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New Focus in Pursuit of Abuse
by Clergy
Irish Report Spurs Area Group to Look at Church
Schools
By Michael Paulson
Boston Globe
June 18, 2009
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2009/06/18/irish_findings_spur_pursuit_of_clergy_
abuse_at_us_institutions/
Five weeks after an Irish commission released a devastating report about
abuse at Catholic children's institutions there, a Waltham-based organization
is starting an effort to compile evidence about what it believes was a
similar pattern of abuse at Catholic institutions in the United States.
BishopAccountability.org,
an organization that maintains an Internet-based archive about clergy
sexual abuse, published on its website yesterday a list of twelve Catholic
institutions whose faculty or staff have faced allegations of child sexual
abuse.
Organizers are hoping to rapidly expand that list, including schools in
and around Boston.
Many of the schools where the abuse allegedly took place were run by religious
orders, not dioceses, and are no longer open. Many such allegations are
already public through lawsuits or media coverage, but organizers of the
new archive expect more accusers to emerge as a result of the effort.
"This was inspired by the Ireland report," said Anne Barrett
Doyle, codirector of BishopAccountability.org. "We realized that
there has been no accounting here of the abuse of kids in minor seminaries,
boarding schools, reform schools, and orphanages run by the church."
A spokeswoman for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, Sister Mary Ann
Walsh, said, "Anyone abused in any US diocese, be it in a church
or church institution, has been urged to come forward.
"As a result, many have received needed assistance," she said.
"The bishops have been relentless in addressing sexual abuse and
continue to be."
There have been allegations of abuse at a number of institutions for young
people in the Boston area.
For example, John Vellante, a 64-year-old Haverhill resident, says he
was abused as a 13-year-old at a minor seminary run by the Stigmatine
religious order in Wellesley in 1958 and 1959. Vellante's alleged abuser,
Leo P. Landry, was dismissed from the clergy in 1972 and pleaded guilty
to abuse charges in 2004.
Vellante, a retired Boston Globe employee who contributes a sports column
in the Globe North section, said he supports the BishopAccountability
effort, "just to prove to people that it happened here, too."
"It's not just in Ireland, and I'm sure it's not just in the US,"
he said. "I'm sure you're going to find it all over the world."
There are important differences between the Irish situation and that in
the United States. The Irish institutions, for orphans and troubled children,
were government-regulated but church-run, whereas the institutions in
the United States were largely independent of the government and often
of each other.
"Because of our system, which was scattershot and not systematic,
it's hard to hold anyone accountable," Barrett Doyle said. "But
there is a colossal hidden problem here."
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