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Hierarchical
Power and Clerical Sex Abuse
By Mary Ann McGivern National Catholic Reporter
February 10, 2014
http://ncronline.org/blogs/ncr-today/hierarchical-power-and-clerical-sex-abuse
Back in the 1980s, a priest from Portland, Ore., Ray
Carey, already had a reputation for assisting seminaries in
identifying applicants who were pedophiles. I was on our Loretto
membership team and participated in three of his workshops. I
learned interviewing skills that stand me in good stead today,
centering on how to frame questions to sample interviewee
behavior. I also learned more than my mother would have ever
wanted me to know about child sexual abuse by the clergy. (That
joke is his, too, and I've borrowed it for weapons trade and
prisons as well as pedophilia.)
I Googled Father Carey and learned that he gives
frequent talks in Portland on spiritual growth and development.
He gave a talk on the gifts of sexuality last month that drew
high praise in the parish bulletin. I don't know if he still
advises seminaries or speaks on abuse issues, but I wish the
U.S. bishops conference would consult with him. The sex abuse
scandal continues, and I fear that in the search for vocations,
some seminaries still don't screen applicants adequately. Past
and potential abuse continues to be buttressed by a parallel
abuse of hierarchical power.
For example, according The New York Times,
the United Nations is calling on Pope Francis and the Vatican to
comply with the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Among the
failures and shortcomings listed by the U.N. are obstruction to
extending statutes of limitations; settlements that require
victims signing confidentiality agreements; failure to assist
birth parents seeking children adopted out of Catholic
institutions without parental consent; and failure to identify
and support children fathered by Catholic priests.
The Holy See is a member of the United Nations and
signed the Convention on the Rights of the Child. But somebody
at the Vatican is arguing that the document only applies within
the geographical Vatican, not to the church. Now there's a
mind-blowing distinction.
Wikipedia estimates there are well more than 10,000
victims since 1950 in the United States alone, and the Vatican
denies that the Convention on the Rights of the Child is
applicable. What's new? But reading about the U.N. call for
Vatican compliance, I remember with sorrow Father Carey's
passion, diligence, knowledge and skill 25 years ago. But it is
never too late to repent and reform.
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