Some at
Vatican Felt 'Enemies' Behind Abuse Claims
New Tang Dynasty Television March 24, 2014
http://www.ntd.tv/en/news/world/europe/20140324/116424-some-at-vatican-felt-39enemies39-behind-abuse-claims.html
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Cardinals attends a mass
with newly appointed cardinals held by Pope Francis at St
Peter's Basilica on February 23, 2014 in Vatican City,
Vatican. Pope Francis presided over Mass in Saint Peter's
Basilica on Sunday, one day after 19 bishops were added to the
college of cardinals. |
Australia's Catholic Cardinal George Pell said Monday that
some in the Vatican once saw accusations of child sex abuse by
priests as coming from "enemies of the church to make
trouble". Pell, recently appointed by Pope
Francis to head a new Vatican finance ministry, was giving
evidence to a Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to
Child Sexual Abuse in Australia. "The
attitude of some people in the Vatican was that if accusations
were being made against priests, they were being made
exclusively or at least predominantly by enemies of the church
to make trouble and therefore should be dealt with
sceptically," he said. "And I think
there was more of an inclination to give the benefit of the
doubt to the defendent rather than listening seriously to the
complaints." Pell said he felt that the
church in Australia did not share this attitude to the same
degree, and during the 1990s forged ahead in dealing with
allegations of sex abuse by members of the Catholic Church.
"Whatever the deficiencies, I think we were ahead
of some countries," he told the commission.
The national Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to
Child Sexual Abuse is under way after a decade of growing
pressure to investigate widespread allegations of paedophilia.
Its hearings are covering harrowing allegations of child
abuse involving places of worship, orphanages, community groups
and schools. Pell's appearance at the
commission relates to the handling of the case of John Ellis, a
former altar boy who was abused by a priest from the age of 13.
In a statement, the cardinal apologised to Ellis for the
"gross violation and abuse" committed by the priest
Aidan Duggan, who is now deceased. Pell, who is
not accused of any sexual abuse, said that mistakes were
"made by me and others in the Church that resulted in
driving Mr Ellis and the Archdiocese apart rather than bringing
healing". The royal commission follows an
Australian state inquiry into the handling of child sex cases by
the Catholic Church last year which found that religious leaders
trivialised the problem of child sex abuse. Last
month Pope Francis handed Pell, formerly Archbishop of Sydney,a
posting which makes him one of the most important men in the
Catholic Church. As such Pell is charged with
helping overhaul the much-criticised central administration
following a wave of scandals, including allegations of waste,
corruption and even money-laundering.
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