The Spiritan schools involved are Blackrock College and Willow Park, Rockwell College, St. Mary's College, St. Michael’s College and Templeogue College.

While Restore Together has welcomed that the Spiritan Order has made payments as part of legal claims made by victims (52 of 58 individual claims have been settled by the Order since 2022), it said no survivor should have to issue legal proceedings in order to obtain justice.

In a statement, it said that child welfare and trauma experts have agreed bringing legal proceedings to seek justice adds to the suffering of victims, many of whom are very vulnerable.

"It is not acceptable that the Spiritan Order is treating victims/survivors who issue legal proceedings against them with greater urgency than the many who wish, in good faith and for good reason, to obtain financial recognition for the harm done to them through a redress scheme that the Order has agreed to in principle," it said.

Since May 2021, Restore Together has been advocating for the implementation of a victim-centred, trauma-informed and non-adversarial redress scheme.

It said that financial awards under the redress scheme should be at the same value that a court would award to a successful claimant.

The group acknowledged that Spiritan Order had agreed to a redress scheme in principle - as one of five pillars of its Restorative Justice Programme - and that there has been detailed discussions over that time with the Spiritans and lawyers about its structure, nature and implementation.

However, it added that the Spiritan Order in Ireland "has very significant assets which it has valued at €160m in its accounts".

It said this was multiple times the amount that would be needed to fully implement a redress scheme.

"While it may take longer to finance the full extent of funds needed, the Spiritans have the necessary resources to commence the urgently needed redress scheme no later than 1st June this year. Further delay in the activation of a redress scheme and payment of compensation of their victims/survivors is totally unacceptable," it stated.

It pointed out that every week that goes by without a redress scheme being in place "prolongs the suffering, and in some cases despair, of victims/survivors who have come forward in good faith having carried their burden for decades through their lives".

The ongoing delay repeats and continues the sense of betrayal and abandonment first felt by victims as innocent children, according to Restore Together.

"Many victims/survivors are now in the later stage of life and should not have to wait any longer for proper recognition by the Spiritans of their failure to protect the children in their care or wait for the justice to which they are entitled."

It accused the Spiritans of failing to respect the frustration that the pain of survivors was not being respected by the Order, due to its continued "lack of urgency" in implementing all aspects of their own Restorative Justice Programme.

"Their own principles and Christian teachings require the Spiritans to show true repentance and to fully atone for what they as a congregation did to these vulnerable children.

"Until they have done so and this enormous wrong has been fully righted by the Spiritans, without equivocation or further delay, it casts a fundamental question over their other missions and moral authority," it concluded.