Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Analysis: Pope's Sex Abuse Summit: What It Did and Didn't Do
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
February 25, 2019

Share

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis’ summit on preventing sexual abuse was never going to meet the expectations placed on it by victims groups, the media and ordinary Catholics outraged over a scandal that has harmed so many and compromised the church’s moral authority so much.

“In people’s justified anger, the church sees the reflection of the wrath of God, betrayed and insulted by these deceitful consecrated persons.” — Pope Francis
Indeed, no sweeping new law was announced to punish bishops who cover up abuse. No files were released or global reporting requirement endorsed requiring priestly rapists to be reported to police. In his final speech to the summit Sunday, Pope Francis even fell back on the hierarchy’s frequent complaint of unfair press coverage.
But something has changed.
By inviting the leaders of Catholic bishops conferences and religious orders from around the world to a four-day tutorial on preventing sex abuse, Francis has made clear that they all are responsible for protecting the children in their care and must punish the priests who might violate them, or risk punishment themselves.
“In people’s justified anger, the church sees the reflection of the wrath of God, betrayed and insulted by these deceitful consecrated persons,” the pontiff said.

Women’s Voices Drive Message Home

And yet as strong as his words were, it was actually the handful of women invited to address the summit who drove the message home most forcefully. That too speaks volumes about the future of an institution where women are officially barred from the hierarchy’s ranks but are increasingly raising their voices and walking out when they aren’t heard.
Nigerian Sister Veronica Openibo, superior of her religious order, shamed the men in the room for their decades of silence over the “atrocities” committed by their priests and warned them that they would be judged for their inaction going forward.
“This storm will not pass by,” she said.
Valentina Alazraki, the longtime Vatican correspondent for Mexico’s Televisa, challenged the men in power to decide whether they are on the side of the victims, or the priests who raped them.
“We have decided which side to be on,” Alazraki told the summit, warning that unless the hierarchy too sides with victims, “journalists, who seek the common good, will be your worst enemies.”
Francis was so impressed by the address of Linda Ghisoni, a canon lawyer and under-secretary in the Vatican’s laity office, that he delivered an impromptu ode to women at the end of her speech.

Vatican Expected to Issue New Policy

And by all indications, the searing testimony of a woman who as a child endured five years of rape at the hands of a priest — and a lifetime of trauma, eating disorders, depression and suicide attempts — brought the 190 bishops and religious superiors to a stunned, shameful silence.

“This has really reached the heart level. And if you get to that level, you cannot be as you were before.” Rev. Hans Zollner
She told them that she had wanted to tell them something about her childhood, but couldn’t because since she was 11 years old “I, who loved coloring books and doing somersaults on the grass, have not existed.”
“Instead, engraved in my eyes, ears, nose, body and soul, are all the times he immobilized me, the child, with superhuman strength.”
The Rev. Hans Zollner, one of the conference organizers, said her tearful testimony stopped the bishops cold.
“This has really reached the heart level,” he said. “And if you get to that level, you cannot be as you were before.”
And some concrete steps were announced at the summit’s end that will change things as they were before.
For starters, the Vatican in the coming days is expected to issue a new child protection policy for the Vatican City State. Despite having instructed all the world’s bishops’ conferences to draft such a policy in 2011, the headquarters of the global Catholic Church still has none.

Plowing Ahead to Articulate Clear Accountability Proposals

The Vatican will soon issue a step-by-step guidebook for bishops around the world explaining how to investigate and prosecute abuse cases. Task forces at the regional or continental level will be established to give them expert help, since many dioceses in poorer countries simply don’t have the legal resources on hand.
All indications are that the Vatican will be re-evaluating the use of “pontifical secret” in abuse cases, so that victims can actually learn the outcomes of their cases.
New “clarifications” are expected to be issued about implementing a 2016 law on holding bishops and religious superiors accountable when they cover up abuse cases.
And individual bishops conferences, such as in the U.S., are plowing ahead to articulate clear accountability proposals for their leadership.
Archbishop Charles Scicluna, the Vatican’s longtime sex crimes prosecutor, told reporters at the summit’s end that his main takeaway after four days was that there is now a recognition within the church that “abuse of minors is an egregious crime, but so too is cover-up.”
And with that, he said, “There is no going back.”

DON'T MISS

Fresno Council Throws Out Plan for South Central, Says It Was Too Strict

DON'T MISS

How Democrat Adam Gray Won His Race, the Last to Be Called in the US House

DON'T MISS

New Coach Matt Entz Promises to Make Bulldog Football ‘Something Special’

DON'T MISS

San Francisco Man Escaped a Merced County Prison 8 Years Ago. He’s Back With New Charges.

DON'T MISS

Fresno Hit-and-Run Big-Rig Driver Sought After Crash

DON'T MISS

She Buys a Ticket to Support a Good Cause, Then Wins the 2024 Granville Home of Hope

DON'T MISS

CA Needs More Water Storage to Handle Boom-or-Bust Cycles

DON'T MISS

Dodgers’ Deferred Payments Top $1 Billion to 7 Players, Including Snell and Edman

DON'T MISS

Feds Close ‘Rape Club’ Women’s Prison in California

DON'T MISS

California Will Appeal Rejection of Lawsuit Over Huntington Beach Voter ID Law

UP NEXT

Digging Resumes in the Search for a Woman in a Pennsylvania Sinkhole

UP NEXT

Syrian Insurgents Capture Central City of Hama in Severe Setback to the Syrian President

UP NEXT

Amnesty International Accuses Israel of Genocide in Gaza War

UP NEXT

A Major Power Plant Fails in Cuba, Plunging the Island Into Darkness — Again

UP NEXT

Israel’s Military Says Hostages Were Likely Killed by Hamas as Airstrike Hit

UP NEXT

Tulare County Explosion Burns Man, Destroys Fifth-Wheel Trailer

UP NEXT

Trump Considers DeSantis for the Pentagon With Hegseth Under Pressure Over Allegations: AP

UP NEXT

Is Enron Back? If It’s a Joke, Some Former Employees Aren’t Laughing

UP NEXT

South Korean President Backs Down From Martial Law Order

UP NEXT

Three Climbers From the US and Canada Are Missing on New Zealand’s Highest Peak

San Francisco Man Escaped a Merced County Prison 8 Years Ago. He’s Back With New Charges.

8 hours ago

Fresno Hit-and-Run Big-Rig Driver Sought After Crash

8 hours ago

She Buys a Ticket to Support a Good Cause, Then Wins the 2024 Granville Home of Hope

10 hours ago

CA Needs More Water Storage to Handle Boom-or-Bust Cycles

10 hours ago

Dodgers’ Deferred Payments Top $1 Billion to 7 Players, Including Snell and Edman

11 hours ago

Feds Close ‘Rape Club’ Women’s Prison in California

11 hours ago

California Will Appeal Rejection of Lawsuit Over Huntington Beach Voter ID Law

12 hours ago

The NWS Cancels Tsunami Warning for the US West Coast After 7.0 Earthquake

12 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Is Fresno’s Project Labor Agreement Meeting Local Hiring Goals?

12 hours ago

‘Embarrassing’: The Lakers Have Lost Their Last 2 Games by a Combined 70 Points

12 hours ago

Fresno Council Throws Out Plan for South Central, Says It Was Too Strict

The Fresno City Council on Thursday rejected a $1 million plan five years in the making that would have determined land use in south central...

6 hours ago

6 hours ago

Fresno Council Throws Out Plan for South Central, Says It Was Too Strict

7 hours ago

How Democrat Adam Gray Won His Race, the Last to Be Called in the US House

7 hours ago

New Coach Matt Entz Promises to Make Bulldog Football ‘Something Special’

A San Francisco man has been indicted after escaping from U.S. Penitentiary Atwater in Merced County and evading capture for eight years. (Wikipedia)
8 hours ago

San Francisco Man Escaped a Merced County Prison 8 Years Ago. He’s Back With New Charges.

CHP is investigating a Fresno hit-and-run where a big rig driver fled after colliding with a pickup at North and Temperance. (CHP)
8 hours ago

Fresno Hit-and-Run Big-Rig Driver Sought After Crash

10 hours ago

She Buys a Ticket to Support a Good Cause, Then Wins the 2024 Granville Home of Hope

10 hours ago

CA Needs More Water Storage to Handle Boom-or-Bust Cycles

11 hours ago

Dodgers’ Deferred Payments Top $1 Billion to 7 Players, Including Snell and Edman

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend