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Comiskey's
Successor in Ferns Says Disgraced Bishop 'Has a Big Heart'
By Sarah Macdonald Irish Independent February
3, 2014
http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/comiskeys-successor-in-ferns-says-disgraced-bishop-has-a-big-heart-29973462.html
[with video]
THE bishop who was sent in to pick up the pieces in
the Diocese of Ferns following the sensational resignation of
Bishop Brendan Comiskey says the disgraced cleric "has a big
heart".
Bishop Eamon Walsh acted as caretaker of Ferns between
2002 and 2006 following Bishop Comiskey's resignation in the
wake of the BBC documentary 'Suing the Pope', which lifted the
lid on Fr Sean Fortune's abuse of Colm O'Gorman and others.
He described the former Bishop of Ferns, whose
alcoholism and flamboyant lifestyle are believed to have left
him incapable of confronting Sean Fortune and other abusive
priests, as a man with "a big heart".
"We always have to look beyond the failings that we
all have and look at the bigger picture," said Bishop Walsh. He
was speaking out after Bishop Comiskey broke his decade-long
silence in the Irish
Independent at the weekend.
Bishop Comiskey practically vanished in recent years
but has insisted that he was not in hiding. "I am not hiding. I
am living like an ordinary Irish citizen. I am retired," he
said.
Bishop Walsh subsequently tendered his own resignation
in 2009, following the publication of the Murphy Report into the
mishandling of allegations of clerical sexual abuse in Dublin,
but the Vatican refused to accept his resignation.
He was widely praised for his role as administrator of
Ferns and for his facilitation of the investigations which
resulted in the 2005 Ferns Report.
"Once you have a well-known name and you bring their
story to the public every so often, it sells papers. I couldn't
make my living out of that," said Bishop Walsh.
"Isn't it terribly sad that we would chase an
80-year-old man at this stage in his life – a man who has
heroically overcome his difficulty with alcohol?"
However, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid
Martin said of Bishop Comiskey's admission that "he didn't get
things right" and his apology: "If more people had come forward
earlier and admitted their mistakes the reconciliation process
within the church would have been easier."
Both leading clergymen were speaking to the Irish
Independent at the Irish Bishops' Drugs Initiative national
conference in Dublin at the weekend.
Colm O'Gorman, the founder of One in Four, took a
measured approach, commenting: "I think we have to be very
careful to neither demonise nor indeed to excuse people who were
responsible for appalling acts of neglect that led to the abuse
of so many young people."
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