Boy abused in New Zealand Catholic Church care 'shown corpse' to keep
him quiet
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[February 09, 2022]
By Praveen Menon
WELLINGTON (Reuters) - A New Zealand
inquiry on Wednesday heard harrowing accounts from people who were
abused as children while they were under the care of the Catholic
Church, one of whom said he was shown a corpse in a hospital morgue by a
priest to keep him quiet.
The livestreamed hearings are part of a wider Royal Commission of
Inquiry that is looking into abuse in state care and faith-based
institutions that is under way in the Pacific island nation.
An interim report on the inquiry released in Dec 2020 revealed that up
to a quarter of a million children and young and vulnerable adults were
physically and sexually abused in New Zealand’s faith-based and state
care institutions from the 1960s to the early 2000s.
Wednesday marked the first of a seven-day hearing into abuse in the care
of the Catholic Church, which has been rocked by decades of sex abuse
scandals across the world.
The hearing focused on abuse by priests of the St John of God at three
Catholic institutions in the South Island city of Christchurch – the
Marylands School, the neighbouring St Joseph's orphanage and the Hebron
Trust.
One survivor from Marylands School talked about how he endured abuse by
child sex offender Brother Bernard McGrath for four years.
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"After a while, I started to just
adapt to the sexual things that happened at Marylands," Donald Ku
said in his testimony.
"I was also threatened by Brother McGrath to keep
quiet about what was going on. Once he took me to the hospital
morgue and showed me a corpse as a way of silencing me," he said.
"The Church carries deep shame for this dark chapter of their
history," lawyer Sally McKechnie, representing the bishops and
congregational leaders of the Church, told the royal commission,
referring to abuse at Marylands, the orphanage and the trust.
The Catholic Church acknowledged in its statement that McGrath is
one of Australasia’s worst sexual offenders against children. He is
currently serving a sentence of 33 years in prison in Australia
after being convicted of 64 offences against 12 boys there.
Of the 42 priests at Marylands, 21 had abuse complaints against
them, higher than the abuse claims made against St John of God
priests in Australia.
A total of 537 boys, many with disabilities, attended Marylands and
144 reported abuse, although this was the "tip of the iceberg", the
commission was told at the hearings.
The commission has so far heard about 1,686 experiences of abuse in
87 days of public hearing. It is expected to deliver a full report
in June next year.
(Editing by Jon Boyle and Nick Macfie)
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