[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
International News Title: Please forgive us: Catholic bishops’ deep sorrow for decades of child sex abuse [ U.K. ] The leaders of the five million Roman Catholics in England and Wales will publish an unprecedented mea culpa today for child sex abuse. The expression of deep sorrow acknowledges the harm done to hundreds of children over decades by Catholic priests and lay officials. The Archbishop of Westminster, the Most Rev Vincent Nichols, will lead diocesan bishops and archbishops in offering repentance to all Catholics for how the children were treated. The Catholic Church in England and Wales has been regarded worldwide as a model of how to respond to the crisis. It addressed child abuse in two reports a decade ago and has strict guidelines on safeguarding children. But although individual bishops have spoken of their sorrow through a series of reports, commissions and sets of guidelines, as well as in sermons, the Churchs leaders have never offered a statement comparable to todays. Related Links A church insider said that the failure to do so had been an oversight and that the statement did not represent a sudden change of heart. The bishops understood the importance of making clear the extent of their sorrow. Their statement is expected to reiterate what Archbishop Nichols wrote in a recent article in The Times: The child abuse committed within the Roman Catholic Church and its concealment is deeply shocking and totally unacceptable. I am ashamed of what happened and understand the outrage and anger it has provoked. Most cases in England and Wales are historic but a few clerical abusers have continued exploiting their access to children. Father David Pearce, a Benedictine monk at Ealing Abbey, West London, was jailed for eight years in October after admitting offences against pupils during 35 years at the abbey. Archbishop Nichols chaired the Churchs child safety body but was not told all the details of Pearces offences until last year, when he replaced Cardinal Cormac Murphy-OConnor at Westminster. The bishops apology comes the day after the Pope, in his first comment on the scandal since his letter to Irish bishops last month, promised church action to help the victims of clerical sex abuse. Speaking at his weekly audience in St Peters Square, he said that he had met victims of abuse during his trip to Malta last weekend. I shared with them their suffering and emotionally prayed with them, assuring them of Church action, he said. The Pope is understood to have accepted the resignation of James Moriarty, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin, who admitted in December that he had failed to challenge the Dublin archdioceses past practice of concealing child abuse complaints from police. A formal announcement is expected from the Holy See today. Two auxiliary Dublin bishops, Eamonn Walsh and Ray Field, are expected to resign within weeks. All three were identified in an investigation ordered by the Irish Government into decades of child abuse cover-ups in the Dublin Archdiocese. It found that all bishops until 1996 colluded to protect dozens of paedophile priests from criminal prosecution. Last week the Holy See issued instructions to bishops worldwide to report cases of abusive priests to police where civil laws require it. The scandal also continues to reverberate in the Popes German homeland, where the head of the Catholic Church has asked Walter Mixa, Bishop of Augsburg and a papal ally, to step down until investigations into claims that he beat orphaned children and misused Church funds are complete. Alleged victims have claimed that he also used a stick, a wooden spoon and, when that broke, his fists. After weeks of denials, Bishop Mixa said that he could not rule out a cuff or two around the ear 20 years ago but added: I very much regret that today.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: WhiteSands (#0)
You and Brian S should take a show on the road.
I can see NOVEMBER from my House....
It shouldn't hurt to be a child, your 'sorrow' is nothing compared to the pain you inflicked, and the innocence you stole...
|
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|