KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter
Elizabeth A. Elliott | Sep. 10, 2015
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Baskets of fresh white candles greeted visitors at St. Elizabeth Parish as they entered the dim and sparsely decorated church for an unusual evening service. A little more than 100 men and women scattered throughout the pews, some in small groups, some in couples, some quietly alone.
“I commend you for being here,” Fr. Greg Haskamp, the pastor at St. Elizabeth’s, told the solemn group. “I know the decision to attend was not an easy one.”
The event was the second in a series of healing services sponsored by the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., to reach out to survivors of sexual abuse at the hands of clergy over many decades. St. Elizabeth’s is one of four parishes chosen for the services because of its history with clergy sex abuse. At least three priests — Fr. Thomas O’Brien and Fr. Thomas Reardon in the 1970s and ’80s and Fr. Michael Brewer in the 1990s — have been accused of sexually molesting boys in the parish, according to the website bishopaccountability.org.
The diocese began the program, Healing Our Parishes through Empathy (HOPE), in August, four months after Bishop Robert Finn resigned. The services are the first of their kind in the diocese, according to Carrie Cooper, director of the Department of Child and Youth Protection.
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