Sex
abuse survivor to papal adviser: Marie Collins
By Nicole Winfield VATICAN CITY Ledger-Enquirer
March 25, 2014 http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/2014/03/25/3022436/sex-abuse-survivor-to-papal-adviser.html?sp=/99/164/252/
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FILE - In this Tuesday, Feb.
7, 2012 file photo, Marie Collins, who was assaulted as a
13-year-old by a hospital chaplain in her native Ireland,
attends a press conference at a Vatican-backed symposium on
clerical sex abuse, in Rome. Marie Collins is not your
ordinary papal adviser: Sexually assaulted as a child by a
hospital chaplain, Collins went onto become a leading Irish
activist demanding justice for victims of priestly abuse and a
fierce critic of the Catholic Church’s handling of the
scandal. She was named on Saturday, March 22, 2014 to Pope
Francis' commission on setting sex abuse policy, one of eight
people _ half of them women _ who will now help craft the
panel’s scope and advise the church on best practices to
protect children. In an interview with The Associated Press,
Collins said her top priority was for the Vatican to punish
those bishops who have covered up for priests who raped
children. |
VATICAN CITY — Marie Collins
is not your ordinary papal adviser.
Sexually assaulted as a child by a hospital chaplain,
Collins went onto become a leading Irish activist demanding
justice for the victims of priestly abuse and a fierce critic of
the Catholic Church's handling of the scandal.
Now she has been named to Pope Francis' commission on
setting sex abuse policy, one of eight people — half of
them women — who will help craft the panel's scope and
advise the church on best practices to protect children.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Collins said
her top priority was for the Vatican to punish those bishops who
have covered up for priests who raped children.
"There's no point in my mind of having
gold-plated child-protection programs in place if there's no
sanction for a bishop who decides to ignore them," Collins
said by telephone from her home in Dublin. "The reason
everyone is so angry is not because they have abusers in their
ranks. Abusers are in every rank of society. It's because of
the systemic cover-up."
Francis announced the initial members of the commission
after coming under fire from victims' groups for a perceived
lack of attention to the scandal, which has cost the church its
credibility — and billions of dollars — in
traditionally Catholic strongholds of the U.S., Europe and Latin
America.
Church law does provide for sanctions if a bishop is
negligent in carrying out his duties, but to date no bishop has
ever been disciplined for abuse-related negligence. In its
announcement on Saturday the Vatican hinted that might change,
saying one part of the commission's remit would be to look
at the duties and responsibilities of church personnel.
Collins acknowledged that she may be disappointed. But
said she felt it was "worth taking the chance" to
participate in the commission, even at the risk of losing
credibility with other abuse victims.
"People are telling me that it means I trust the
church. But the fact is, I don't trust them at all,"
she said.
"My reason for saying 'yes' is because
I've been criticizing the church for how they do things and
the way they treat survivors," she said. "Not to take
this opportunity to say those things at the heart of the church
would go against everything I feel."
Collins was sexually assaulted by the Rev. Paul McGennis
in 1960 when she was 13 and in the hospital. He also took lewd
photos of her. She battled anxiety, depression and agoraphobia
for decades and was in and out of psychiatric hospitals. When
she finally summoned the courage to report her abuser, her
pastor told her it was her fault.
"I disintegrated into 1,000 pieces," she said.
"I didn't speak to anyone for 10 years."
Eventually civil authorities prosecuted and jailed the
priest and he was sentenced two more times for molesting other
children. He was stripped of his priestly duties and became a
layman in 1997.
In 2003, Collins helped the Dublin archdiocese set up its
child-protection service and in 2012 she addressed a
Vatican-backed symposium at Rome's Pontifical Gregorian
University to educate bishops on crafting guidelines to protect
children.
The main U.S. victims' group in the U.S., SNAP,
welcomed Collins' participation in Francis' panel, as
did the leading church authority on clerical sex abuse, Bishop
Charles Scicluna, for a decade the Vatican's chief sex
crimes prosecutor.
"Her resolve and indeed the very narrative she brings
to the table will help forge the determined implementation of
policy the church needs at this time," Scicluna said in an
email to AP.
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