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								Pope
										Francis, Help the Children Sexually Abused by Priests: Open
										the Vatican Archives
							 
								By Bill BerkowitzTruth-Out
 February 8, 2014
 
 http://truth-out.org/buzzflash/commentary/francis-open-vatican-archives
 
 
 Now that the UN Committee on
									the Rights of the Child has delivered its report condemning the
									Vatican for aiding, abetting & covering up the Church's sexual
									abuse scandal, WWPFD (What Will Pope Francis Do)?
 
 Since Pope Francis (formerly Cardinal Jorge Mario
							Bergoglio of Argentina) took dominion over the Holy See, there
							has been much speculation about which direction he might move the
							Catholic Church; how he was going to modernize and make the
							Church more accessible to more people.
 
 Liberals have lauded him for his comments about income
							inequality and his openness and apparent willingness to usher in
							a new way of going about the business of being Pope. Some
							conservatives, however, have scorned him for his economic
							pronouncements, while maintaining that he isn't focusing enough
							on such culture war issues as birth control, homosexuality, and
							abortion.
 
 With so many difficult issues to deal with, he has
							recently been handed a golden opportunity to deal with one of the
							most vexing of those issues: Child sexual abuse by Catholic
							priests, and its aiding and abetting and subsequent cover-up by
							Catholic Church officials.
 
 The most prudent move for Pope Francis to make in this
							regard is to accept the recommendations of the report by the
							United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child and, at the
							same time, open up the Vatican archives.
 
 UN report on sexual abuse urges action
 
 "The committee is gravely concerned that the Holy See
							has not acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, has not
							taken the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual
							abuse and protect children, and has adopted policies and
							practices which has led to the continuation of the abuse by and
							the impunity of the perpetrators," the report states.
 
 The panel, according to The New York Times, "demanded
							that the Vatican open its archives to identify abusers and that
							it hold accountable those who had concealed abuse and it
							knowingly allowed abusers continued contact with children."
 
 In a recent Real News Network interview Kirsten
							Sandberg, Chairperson of the UN Committee on the Rights of the
							Child, pointed out that the report covered the past 19 years,
							which was the last time that the Vatican reported to the
							Committee on the Rights of the Child.
 
 Sandberg was asked to respond to assertions by a Vatican
							representative that it "has carefully delineated policies and
							procedures designed to help eliminate such abuse."
 
 Sandberg: "Well, they're defending themselves now,
							because they've started to take some measures. They have given
							guidelines to all bishops that they should cooperate with law
							enforcement authorities and things like that, which is very good.
							So that's really a positive beginning, I think. But we really
							need to see the results on the ground. And we haven't yet got all
							the data from the Holy See, so we don't yet know what they have
							been doing and how they have actually reacted. They have also
							covered up this for many years."
 
 According to Sandberg, it is extremely "disturbing" that
							while we know of the tens of thousands of cases of children who
							were sexually abused in some parts of the world, there are other
							parts of the world where we don't know "whether it's still going
							on, for instance in Eastern Europe, and we don't know whether
							it's still going on also in the countries where it has been
							revealed, because a lot of this might still be happening but
							without anybody knowing."
 
 Sandberg pointed out that, "there's been a lot of
							support worldwide from victims and from others." But, Sandberg
							notes it appears that "the Holy See, as far as I've understood,
							are quite reluctant to accept our recommendations," despite their
							being "open to this in the dialog we had with the Holy See."
 
 Vatican upbraids UN Committee
 
 "This committee has not rendered a good service to the
							United Nations," Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, head of the Vatican
							delegation to U.N. organizations in Geneva, told Vatican Radio.
 
 A Newark Star-Ledger Editorial pointed out that while it
							wasn't surprised by any of the findings about "systemic rape and
							cover-ups," it was surprised by "the church's response":
							"outright criticism of the Committee on the Rights of the Child,
							which conducted the inquiry, coupled with the tired 'if you're
							not with us, you're against us' defense the church reserves for
							its strongest critics."
 
 The Editorial maintained that "At its lowest point, the
							Vatican's response accused the committee – a panel of independent
							experts on global children's issues, not UN member states – of
							being co-opted by gay rights and gay marriage supporters."
 
 The Star-Ledger also pointed out that the report
							provides the Vatican with "an opportunity for the Holy See and
							Pope Francis to finally get it right – and to craft a concrete,
							meaningful response that addresses the church's past crimes,
							punishes the guilty, compensates the victims and, finally, sets a
							path that provides for the safety of future generations of
							Catholic children."
 
 As expected, conservative Catholic groups were outraged
							by the UN report. "It shows a certain ignorance of how the church
							works," said Ashley McGuire of The Catholic Association. "They
							don't just change canon law. The church's teachings, many of them
							are thousands of years old and are grounded in deep moral
							principle. To just fire a shot off the bow and not look at the
							actual reality of the last 10 years seems totally unfair and
							undermines the credibility of the report."
 
 "It's disingenuous for Catholic officials to trot out
							the 'religious freedom' canard when confronted with
							uncontroverted evidence of massive wrongdoing," said Barbara
							Dorris, outreach director of the Survivors Network of those
							Abused by Priests. "The vast bulk of the United Nations panel's
							findings have nothing to do with birth control, homosexuality,
							abortion or doctrine."
 
 In December, Pope Francis named a panel to advise him on
							dealing with the sexual abuse scandal. It remains to be seen
							whether the Pope will recommend that the archives be opened to
							independent investigators, a move that could reveal what the
							Church knew and when it knew it.
 
 
								
 
 
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