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International News Title: Vatican and Pope Stumble in Response to Abuse Crisis [ Which of the many: Boston, Germany, Ireland, Mexico...? ] VATICAN CITY The Vatican has been ramping up its defense of how Pope Benedict XVI and the church have handled a growing sexual abuse scandal. But deflecting criticism has proved challenging for this papacy, which has been defined by missteps and difficulties in conveying its message. Even as the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, has said that the crisis has threatened the moral credibility of the church, he acknowledged in an interview this week that he had not personally discussed the abuse crisis with the pope, a fact he attributed to the structure of the Vaticans communications apparatus. The pope has never avoided the problems of the church, Father Lombardi said of the sexual abuse issue in an interview on Monday. He has always expressed his very deep pain and his very deep awareness of the seriousness of what has happened. That message may not be getting across, Vatican analysts say, partly because Benedict, a reserved theologian long immersed in doctrinal issues, seems to have little interest in communications. I dont think youll ever have the Vatican handle something like this the way a big P.R. firm in the States would, with big press conferences, said an American archbishop who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid ruffling relations with the Holy See. Theyre rather defensive at the moment, convinced its a vendetta against the Holy Father. Yet at the same time, the archbishop said, entrenched bureaucracy has also made it tougher for the Vatican to make its case publicly. I just dont think theres that much discussion, he said, adding that there was not much regard for public relations. He continued, Its just kind of a naïveté about how to face these rather significant challenges in a way that will come across to the people in the pews. The pressure on Benedict has grown especially intense because of questions over the role of the pope, as an archbishop in Munich three decades ago, in handling the case of a pedophile priest permitted to continue pastoral work. The Vatican has insisted that Benedict bears no responsibility for the matter, and one of his aides has taken the blame. The Vatican has tended to label such news coverage as attacks that have undoubtedly proved harmful. But it has declined to discuss his role in the matter in any detail, insisting that the church has already amply demonstrated the popes nonresponsibility in the matter. It would not be right for him to take a personal responsibility for things or errors that he didnt make, Father Lombardi said in the interview. By the standards of any secular state or multinational corporation, that response might seem aloof. But by the standards of the Vatican, a slow-moving, bureaucratic monarchy that tends to communicate indirectly and in ciphers St. Peters successor generally does not give news conferences the response is seen as relatively forceful. Benedicts strongest response to the latest crisis was a long letter earlier this month to Roman Catholics in Ireland, following government reports that documented a cover-up of decades of widespread sexual abuse. In the letter, he spoke of the serious sins committed against defenseless children, and he directly blamed Irelands bishops. It must be admitted that grave errors of judgment were made and failures of leadership occurred, Benedict said. The pope called for a special Vatican inquiry into unspecified dioceses. He also accepted the resignation of two Irish bishops, and several others have also offered to resign. But his approach was dismissed as inadequate by some Irish critics, who criticized Benedict for not disciplining bishops complicit in the cover-up. The popes reluctance to advocate specific penalties for bishops who made mistakes in handling such cases has resonance after it emerged that Benedict had been sent a memo about the return to parish work of an abuser priest in Munich while the future pope was archbishop there in 1980. The Vatican has insisted that Benedict did not know that the priest, who went on to molest other children, had returned to work.
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