IMAGE: CNS photo/Alessandro Bianchi, Reuters
By Junno Arocho Esteves
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — A survivor of clergy sexual abuse in Chile said he
hopes his meeting with Pope Francis
will be an opportunity to make a difference and bring an end to a culture
within the Catholic Church that disparages victims and makes them feel guilty for coming forward.
“I
hope that it is not just about me. I hope I can convey the pain of thousands of
people who are still suffering, and that this is the beginning of the end of
this culture of abuse and this culture of cover-up among bishops,” Juan Carlos Cruz said in a
telephone interview with Catholic News Service April 25.
In
a statement released by the Vatican April 25, Greg Burke, director of the Vatican press office, said Cruz, James
Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo will meet individually with Pope Francis and will stay
at the Domus Sanctae Marthae, the Vatican residence where the pope lives. The pope’s individual meetings
with the men will take place April 27-29 and then he will meet them as a group
April 30.
“The pope thanks them for accepting his
invitation,” Burke said. “During these days of personal and brotherly
encounter, the pope wants to ask their forgiveness, share his pain and shame
for what they have suffered and, above all, listen to all suggestions that can
be made to avoid the repetition of such reprehensible acts.”
The Chilean survivors have alleged that Bishop Juan Barros
of Osorno — then a priest — had witnessed their abuse by his mentor, Father Fernando Karadima. In
2011, Father Karadima was sentenced to a life of prayer and penance by the Vatican
after he was found guilty of sexually abusing boys.
During his visit to Chile in January, the pope sparked
controversy when he pledged his support for Bishop Barros and said: “The
day they bring me proof against Bishop Barros, I will speak. There is not one
piece of evidence against him. It is calumny.”
He later apologized to the victims and admitted that his
choice of words wounded many.
A short time later, the Vatican announced Pope Francis was
sending Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta and an aide, Father Jordi Bertomeu Farnos,
to Chile to listen to people with information about Bishop Barros.
Not all of the 64 witnesses spoke about Father Karadima and
Bishop Barros; several of them gave testimony about abuse alleged to have
occurred at a Marist Brothers’ school.
Burke said the pope called for prayers for the church in
Chile and hoped the meetings would be “a crucial step to repair and
forever avoid the abuses of conscience, power and especially sexual (abuse) in the heart of the
church.”
Cruz
told CNS that there is still much to be done in the fight against clergy sexual
abuse, because the
attempts at reform
have failed to address a pervasive culture that treats historical abuses as
“something that happened that’s already in recovery” when in reality
it is “an open wound that keeps getting deeper.”
“I
think we need to attack the problem head-on, directly, and deal with
that,” he said.
While
there are good people on
the
Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, Cruz said it was “pretty
shameful” that the commission has accomplished little in helping survivors.
Cruz
said he intends to tell Pope Francis “all these things directly.”
“He
wants to hear the truth, he has an open heart and he’s a good man and I’m
excited in a good way to be able to speak about these things frankly and with
respect with him,” Cruz told CNS.
After receiving more than 2,300 pages of documentation from
Archbishop Scicluna, Pope Francis acknowledged he had made “serious mistakes in the
assessment and perception of the situation, especially due to a lack of truthful
and balanced information.”
In a letter to the bishops of Chile released by the Vatican
April 11, Pope Francis asked “forgiveness of all those I have offended,”
and said he hoped to “be able to do it personally in the coming
weeks.”
The pope said he was convening a meeting in Rome with the Chilean bishops to
discuss the findings of the investigations and his own conclusions
“without prejudices nor preconceived ideas, with the single objective of
making the truth shine in our lives.”
Following the release of Pope Francis’ letter, Bishop
Santiago Silva Retamales, president of the bishops’ conference and head of the
military ordinariate, said the bishops of Chile would travel to the Vatican in
the third week of May.
Regarding
the pope’s meeting with the Chilean bishops, Cruz told CNS he hopes Pope
Francis will hold accountable bishops who covered up abuse, rather than punish them “with
a cushy job in the Vatican.” They should be replaced with good people because “the people in
Chile have been pretty scandalized” by the behavior of several members of
the church hierarchy.
“I
hope too that this — what’s happening in Chile — sends a (message) to the
universal church that this behavior will not be tolerated anymore,” Cruz
said.
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Follow Arocho on Twitter: @arochoju.
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