MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The Age
August 22, 2019
The dismissal of Cardinal George Pell’s appeal against his conviction, vindicates and provides some solace to those who have spoken out against being sexually abused by priests and other paedophiles. May it give them some peace that their experiences have been believed and they have truly been heard. This judgment helps to restore one’s faith in the justice system, which so often seems to reward those with the most power and money.
Suzy and Nick Toovey, Beaumaris
Don’t blame judiciary, blame the hierarchy
For those Catholics feeling bad right now. Feeling hunted. Feeling let down. You have been. Not by the judiciary, but by your hierarchy. The time is now, not to circle the wagons but to look outwards. Look to your fellow Catholics whose lives have been ruined, through no fault of their own, because they or a loved one have been sexually assaulted as a child or because they have called out what they saw and lost their livelihoods as a result.
Julian Guy, Mount Eliza
Now, the defining moment has come
Today all print and TV media outlets are referring to convicted sex offender George Pell as Cardinal George Pell. Technically he is still a cardinal until and if the Vatican defrock him. However the media and the rest of society, if they need to speak of him at all, should refer him as George Pell convicted child abuser.
Peter Roche, Carlton
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