AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald
September 21, 2013
David Marr
George Pell ruled the Catholic church with an iron will and, even as victims of sex abuse came forward, steadfastly tried to protect it.
The lumbering figure walking the length of Melbourne’s Royal Exhibition Building to the sound of Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus on the night of August 16, 1996, was in better health than he had been for years. He had shed weight. A little grey was showing under the mitre but, all things being equal, George Pell had 20 years ahead of him to fulfil Rome’s mandate. He had been a contentious figure inside the church for years but his appointment to Melbourne exposed him to wider scrutiny.
Australia was beginning to pay attention. That he broke the mould made him interesting. Catholic archbishops hadn’t sounded like him for 40 years. He was deliberate rather than graceful. He had the bearing of a football coach rather than a divine. His face was chunky and his mouth surprisingly small. His voice was masculine but oddly refined: Oxford laid over Ballarat.
Pell’s promise not to play legal games was entirely empty.
That he had so little charm was arresting. He seemed not to try to win people over. He was not a persuader. He spoke at that slow, clear pace headmasters and doctors use, a pace that says: if you fail to obey, you don’t have the excuse of misunderstanding me. The threat is in the rhythm. He had a powerful man’s habit of often seeming to focus his attention elsewhere. He didn’t hug. He flinched from the attentions of the devout. He appeared to have sex well bricked up inside himself with the determination of a professional celibate.
A week after Rome announced his appointment as Archbishop of Melbourne, a court lifted orders suppressing media reports of the paedophile ring of St Alipius. The media were ready. The stories were sober, shocking and detailed. Victims put their names to stories of abuse and betrayal.
The archbishop-designate found himself in the thick of an ugly controversy. It was reported for the first time that he had lived in the St Alipius presbytery and walked Father Gerard Ridsdale to court. Stephen Woods, abused by Brother Edward Dowlan for years when he was a little boy and raped when he turned to Ridsdale for help, called for a royal commission and for Pell’s resignation: “He should have known, he ought to have known what was going on.”
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