In U.S., pope's summit on sex abuse seen
as too little, too late
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[February 21, 2019]
By Katharine Jackson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In the study of his
home outside Washington, victims’ advocate Tom Doyle searched a shelf
packed with books to find the thick report that led him to stop
practicing as a priest and devote himself to helping those who had been
sexually abused by clergymen.
The 1985 report was one of the first exposes in a sexual abuse scandal
that has plagued the Catholic Church. Pope Francis has called senior
bishops to meet for four days starting on Thursday to discuss how to
tackle the worsening crisis.
Doyle, 74, who lost his job as a canon lawyer in the Vatican Embassy
soon after the report was made public and eventually decided he could
not continue working as an active priest, is deeply skeptical that
anything of substance will come of this week’s meeting.
"They're going to pray and they're going to meditate. But it's totally
useless," he said. "You shouldn't have to have something like this in
2019. These men should know right out of the gate that if you have a
priest who's raping children, you don't allow them to continue."
The meeting comes after a year in which fresh revelations about abuse of
children and cover-up has shaken the church globally and tested the
pope's authority. Predatory priests were often moved from parish to
parish rather than expelled or criminally prosecuted as bishops covered
up the abuse.
Monsignor Stephen Rossetti, 67, a professor at Catholic University, said
that U.S. bishops have already taken decisive steps to keep children
from being abused. In 2002, after decades of abuse in the Boston area
became public, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) passed a
charter including requirements to report allegations of abuse of minors
to police and to remove abusive priests or deacons after a single
offence.
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Pope Francis holds a cross as he conducts the Mass for the Feast of
Epiphany in Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican January 6, 2019.
REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi
"The bishops of the United States are following zero tolerance,"
Rossetti, who helped draft the charter, said. "If you molested a
minor at any time in your life, you're not going to be a priest in
this country. Period."
Rossetti said the pope and the bishops should use the Vatican
meeting to push for similar reforms in other countries where the
problem of abuse is still coming to light.
But the U.S. policy "still left the bishops off the hook," David
Lorenz, a director at Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests,
or SNAP, said. He called the pope’s summit "a publicity stunt."
Recalling how he was abused at age 16 by a priest at an all-boys
high school in Kentucky, Lorenz said the church and bishops with
secrets of their own will continue to cover up abuse.
"It's the secrecy. It's the silence. It's because I was silent for
so long," Lorenz, now 60, said, welling up. "They rely on that."
(Reporting by Katharine Jackson in Washington; Editing by Frank
McGurty and Cynthia Osterman)
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