Abuse survivors urge the Vatican to globalize the zero-tolerance policy
it approved in the US
Send a link to a friend
[November 19, 2024]
By NICOLE WINFIELD
ROME (AP) — Survivors of clergy sexual abuse urged the Vatican on Monday
to expand its zero-tolerance policy that it approved for the U.S.
Catholic Church in 2002 to the rest of the world, arguing that children
everywhere should be protected from predator priests.
The U.S. norms, adopted at the height of the abuse scandal there, say a
priest will be permanently removed from church ministry based on even a
single act of sexual abuse that is either admitted to or established
under church law.
That “one strike and you’re out” policy in the U.S. has long stood out
as the toughest in the church. It is held up by some as the gold
standard, by others as excessive and by still others as imperfect but
better than most. It was adopted by U.S. bishops as they scrambled to
try to regain credibility following the revelations of abuse and
cover-up in Boston documented by the Boston Globe’s “Spotlight” series.
Since then, the church abuse scandal has erupted globally, and survivors
from around the world said Monday there’s no reason why the U.S. norms
couldn’t and shouldn’t be applied universally. They called for changes
in the church’s in-house canon law and reasoned they could be approved
since the Holy See already approved the norms for the U.S. church.
“Despite Pope Francis’ repeated calls for zero tolerance on abuse, his
words have yet to lead to any real action,” said Gemma Hickey, a
transgender survivor of abuse and the president of the global survivor
network Ending Clergy Abuse.
The proposal launched at a press conference was hammered out during an
unusual meeting in June in Rome between survivors and some of the
Catholic hierarchy's top priestly experts on preventing abuse. It was
described by participants at the time as a “historic collaboration”
between two groups that often talk past one another, given victims' deep
distrust of the Catholic hierarchy.
The priestly participants in that meeting included the Rev. Hans Zollner,
who heads the church’s main academic think tank on safeguarding; the No.
2 at the Vatican’s child protection advisory board, Bishop Luis Manuel
Ali Herrera; and the Gregorian University’s canon law dean, the Rev.
Ulrich Rhode as well as diplomats from the U.S., Australian and other
embassies.
[to top of second column]
|
Dave West, left, and his brother Larry West, both of Fort Worth,
Texas, demonstrate outside the hotel where the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops are meeting in Dallas on June 14. 2002. (AP
Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
However, there was apparently no one from the Vatican legal office,
secretariat of state or the discipline section of the Dicastery for
the Doctrine of the Faith, which processes all abuse cases worldwide
and largely sets policy on applying the church’s canon law — albeit
in secret since its cases are never published.
As a result, it was unclear what would become of the proposed policy
changes, given the U.S. norms only came about because U.S. bishops
pushed the Vatican to approve them, driven by their outraged flocks
and insurance companies.
Nicholas Cafardi, a U.S. canon lawyer who was an original member of
the U.S. National Review Board that provided input to the 2002 U.S.
norms, said globalizing that policy into universal church law “would
be one of the logical next steps” for Francis to take to continue
the fight against abuse.
But Cafardi, author of “Before Dallas,” about the lead-up to the
2002 Dallas bishops' meeting that approved the norms, said that some
bishops today bristle at how the policy limits their authority and
freedom. And in a telephone interview, he noted that even in the
U.S., the norms are only still in place because the U.S. bishops
keep formally asking to keep them, which he acknowledged was a
“weakness” in the system.
“It seems to me that a good protection would be ‘Let’s just make it
universal law,’” said Cafardi. “Once you have that law, you don’t
have to worry about the bishops asking for it in country after
country. It’s just the law."
However, the proposal faces an uphill battle since the Vatican in
recent years has repeatedly insisted on “proportionality” in its
sentences for abuse, refusing to apply a one-size-fits-all approach
and taking into account cultural differences in countries where
abuse isn't as openly discussed as it is in the West.
That has resulted in seemingly light punishments for even confirmed
cases of abuse which, in the U.S., would have resulted in a priest
being permanently removed from ministry.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |