Senate codes committee, I will advocate tirelessly to ensure this critical legislation is brought before the full Senate for a vote. Mr. Flores, Ms. DeRosa, and the countless other victims throughout our state deserve nothing less.”

Attorney Diane Tiveron of HoganWillig, the law firm representing Flores and DeRosa, said, “We want to extend our sincere thanks and gratitude to Sen. Marc Panepinto and his office in taking this bold step to effectuate a change in the statute of limitations associated with victims of abuse and the constraints they face in bringing their abusers to justice. We also want to thank all the brave people who have contacted our office after our press conference last week and conveyed their individual and personal stories of unpunished abuse. Our clients, Tino Flores and Vanessa DeRosa, are pleased that their efforts may finally right a wrong that has caused irreparable pain to countless people.

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