12.4.2010
(1) Irish Independent, (2) Irish Central
Monday, 5 April, 2010
Sunday, 10 April, 2010
Church needs Easter Rising to sweep away the old guard
By Maurice Hayes, Irish Independent
A fairly savage cartoon in a French regional newspaper on Holy Saturday depicted a crucifix shrouded in purple cloth for the Holy Week liturgy. A priest standing by explained the significance of the veiled cross: "There are things going on in the church that Christ would be better not seeing."
This, of course, is France, but the editorial extends the problem to the wider church, and specifically to Ireland.
There is in France, too, the tension between a younger generation of bishops and priests who recognise the need to report crime to the civil authorities, to have regard to the material and psychological needs of victims and their demand for justice, and the need for transparency, against those traditionalists who would still put the protection of the institution from exposure above the protection of children from abuse.
At least they can take comfort (as some do) in not being the target for a papal letter like their counterparts in the Irish church.
How much difference that would make is an open question -- even in Ireland, where the letter is seen largely as a lost opportunity rather than a world-changing (or even church-changing) intervention.
It has faded into the background as new crises rock the hierarchy and new evidence of episcopal fallibility or failure leaks daily into the public domain.
It was not, perhaps, the happiest choice for the Pontiff to invoke the spirit of St Oliver Plunkett in his letter. Oliver Plunkett was indeed a martyr, and is to be revered as such, but a martyr as much to divisions in the Irish church at the time as to the Penal Laws.
On one plausible reading of history, he was sent back by Rome as an agent of reform with a mission to improve church governance in Ireland and to remove irregularities and questionable practices.
In doing so he ran up against clerical vested interests and their powerful friends who engineered his betrayal and eventual death. Not a very happy precedent for a curial inspectorate.
Most people will have been uncomfortable at the Pope's attribution of blame for clerical child abuse to growing secularisation. For them, disillusionment with the church has been as a result of such behaviour and the failure to manage the consequences rather than a contributory cause.
Where the Pope really gets it wrong in the public mind is in clinging to canon law and relegating the law of the land to "its own area of competence".
Had canon law been followed, he seems to say, the matter would have been dealt with. But it is because the church authorities followed canon law (encouraged to secrecy by the then Cardinal Ratzinger) that we now have a problem.
The problem is not that canon law was imperfectly applied, but that it should have been invoked at all in what was clearly the province of the criminal law and the civil authorities.
In a democracy, canon law has no more validity than the rules of a golf club in circumstances where children have been abused and a crime committed.
Apart from the diagnostics, it is the absence of any clear programme for change that is most disappointing. Apart from a Friday fast during Lent and an exhortation to pray harder, the Pope has little to offer
Apart too from the enormity of the crimes and the suffering of the victims, the continuing failure to deal adequately with the situation is a cause of public anger and disillusionment.
There is the fear, too, of more to come in Cloyne, then Raphoe and a constant drip after that, and then the outcome of a PSNI investigation and the Assembly's clone of the Ryan commission.
Bishop Noel Treanor (along with Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, one of the few functioning moral lighthouses on the horizon) spoke for many when he expressed horror, shame and disgust at the inept management and cover-ups by some bishops.
Where the Pope's letter (much hyped as it was) fell short of the expectations of the faithful is in not prescribing total and immediate disclosure and radical changes in senior management and structures.
Reducing the number of dioceses by half and retiring a cadre of senior bishops would mark a break with the past. Allowing the promotion of younger men not associated with past practices would release latent energy and bring a new sense of mission to the church.
Cardinal Sean Brady is a decent, honourable and compassionate man who has laboured mightily to install effective procedures for the protection of children.
It is a sad fact of life that the reality of change needs to be symbolised and effected by a change at the top. Caught in a web of circumstances not entirely of his own making, his position is increasingly unsustainable.
It is not the failure to report Brendan Smyth (when the duty was by no means clear) or letting him free to offend (when the nature of paedophilia was poorly understood) or inflicting a gobbledegook oath of silence on frightened and abused teenagers that are most at issue, but simply in being at the head of a system that has failed and a management that is not fit for purpose and needs to be replaced if confidence is to be restored, that most undermines the cardinal's position.
Easter, a time of hope and renewal, could have heralded a new beginning with a better lead from the Pope. After all, what is Easter without a rebellion?
Copyright © Irish Independent 2010
Of course the Pope covered up child sex-abuse
By Irish Central (USA)
Of course the Pope knew about child sex abuse and how rampant it was in the Church.
The ridiculous discussion going on about whether not he did reminds me of the arguments over whether Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams was in the IRA or not.
The question should always have been, if he wasn't in the the IRA, then why wasn't he?
He grew up in West Belfast at the beginning of The Troubles in Northern Ireland when every kid in the neighborhood joined.
Do you think for a moment he would have gained such a position of influence with the IRA in later years if he hadn't once been part of them?
It is the same with the Pope. He would never have become Pope if he wasn't prepared to keep some dark secrets. The Vatican loves its secrets and he has to keep his share of them.
Pope Benedict didn't get where he is today by not being totally aware of what was going on with child abuse cases in the Vatican.
In his previous life he was in charge of overseeing all the allegations or and acting or not acting on them. He preferred not to act unless absolutely necessary.
All big institutions, especially those that lack any sense of real democracy, do the same. The Russians are just admitting that Stalin killed thousands of Polish soldiers during the Second World War after decades of blaming the Germans. Each institution like that protects itself at all costs until it can protect no more.
Under all the trappings of power and pomp are deeply fallible human beings who pay attention to ensuring their mistakes are never uncovered. They have no special powers and are just as riven with problems as any ordinary group of people. We cannot expect them to be any different.
Covering up pedophilia or Polish mass graves is like discovering that your septic tank doesn't work. You persist in ignoring it until the smell becomes too trenchant. Then you apologize and try to clean it up.
It is clear that both Cardinal Ratzinger and his predecessor Pope John Paul and Cardinal Brady in Ireland swept the entire matter under the carpet as much as possible until the media pressure forced them to go public and repent on it.
The wonder is so many people are expressing such surprise over what was a perfectly straightforward reality. The Church covered up child abuse, and in many cases, such as with Cardinal Bernard Law in Boston, promoted those who covered it up too even after they had been disgraced.
Copyright © Irish Central 2010