The cynical indifference by Irish Catholic bishops to the sexual abuse of children perpetrated by their brother priests is not the full story, by any means.
The culpability of the leadership of the Catholic Church at the Vatican is part of that fuller story, as I hope to demonstrate.
Clerical child sex abuse is only a small part of the scarifying phenomenon of child sex abuse in Ireland.
However, let’s examine the culpability of the Vatican authorities and its indifference to the welfare of children.
Desmond Connell became Catholic archbishop of Dublin in 1988.Twelve years later he was singled out to hold the second-most prestigious posit ion in the Catholic Church, that of cardinal.
It is not believable that, from 1988 to 2000, when Connell was appointed cardinal, the Church authorities in Rome had no idea how he handled (or rather, mishandled) clerical sex abuses cases here, and how he had lied about at least one of these cases.
The case in which clearly he lied concerned the courageous victim Andrew Madden, and the priest, Ivan Payne.
Payne was a serial child abuser who abused at least 31 people.
Madden made a complaint about Payne in 1981, claiming that Payne had sexually abused him for five years. The Church authorities knew of the abuse from 1981 onwards but, essentially, nothing was done.
In 1989, Madden repeated his complaint, this time to an auxiliary bishop, and asked why Payne had been moved to another parish where he might well abuse again.
Neither this auxiliary bishop nor Connell made any effort to enquire into the grounds of the complaint to determine whether Payne remained a danger to children.
Madden threatened legal proceedings against Payne in March 1992.Madden wrote to Connell in April 1993 complaining about the delay in settling the case. Connell instructed the diocesan solicitors to offer Payne financial assistance to settle the case. A settlement was reached the following month.
In 1994,Maddenwent to the media, first on the Gay Byrne radio programme. The case got widespread publicity.
Connell went on radio in May 1995 and said, in relation to the handling of clerical child sex abuse cases: ‘‘I have compensated nobody, I have paid nobody." He went onto say that the finances of the diocese ‘‘are not used in any way’’ to make settlements in civil actions concerning clerical child abuse. Madden exposed this claim as a lie.
On October 4, 1995, I wrote in a newspaper column, in reference to Connell’s statements quoted above: ‘‘We now know that each of these statements is essentially misleading. Archbishop Connell provided £27,000 to compensate a clerical child abuser victim and, in doing so, the finances of the diocese were used in a particular way to make a settlement.
‘‘But not just that. We also know that Archbishop Connell failed to report the commission of a crime to the Garda, in spite of a legal obligation to do so. Connell knew that a crime had been committed because he had made £27,000 available to the priest to make a settlement for the crime.
‘‘We also know that the priest in question was given some form of therapeutic assistance, after which he was proclaimed fit to resume pastoral work.
‘‘If no crime had been committed, then what was this therapy for and, if it was for something unconnected with the crime, why was it mentioned in this connection?"
I do not claim any special insight.
My purpose in quoting myself is simply to show how there was widespread appreciation at the time that Connell had failed to report a crime to the Garda and had lied about making funds available to compensate a victim of clerical abuse and had failed quickly to move a priest from a parish, who he had every reason to believe was a child sex abuser.
If I and several others, including the dogs in the street, knew about this at the time, is it believable that the Vatican did not know about it?
Neither is it believable that they knew nothing about any of the other cases which he mishandled during that period from 1988 to 2000.
When the proposal arose - I assume some time in early 2000 - of appointing Connell to the College of Cardinals, one assumes rudimentary checks were made to determine the suitability of the appointment.
One assumes the Papal Nuncio - and perhaps some other bishops in Ireland - would have been consulted.
Is it plausible that none of them would have mentioned to the Vatican anything about the Payne case and the lie which Connell told in that connection?
Assuming that such mention was made, isn’t it likely that further enquiries would have been made into how Connell had handled other clerical sex abuses cases since his appointment as archbishop in 1988?
If the Papal Nuncio made no such report and not a single bishop did so, doesn’t that in itself say something about the institutional Catholic Church?
More likely, the Vatican was aware all along about the ‘‘mental reservation’’ and the cover-ups, and saw absolutely no reason why that should disbar Connell from the College of Cardinals, because the sexual abuse of a few children is a trifling matter in the panoply of power and importance of the church.
One final reflection. This quite proper outrage over the bishops and the cover-ups and the lies disguises a larger phenomenon.
The incidence of child sex abuse in Ireland is enormous.
According to that Sexual Abuse and Violence in Ireland (SAVI) report of 2002, around 320,000 people were raped in childhood, and there is little reason to believe the incidence of child rape has diminished.
The incidence of child rape among the clergy is certainly greater than among the population at large, but only about 4 per cent of child rapes have been perpetrated by the clergy.
The government shows no interest at all, aside from the odd photo opportunity.
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