New Indian-Chennai News + more

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Pope Dont come


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Pope Dont come
Permalink  
 


Leading article: The Pope should reconsider his state visit to Britain

 

He may not be guilty of crimes but he has failed his role as pontiff

 

Friday, 2 April 2010

SPONSORED LINKS:
Ads by Google

Caterpillar Power Plants
From 2.8 to Over 100MW, TurnkeyServices And Engineered Equipment
www.catpowerplants.com

UK Migration Services
Visas to the United KingdomFast Track Your Visa Application.
Migration.UK.migrationexpert.com

Independent House Chennai
Buy-Sell-Rent Homes, Flats, Land,Shops, Office Space etc. in Chennai
Chennai.MagicBricks.com

 

 

Over the past few days the head of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales, Archbishop Vincent Nichols, has used Holy Week vociferously to defend the Pope from the charges of colluding in the paedophile scandals that have hit Ireland, the US and Germany. It was not the Pope's direct responsibility, Nichols has argued. Indeed, as head of the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (successor to the Inquisition) the present Pope was at the forefront of toughening up the Church's rules on errant priests.

 

It is a robust defence. As an archbishop, Vincent Nichols clearly has a duty to mount a defence against the rising criticism of the "Holy Father". As a man who must understand just how serious this crisis is to the standing of the Church and the faith of its parishioners, however, the Archbishop should be privately advising Benedict XVI to consider cancelling his forthcoming visit to Britain next September. The Pope, to put it baldly, is now too embattled and too damaged by the worldwide revelations of abuse and cover-up to be able to come to this country without controversy, protests and distaste.

This is not simply a matter of the specific charges brought against him for complicity in a cover-up of child abuse in Germany and Wisconsin when Archbishop of Munich and then head of the relevant Vatican department. The papal office can claim that he was not directly responsible for the German case and that he had not, as reported, actually stopped the proceedings against the Wisconsin priest.

But that is to relegate the crimes to the area of professional misconduct rather than criminal acts. The problem for Pope Benedict – or Joseph Ratzinger as he then was – is that he has always been a bureaucrat of the church and seen its problems in terms of institutional discipline. Tinkering with canon law, as he did, simply won't serve in a world where paedophilia is dealt with as a crime to be judged in the public courts. The Church is, and has been, an enormous force for good in the community. But it, and the Pope, also has a moral voice which has been severely damaged by the sense of widespread abuse and cover-up in its ranks.

It is even worse for the faithful. The role of the priest is a very special one in the Roman Catholic Church. It is what sets it aside from most other Christian, and indeed other religious, groups. The priest has a unique role of responsibility, above all to children. At no point does the Pope in all his apologies seem to have taken on board how great has been the betrayal of his own flock.

The Roman Catholic Church, with more than a billion followers, is one of the largest and most global organisations in the world. Of course the Pope's visit is an official and important one, in which he will be entertained by the Queen and acclaimed by the Prime Minister. No one should say that he is not welcome here.

But it is precisely because it is a state occasion, planned as a grand visit, that he should reconsider it. It's the wrong time and the wrong occasion. The Roman Catholic Church arguably faces its greatest crisis in a century from this scandal. The Pope's place, on his return from his summer retreat, should be in Rome, visibly mediating on the duties and failings of his role as shepherd of his universal church.

If he has to come here, he might consider doing so as a penitent on his way from Germany to Ireland then on to the United States and Mexico, where the litany of child abuse by priests is daily sounded.




__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Number of atheists on the rises in Spain

The number of non-believers and atheists has grown significantly in Spain during the last decade while the percentage of Catholics has come down by 10%,a government survey has said.At present,13.6% of the people said they were "non-believers" while 7.7% identified themselves as atheists,a survey released this week by the Sociological Research Centre said.The survey said 75% Spaniards define themselves as Catholics,down from nearly 85% a decade ago.Five years ago,79% of the people said they were Catholics and in the year 2000,84.7% defined themselves in that way.The number of people who dont believe in god is on the rise all over Europe.


__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

ope's immunity could be challenged in Britain

CW.jpgProtests are growing against Pope Benedict XVI's planned trip to Britain, where some lawyers question whether the Vatican's implicit statehood status should shield the pope from prosecution over sex crimes by pedophile priests.

More than 10,000 people have signed a petition on Downing Street's web site against the pope's 4-day visit to England and Scotland in September, which will cost U.K. taxpayers an estimated 15 million pounds ($22.5 million).

The campaign has gained momentum as more Catholic sex abuse scandals have swept across Europe.

Although Benedict has not been accused of any crime, senior British lawyers are now examining whether the pope should have immunity as a head of state and whether he could be prosecuted under the principle of universal jurisdiction for an alleged systematic cover-up of sexual abuses by priests.

Universal jurisdiction — a concept in international law — allows judges to issue warrants for nearly any visitor accused of grievous crimes, no matter where they live.

British judges have been more open to the concept than those in other countries.

Lawyers are divided over the immunity issue.

Some argue that the Vatican isn't a true state, while others note the Vatican has national relations with about 170 countries, including Britain.

The Vatican is also the only non-member to have permanent observer status at the U.N.

Then again, no other top religious leaders enjoy the same U.N. privileges or immunity, so why should the pope?

David Crane, former chief prosecutor at the Sierra Leone war crimes tribunal, said it would be difficult to implicate the pope in anything criminal.

"It's a fascinating kind of academic, theoretical discussion," said Crane, who prosecuted Sierra Leone's Charles Taylor when he was still a sitting head of state. "At this point, there's no liability at all."

But Geoffrey Robertson, who as a U.N. appeals judge delivered key decisions on the illegality of conscripting child soldiers and the invalidity of amnesties for war crimes, believes it could be time to challenge the immunity of the pope — and Britain could be the place.

He wrote a legal opinion on the topic that was published Friday in the U.S. news site The Daily Beast and Saturday in the British newspaper the Guardian.

"Unlike in the United States, where the judges commonly uphold what the executive says, the British courts don't accept these things at face value," Robertson told The Associated Press on Saturday. "The Vatican is not a state — it was a construct of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini."

But Jeffrey Lena, the California attorney who argued — and won — head of state immunity for Benedict in U.S. sex abuse cases, said the pope could not successfully be prosecuted for crimes under international law.

"Those who would claim that 'universal jurisdiction' could be asserted over the pope appear to completely misunderstand the sorts of violations, such as genocide, which are required to assert such jurisdiction," he said in a statement to the AP.

Still, Israeli officials, including former Prime Minister Ehud Barak, have recently been targeted by groups in Britain under universal jurisdiction.

The law principle is rooted in the belief that certain crimes — such as genocide, war crimes, torture and crimes against humanity — are so serious that they are an offense against humanity and must be addressed.

It's a tactic that the British government would likely abhor, but British judges have often gone against government wishes in lawsuits.

Recent examples include British judges who issued an arrest warrant against Israel's former foreign minister for alleged war crimes, and a British court ruling this year that forced the government to release its intelligence exchanges with U.S. officials about the torture claims of a former Guantanamo detainee.

Prosecution in the deepening cleric sex abuse scandal, however, ultimately rests on the question of immunity. If British judges do challenge the pope's immunity, there are a handful of possible legal scenarios — all of them speculative.

The pope could be served for a writ for civil damages, a complaint could be lodged with the International Criminal Court, or abuse victims could try to have Benedict arrested for crimes against humanity — perhaps the least likely scenario.

Lawyers question whether an alleged systematic cover-up could be considered a crime against humanity — a charge usually reserved for the International Criminal Court — and whether it could be pursued under universal jurisdiction.

Attorney Jennifer Robinson in London, who has been researching the possibilities, says rape and sexual slavery can be considered crimes against humanity.

Others, like Hurst Hannum with the Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy at Tufts University near Boston, are skeptical.

"No one would question that the Church's response to widespread abuses has been atrocious, but it's very difficult for me to see how that would fit 'crimes against humanity,'" said Hannum.

Robertson is more in favor of challenging the immunity question.

"Head of state immunity provides no protection in the International Criminal Court," said Robertson, who represented The Associated Press and other media organizations who sought to make U.S.-U.K. intelligence exchanges public in the case of former Guantanamo detainee Binyam Mohamed.

"If acts of sexual abuse by priests are not isolated or sporadic events but part of a wide practice both known to and unpunished by their de facto-authority — i.e. the Catholic Church ... then the commander can be held criminally liable," Robertson said.

Even though the Vatican — like the United States — did not sign the accord that established the international court, a crime would only have to occur in a country which did sign, like Britain.

Still, lawyers would have to prove that the crimes or an alleged cover-up occurred or continued after the court was set up in July 2002.

In a 2005 test case in Texas that involved alleged victims of sex abuse by priests, the Vatican obtained the intervention of President George W. Bush, who agreed the pope should have immunity against such prosecutions because he was an acting head of a foreign state.

It was around 1929 when Mussolini decided that the Vatican — a tiny enclave about 0.17 of a square mile with some 900 people — was a sovereign state.

"The notion that statehood can be created by another country's unilateral declaration is risible," Robertson said.

Others say the last 80 years of history have turned the Vatican into a state, and it would be almost impossible to strip the pope of his immunity now.

"My guess is the weight of opinion would allow the pope to enjoy immunity," said Hannum. "It's not automatically clear that the Holy See is a state, although it's treated as one for almost every purpose."

Last year, a Palestinian bid to have Barak — the Israeli defense chief who also served as prime minister until 2001 — arrested for alleged war crimes during a visit to Britain failed when the courts determined that he should be given immunity from arrest.

But months later, pro-Palestinian activists persuaded a London judge to issue an arrest warrant for Israeli politician Tzipi Livni, who was foreign minister during the 2008-2009 war in Gaza.

The warrant was eventually withdrawn after Livni canceled her trip.

Spain and Britain jointly pioneered the universal jurisdiction concept when, in 1998, Britain executed a Spanish arrest warrant for former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet on torture claims.

Pinochet was kept under house arrest in London until he was ruled physically and mentally unfit to stand trial and released in 2000.

When he was arrested, however, Pinochet was no longer head of state.

In 2001, activists brought Israel's then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to trial in Belgium in connection with a 1982 massacre at a Beirut refugee camp.

Sharon canceled a planned trip to Belgium and was tried in absentia in a Belgian court.

He was not convicted but the case provoked diplomatic protests and prompted Belgium in 2003 to tighten the law that had permitted the trial.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown has vowed to block private groups from taking legal action against visiting foreign dignitaries but any new law is unlikely before Britain's expected May 6 election.

The pope plans to visit Malta, Portugal and Cyprus before traveling to Britain on Sept. 16.

A trip to Spain is planned for later in the fall.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Paris archbishop hits out at 'smear campaign' targeting pope

CW.jpgThe archbishop of Paris and head of the Catholic Church in France on Sunday denounced paedophile priest scandals as a smear campaign targeting the pope.

Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois told Le Parisien newspaper that shocking cases that have recently been made public of priests sexually abusing children date back several decades and that these concerned a small minority in the clergy.

 

There is a smear campaign aimed at the pope," he said.

"And yet it was Cardinal Ratzinger who, as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, encouraged bishops to take action against paedophilia by systematically informing Rome of such cases."

Before he became Pope Benedict XVI, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger spent 24 years as head of the Congregation, once known as the Holy Office of the Inquisition.

 

The interview with Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois took up a full page of the popular newspaper and ran on Easter Sunday, a religious holiday widely celebrated in France, where Catholicism is the number one religion.

France has not seen the sort of large-scale paedophile scandals that have rocked the Irish, German and US churches, but there have been some cases such as the arrest last week of a Christian radio station director.

Father Jacques Gaimard, who worked in the northern Normandy region, was charged on Wednesday with sexual assaults on a minor in 1992 and 1993 and released on bail.

"Faced with these appalling crimes committed by some priests, we are filled with horror," said the cardinal. "We all feel shame and regret."

"Having said that, there is no wave of paedophile acts, but a series of revelations of acts committed over the past fifty years," he said.

Of the 20,000 priests practicing in France, about 30 have been convicted and jailed for sexual crimes and not all of them involving paedophilia, said the cardinal.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Belgian bishop denounces church's 'guilty silence' on abuse

CW.jpgBelgium's top Roman Catholic bishop has denounced the "guilty silence" of church officials in the paedophile priest scandal that has rocked much of Europe and the United States.

Andre Joseph Leonard, archbishop of Mechelen-Brussel, criticised the church for often worrying more about the reputation of priests and "abominably" exploiting the abused children, according to a copy of his Easter homily released on Saturday.

"For decades, the Church, like other institutions, has badly managed the problem of paedophilia in its ranks while it had an evangelical obligation to protect the dignity of these children," Leonard says in his Easter homily.

"With a guilty silence, it often gave preference to the reputation of certain men of the Church over the honour of the abused children. We must, by declaring the truth, restore their dignity which was abominably exploited," says Leonard.

"The recent letter of Pope Benedict XVI to Catholics in Ireland is an example of what must be done," he added, referring to the pope's pastoral letter expressing shame and remorse for the victims' suffering and admitting that Irish bishops made serious errors in responding to the sexual abuse allegations.

Leonard's comments also came as the pope himself faced allegations that when he was archbishop of Munich and later as the Vatican's chief morals enforcer, he helped to protect predator priests.


__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Cong Parish Priest vows not to follow in footsteps of predecessor

CW.jpgThe parish priest of Cong in County Mayo has vowed not to follow in the footsteps of his one of his predecessors and steal the famous Cross of Cong.

It was approximately 1870 when the then Parish Priest of Cong, Fr Patrick Lavelle, daringly stole the Cross of Cong from the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin to repatriate it to Mayo.

Fr Lavelle tucked the 12th century relic under his cassock and walked straight out the door of the Academy with it.

However he was caught before he got on the train west.

Speaking to this week’s Mayo News newspaper, current Parish Priest, Fr Paddy Gilligan, jokingly claimed that he hasn’t ruled out following in Fr Lavelle’s footsteps to bring the priceless relic to the shores of Lough Corrib.

The efforts of Fr Lavelle have gone down in local legend in south Mayo.

The Cross had left Mayo in 1839 to be housed at the Royal Irish Academy but Fr Lavelle attempted an audacious robbery and was nearly successful.

Now, as the Cross of Cong returns to Mayo for the first time since 1839, to be housed at the National Museum of Country Life at Turlough Park, Castlebar, Fr Gilligan, has called for the Cross to be on display in Cong and teases museum officials with the legend of Fr Lavelle.

In a letter to Manager Keeper at Turlough Park, Mr Tony Candon, Fr Gilligan makes a roughish nod towards the adventures of the flamboyant priest.

“I am not the first PP of Cong to attempt to have the Cross returned. You may be aware of the story of Fr Patrick Lavelle. He was a man who challenged the high and the mighty in defence of the people of the west. I decided to try the legal route first!”
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

bush_help_from_vatican_priest.jpe

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Priest_Jesus_Mass.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

paedophiles cartoons, paedophiles cartoon, paedophiles picture, paedophiles pictures, paedophiles image, paedophiles images, paedophiles illustration, paedophiles illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

abusers cartoons, abusers cartoon, abusers picture, abusers pictures, abusers image, abusers images, abusers illustration, abusers illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

cgrn13l.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Priest_Jesus_Ordination.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

pedophile2.png

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

pedophile_priest.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

See full size image

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

catholic church cartoons, catholic church cartoon, catholic church picture, catholic church pictures, catholic church image, catholic church images, catholic church illustration, catholic church illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

catholic church cartoons, catholic church cartoon, catholic church picture, catholic church pictures, catholic church image, catholic church images, catholic church illustration, catholic church illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

priest_altarboyslife.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

catholic church cartoons, catholic church cartoon, catholic church picture, catholic church pictures, catholic church image, catholic church images, catholic church illustration, catholic church illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

catholic church cartoons, catholic church cartoon, catholic church picture, catholic church pictures, catholic church image, catholic church images, catholic church illustration, catholic church illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

catholic church cartoons, catholic church cartoon, catholic church picture, catholic church pictures, catholic church image, catholic church images, catholic church illustration, catholic church illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

catholic church cartoons, catholic church cartoon, catholic church picture, catholic church pictures, catholic church image, catholic church images, catholic church illustration, catholic church illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

catholic church cartoons, catholic church cartoon, catholic church picture, catholic church pictures, catholic church image, catholic church images, catholic church illustration, catholic church illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

scandals cartoons, scandals cartoon, scandals picture, scandals pictures, scandals image, scandals images, scandals illustration, scandals illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

popesbrothersexscandal.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

molestation cartoons, molestation cartoon, molestation picture, molestation pictures, molestation image, molestation images, molestation illustration, molestation illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

molestation cartoons, molestation cartoon, molestation picture, molestation pictures, molestation image, molestation images, molestation illustration, molestation illustrations

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

KittenLove.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

pope_red_coat001_resize.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

priest_wants_some_dick001.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

pope_benesith_resize.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

pope_likes_them_young001.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

jeebus075.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

statistics.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

See full size image

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

child_abuse1.gif

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

romanchurch_obscenechildren.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Sex crimes and the Vatican

Vatican City

A secret document which sets out a procedure for dealing with child sex abuse scandals within the Catholic Church is examined by Panorama.

Crimen Sollicitationis was enforced for 20 years by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became the Pope.

It instructs bishops on how to deal with allegations of child abuse against priests and has been seen by few outsiders.

Critics say the document has been used to evade prosecution for sex crimes.

Crimen Sollicitationis was written in 1962 in Latin and given to Catholic bishops worldwide who are ordered to keep it locked away in the church safe.

It instructs them how to deal with priests who solicit sex from the confessional. It also deals with "any obscene external act ... with youths of either sex."

It imposes an oath of secrecy on the child victim, the priest dealing with the allegation and any witnesses.

Breaking that oath means excommunication from the Catholic Church.

Reporting for Panorama, Colm O'Gorman finds seven priests with child abuse allegations made against them living in and around the Vatican City.

One of the priests, Father Joseph Henn, has been indicted on 13 molestation charges brought by a grand jury in the United States.

During filming for Sex Crimes and the Vatican, Colm finds Father Henn is fighting extradition orders from inside the headquarters of this religious order in the Vatican.

The Vatican has not compelled him to return to America to face the charges against him.

After filming, Father Henn lost his fight against extradition but fled the headquarters and is believed to be hiding in Italy while there is an international warrant for his arrest.

Colm O'Gorman was raped by a Catholic priest in the diocese of Ferns in County Wexford in Ireland when he was 14 years old.

Father Fortune was charged with 66 counts of sexual, indecent assault and another serious sexual offence relating to eight boys but he committed suicide on the eve of his trial.

Colm started an investigation with the BBC in March 2002 which led to the resignation of Dr Brendan Comiskey, the bishop leading the Ferns Diocese.

Colm then pushed for a government inquiry which led to the Ferns Report.

It was published in October 2005 and found: "A culture of secrecy and fear of scandal that led bishops to place the interests of the Catholic Church ahead of the safety of children."

The Catholic Church has 50 million children in its worldwide congregation and no universal child protection policy although in the UK there is the Catholic Office for the Protection of Children & Vulnerable Adults.

In some countries this means that the Crimen Sollicitationis is the only policy followed.

The Vatican has refused repeated requests from Panorama to respond to any of the cases shown in the film.

Panorama: Sex crimes and the Vatican was on BBC One on October 1 2006.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

ksmn770l.jpg

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

paedophile gifts, paedophile gift, paedophile merchandise, gifts for paedophile, gift for paedophile

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Vatican scoffs at idea of arresting pope in Britain

BY PHILIP PULLELLA, REUTERSAPRIL 13, 2010COMMENTS (190)
Pope Benedict XVI waves as he leads his weekly audience in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican Dec. 9, 2009.


__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Vatican slammed for blaming gay priests
Apr 14, 10 3:58am
The child sex abuse scandal scorching the Catholic Church worsened Tuesday with lawmakers, doctors and gay activists slamming an attempt by the Vatican to shift the blame for the pedophilia to homosexual priests.

 

Comments by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's secretary of state, during a visit to Chile on Monday triggered the indignation by saying homosexuality, not celibacy among the clergy, was at fault.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Vatican crusades versus Times

Rips paper's papal 'attack' in sex abuse


The Vatican yesterday delivered an extraordinary, scathing blast at The New York Times for going into "attack mode" over Pope Benedict XVI and the Catholic Church's role in sex-abuse scandals.

Rome's doctrinal chief said the Times "lacks fairness" and was "rushing to a guilty verdict" by alleging the then-future pope failed to defrock a priest who molested as many as 200 deaf boys in Wisconsin more than 30 years ago.

The lengthy blast by William Cardinal Levada -- an American who heads the church's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith -- on the official Vatican Web site ripped the Times' reporting, an editorial and op-ed commentary. Levada also attacked what he called columnist "Maureen Dowd's silly parroting" of other Times articles.

APTHROW THE GOOD BOOK AT 'EM: Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Holy Thursday Mass yesterday after the Vatican defended him in the sex-abuse scandal.
AP
THROW THE GOOD BOOK AT 'EM: Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Holy Thursday Mass yesterday after the Vatican defended him in the sex-abuse scandal.

"I ask the Times to reconsider its attack mode about Pope Benedict XVI and give the world a more balanced view of a leader it can and should count on," Levada wrote.

He added that the priest accused in the case, Rev. Lawrence Murphy, was terminally ill when the Vatican asked that his canonical trial be suspended.

"My interpretation would be that the Congregation realized that the complex canonical process would be useless if the priest were dying," Levada wrote.

At the time, the pope was known as Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger and led the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which had oversight in the case.

Meanwhile, an Italian priest and exorcist went even further in condemning the Times -- saying its coverage was "prompted by the devil."

"Because he is a marvelous pope and worthy successor to John Paul II, it is clear that the devil wants to grab hold of him," said Father Gabriele Amorth, 85.

A Times spokeswoman defended its articles about the Wisconsin scandal. "The allegations of abuse within the Catholic Church are a serious subject, as the Vatican has acknowledged on many occasions," said the spokeswoman, Diane McNulty. "Any role the current pope may have played in responding to those allegations over the years is a significant aspect of this story."

The Vatican's broadside prompted Times watchers to take sides.

"It is, at best, disingenuous and, at worst, deceitful and unhealthy to try to shift focus away from child sex crimes and cover-ups and onto the alleged motives of journalists," said David Clohessy, national director if The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

But New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan said singling out the church was unfair.

"You begin to wonder, is there an agenda of bias here?" he said on WNYW/Channel 5's "Good Day New York."

Dolan had also blasted the Times on his blog last November, claiming Maureen Dowd was "anti-Catholic."

Catholic League President Bill Donohue said the Times was unfairly blaming the pope. The fault, he said, was with Wisconsin church officials.

andy.soltis@nypost.com



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Catholic faithful want answers, not Vatican denials



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

IS THE DEVIL IN THE VATICAN?

Some candid admissions here.

Sex abuse scandals in the Roman Catholic Church are proof that that "the Devil is at work inside the Vatican", according to the Holy See's chief exorcist.

Father Gabriele Amorth, 85, who has been the Vatican's chief exorcist for 25 years and says he has dealt with 70,000 cases of demonic possession, said that the consequences of satanic infiltration included power struggles at the Vatican as well as "cardinals who do not believe in Jesus, and bishops who are linked to the Demon". He added: "When one speaks of 'the smoke of Satan' [a phrase coined by Pope Paul VI in 1972] in the holy rooms, it is all true – including these latest stories of violence and paedophilia."

Well, is he right? I think in a way he is. Those of us who hold the Christian faith understand that Satan IS everywhere, the Bible tells us so. This is his realm, we are all fallen creatures open to temptation, and that is why we need to turn to Christ.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Pope Sexual Abuse Scandal: Benedict Implicated In Cover-Up Of Wisconsin Abuse Case

Huffington Post / AP First Posted: 03-24-10 09:24 PM   |   Updated: 03-25-10 02:50 AM

As a cardinal, Pope Benedict XVI and other Vatican officials did not punish or even hold a trial within the Catholic church for a Wisconsin priest who may have molested as many as 200 deaf boys, according to The New York Times.

The Times reports that despite warnings from "several" bishops to then-Cardinal Ratzinger about Father Lawrence Murphy, a priest at the St. John's School For The Deaf in St. Francis, WI, the Vatican chose not to act and ultimately allowed Murphy to go unpunished before his death in 1998. The Times reports:

In 1996, Cardinal Ratzinger failed to respond to two letters about the case from Rembert G. Weakland, Milwaukee's archbishop at the time. After eight months, the second in command at the doctrinal office, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, now the Vatican's secretary of state, instructed the Wisconsin bishops to begin a secret canonical trial that could lead to Father Murphy's dismissal.


But Cardinal Bertone halted the process after Father Murphy personally wrote to Cardinal Ratzinger protesting that he should not be put on trial because he had already repented and was in poor health and that the case was beyond the church's own statute of limitations.


"I simply want to live out the time that I have left in the dignity of my priesthood," Father Murphy wrote near the end of his life to Cardinal Ratzinger. "I ask your kind assistance in this matter." The files contain no response from Cardinal Ratzinger.

 

The Times acquired the correspondence and church files from the lawyers for five men who are suing the Archdiocese of Milwaukee over the abuse. A 2006 story by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel detailed Murphy's violations:

The men's stories are similar. Murphy would call them to his bedroom in the school, or visit them in their dorm beds late at night, masturbate them and leave. Sometimes he would go on to other boys. Often he would say nothing. Sometimes when the boys saw him molesting other boys in the dorm room, they would cover their heads with their blankets, hug themselves tightly and weep. At times, he would take their confession in a second floor walk-in closet in the boy's dorm and molest them.


"Murphy was so powerful and it was so hard," said Geier who was molested when he was in seventh grade and said he saw more than a dozen other boys molested. "You couldn't get out. It was like a prison. I felt so confused. Here I had Father Murphy touching me. I would be like, 'God, what's right?' "


Geier said the boys received no sex education and had no idea what was happening to them. Some, he said, believed it must be all right because it was being done by a priest.

On Wednesday, the Pope accepted the resignation of Bishop John Magee, an Irish bishop, for his failure to report child-molesting priests to police. Last week, the Pope issued an unprecedented letter to Ireland addressing the 16 years of church cover-up scandals there. But he has yet to say anything about his handling of an abuse case in Germany.

In that case, Ratzinger approved the 1980 transfer of Rev. Peter Hullermann to a psychological treatment center to receive treatment for pedophilia. Ratziner, then a cardinal, was the archbishop of Munich and did not report Hullermann's alleged abuse of boys to German police.

Since January, more than 300 former Catholic school students and others have stepped forward with abuse claims and the church has seen it's poll numbers fall drastically.

According to Stern magazine, Only 17 percent of Germans polled said that they still trust the Catholic church, compared to 29 percent in late January, just before the first abuse cases there were made public.




__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Vatican Declined to Defrock U.S. Priest Who Abused Boys

25vatican2_337-395-articleLarge.jpg

The Rev. Lawrence C. Murphy, with hands together, at St. John’s School for the Deaf in Wisconsin in 1960.

Pope Benedict XVI — did not defrock a priest who molested as many as 200 deaf boys, even though several American bishops repeatedly warned them that failure to act on the matter could embarrass the church, according to church files newly unearthed as part of a lawsuit.

Jeffrey Phelps for The New York Times

Arthur Budzinski, at a cemetery behind St. John's School for the Deaf, says he was first molested in 1960 when he went to Father Murphy for confession.

The internal correspondence from bishops in Wisconsin directly to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future pope, shows that while church officials tussled over whether the priest should be dismissed, their highest priority was protecting the church from scandal.

The documents emerge as Pope Benedict is facing other accusations that he and direct subordinates often did not alert civilian authorities or discipline priests involved in sexual abuse when he served as an archbishop in Germany and as the Vatican’s chief doctrinal enforcer.

The Wisconsin case involved an American priest, the Rev. Lawrence C. Murphy, who worked at a renowned school for deaf children from 1950 to 1974. But it is only one of thousands of cases forwarded over decades by bishops to the Vatican office called the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, led from 1981 to 2005 by Cardinal Ratzinger. It is still the office that decides whether accused priests should be given full canonical trials and defrocked.

In 1996, Cardinal Ratzinger failed to respond to two letters about the case from Rembert G. Weakland, Milwaukee’s archbishop at the time. After eight months, the second in command at the doctrinal office, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, now the Vatican’s secretary of state, instructed the Wisconsin bishops to begin a secret canonical trial that could lead to Father Murphy’s dismissal.

But Cardinal Bertone halted the process after Father Murphy personally wrote to Cardinal Ratzinger protesting that he should not be put on trial because he had already repented and was in poor health and that the case was beyond the church’s own statute of limitations.

“I simply want to live out the time that I have left in the dignity of my priesthood,” Father Murphy wrote near the end of his life to Cardinal Ratzinger. “I ask your kind assistance in this matter.” The files contain no response from Cardinal Ratzinger.

The New York Times obtained the documents, which the church fought to keep secret, from Jeff Anderson and Mike Finnegan, the lawyers for five men who have brought four lawsuits against the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. The documents include letters between bishops and the Vatican, victims’ affidavits, the handwritten notes of an expert on sexual disorders who interviewed Father Murphy and minutes of a final meeting on the case at the Vatican.

Father Murphy not only was never tried or disciplined by the church’s own justice system, but also got a pass from the police and prosecutors who ignored reports from his victims, according to the documents and interviews with victims. Three successive archbishops in Wisconsin were told that Father Murphy was sexually abusing children, the documents show, but never reported it to criminal or civil authorities.

Instead of being disciplined, Father Murphy was quietly moved by Archbishop William E. Cousins of Milwaukee to the Diocese of Superior in northern Wisconsin in 1974, where he spent his last 24 years working freely with children in parishes, schools and, as one lawsuit charges, a juvenile detention center. He died in 1998, still a priest.

Even as the pope himself in a recent letter to Irish Catholics has emphasized the need to cooperate with civil justice in abuse cases, the correspondence seems to indicate that the Vatican’s insistence on secrecy has often impeded such cooperation. At the same time, the officials’ reluctance to defrock a sex abuser shows that on a doctrinal level, the Vatican has tended to view the matter in terms of sin and repentance more than crime and punishment.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, was shown the documents and was asked to respond to questions about the case. He provided a statement saying that Father Murphy had certainly violated “particularly vulnerable” children and the law, and that it was a “tragic case.” But he pointed out that the Vatican was not forwarded the case until 1996, years after civil authorities had investigated the case and dropped it.

Father Lombardi emphasized that neither the Code of Canon Law nor the Vatican norms issued in 1962, which instruct bishops to conduct canonical investigations and trials in secret, prohibited church officials from reporting child abuse to civil authorities. He did not address why that had never happened in this case.

As to why Father Murphy was never defrocked, he said that “the Code of Canon Law does not envision automatic penalties.” He said that Father Murphy’s poor health and the lack of more recent accusations against him were factors in the decision.

The Vatican’s inaction is not unusual. Only 20 percent of the 3,000 accused priests whose cases went to the church’s doctrinal office between 2001 and 2010 were given full church trials, and only some of those were defrocked, according to a recent interview in an Italian newspaper with Msgr. Charles J. Scicluna, the chief internal prosecutor at that office. An additional 10 percent were defrocked immediately. Ten percent left voluntarily. But a majority — 60 percent — faced other “administrative and disciplinary provisions,” Monsignor Scicluna said, like being prohibited from celebrating Mass.

To many, Father Murphy appeared to be a saint: a hearing man gifted at communicating in American Sign Language and an effective fund-raiser for deaf causes. A priest of the Milwaukee Archdiocese, he started as a teacher at St. John’s School for the Deaf, in St. Francis, in 1950. He was promoted to run the school in 1963 even though students had disclosed to church officials in the 1950s that he was a predator.

Victims give similar accounts of Father Murphy’s pulling down their pants and touching them in his office, his car, his mother’s country house, on class excursions and fund-raising trips and in their dormitory beds at night. Arthur Budzinski said he was first molested when he went to Father Murphy for confession when he was about 12, in 1960.

“If he was a real mean guy, I would have stayed away,” said Mr. Budzinski, now 61, who worked for years as a journeyman printer. “But he was so friendly, and so nice and understanding. I knew he was wrong, but I couldn’t really believe it.”

Mr. Budzinski and a group of other deaf former students spent more than 30 years trying to raise the alarm, including passing out leaflets outside the Milwaukee cathedral. Mr. Budzinski’s friend Gary Smith said in an interview that Father Murphy molested him 50 or 60 times, starting at age 12. By the time he graduated from high school at St. John’s, Mr. Smith said, “I was a very, very angry man.”

In 1993, with complaints about Father Murphy landing on his desk, Archbishop Weakland hired a social worker specializing in treating sexual offenders to evaluate him. After four days of interviews, the social worker said that Father Murphy had admitted his acts, had probably molested about 200 boys and felt no remorse.

However, it was not until 1996 that Archbishop Weakland tried to have Father Murphy defrocked. The reason, he wrote to Cardinal Ratzinger, was to defuse the anger among the deaf and restore their trust in the church. He wrote that since he had become aware that “solicitation in the confessional might be part of the situation,” the case belonged at the doctrinal office.

With no response from Cardinal Ratzinger, Archbishop Weakland wrote a different Vatican office in March 1997 saying the matter was urgent because a lawyer was preparing to sue, the case could become public and “true scandal in the future seems very possible.”

Recently some bishops have argued that the 1962 norms dictating secret disciplinary procedures have long fallen out of use. But it is clear from these documents that in 1997, they were still in force.

But the effort to dismiss Father Murphy came to a sudden halt after the priest appealed to Cardinal Ratzinger for leniency.

In an interview, Archbishop Weakland said that he recalled a final meeting at the Vatican in May 1998 in which he failed to persuade Cardinal Bertone and other doctrinal officials to grant a canonical trial to defrock Father Murphy. (In 2002, Archbishop Weakland resigned after it became public that he had an affair with a man and used church money to pay him a settlement.)

Archbishop Weakland said this week in an interview, “The evidence was so complete, and so extensive that I thought he should be reduced to the lay state, and also that that would bring a certain amount of peace in the deaf community.”

Father Murphy died four months later at age 72 and was buried in his priestly vestments. Archbishop Weakland wrote a last letter to Cardinal Bertone explaining his regret that Father Murphy’s family had disobeyed the archbishop’s instructions that the funeral be small and private, and the coffin kept closed.

“In spite of these difficulties,” Archbishop Weakland wrote, “we are still hoping we can avoid undue publicity that would be negative toward the church.”

Rachel Donadio contributed reporting from Rome. 



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Cardinal justifies praise for bishop's silence over abuse priest

A top cardinal justified praising a French bishop for not reporting a self-confessed abusive priest to the police, saying the late pope John Paul II authorised him to send the letter, a Spanish newspaper reported Saturday.

Colombia's Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos called Bishop Pierre Pican of Bayeux-Lisieux in northern France a model for all bishops for his handling of the case in a letter he sent him in 2001.

The letter was published in the French press on Thursday, adding to the scandal swirling around the Vatican over its handling of child abuse cases.

"I congratulate you for not denouncing a priest to the civil administration," wrote Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, 81, who at the time headed the Vatican department in charge of priests around the world.

"You have acted well and I am pleased to have a colleague in the episcopate who, in the eyes of history and of all other bishops in the world, preferred prison to denouncing his son and priest."

Father Pican had just been given a three-month suspended prison sentence for not denouncing Rene Bissey, who was sentenced to 18 years in jail in 2000 for sexually abusing 11 boys.

Speaking at a conference in the southeastern Spanish city of Murcia on Friday, Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos said the French bishop did not report Rene Bissey to the police because he was told of the child abuse during confession, the online edition of regional daily La Verdad reported.

Pierre Pican was prevented by the privacy of confession from reporting the priest "by word or any other means, and under any circumstances," he said according to the newspaper.

"After consulting the pope, I wrote a letter to the bishop, congratulating him as a model of a father who does not turn in his children," he added.

"The Holy Father authorised me to send that letter to all bishops in the world and we posted it on the Internet," he added in a reference to Pope Benedict XVI's predecessor, John Paul II who died in 2005.

Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, a staunch conservative from Colombia, headed the Vatican department for priests from 1996 to 2006.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

UK apologizes to Vatican over Pope visit jokes

AP
Pope Benedict XVIAP – Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, foreground, greets Pope Benedict XVI, center, during a special audience for …

LONDON – Britain's Foreign Office issued a hasty apology Sunday toPope Benedict XVI after publication of an internal memo in which officials joked he could open an abortion clinic, launch a range of condoms or sing a duet with Queen Elizabeth II during a four-day visit in September.

The document, sections of which were published in the Sunday Telegraph newspaper, also proposed the pope could bless a gay marriage, and acknowledge the clerical sex abuse scandal by establishing a hot line for abused children, or honoring abuse whistleblowers.

Junior officials wrote the memo following a brainstorming session intended to discuss ideas for the visit, the first to Britain by the head of the Roman Catholic Church since Pope John Paul II in 1982.

Though some included advice for Britain's government on how to approach the abuse scandal, the ministry condemned many of the proposals as "ill-judged, naive and disrespectful."

Britain's ambassador to the VaticanFrancis Campbell, met senior Vatican officials offer a formal apology and one individual involved in drafting the memo has been transferred to other duties, the ministry said.

"The Foreign Office very much regrets this incident and is deeply sorry for the offense which it has caused," the ministry said in a statement. "We strongly value the close and productive relationship between the U.K. government and the Holy See and look forward to deepening this further with the visit of Pope Benedict to the U.K."

The document featured a diagram listing people likely to have an influential role during, or in commenting on, the visit — which ranked Scottish singer Susan Boyle, the surprise reality television star, as more important than Archbishop of Westminster Vincent Nichols, the head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales.

An accompanying note acknowledged many of the ideas contained in the memo were extreme. "These should not be shared externally...," it read, explaining the document was "the product of a brainstorm which took into account even the most far-fetched of ideas."

Vatican spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi said an apology from Britain had been received through the Holy See's embassy. "They supplied all the explanations, and there is nothing to add," Lombardi said.

Britain's Scotland Secretary Jim Murphy on Sunday branded the suggestions contained in the memo as despicable. "These are vile, they're insulting, an embarrassment, and on behalf of the whole of the United Kingdom, I would want to apologize," he said, during an election debate.

During his visit to Scotland and EnglandPope Benedict XVI will give a speech in London, attend an ecumenical service at Westminster Abbey and conduct a public mass in Glasgow's Bellahouston Park.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 9863
Date:
Permalink  
 

Catholic Leaders In UK Apologize For Child Abuse

images_image_281093753.gifCBS News Interactive: Catholic Church Sex Scandals

LONDON (AP) ― Protesters hold placards on March 28, 2010 in London during a rally calling for the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI over abuse scandals rocking the Church.Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty ImagesRoman Catholic leaders in Britain have apologized for child abuse by clergy, saying the scandal has brought shame on the church. 

Archbishop of Westminster Vincent Nichols, the head of the church in England and Wales, says the crimes of some priests were a "profound scandal" that "bring deep shame to the whole church." 

He expressed the church's "heartfelt apology and deep sorrow to those who have suffered abuse, those who have felt ignored, disbelieved or betrayed." 

Nichols made the apology in a statement issued Thursday on behalf of bishops, to be sent to parishes across the country. 

(© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)



__________________
1 2  >  Last»  | Page of 2  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard