Victims of sexual abuse at Jesuit
schools in Germany said Thursday that the Catholic Church’s offer of
€5,000 in compensation is too low.
“This sum is not at all sufficient to compensate for the damages suffered or to signal a recognition of guilt,” leader of the Eckiger Tisch victim’s group Thomas Weiner told daily Frankfurter Rundshau.
Weiner also said he found it incomprehensible that victims already known
to the Church would have to file an application to receive the payment.
On Monday Klaus Mertes, rector of Canisius College, the elite Jesuit school in Berlin at which the first allegations surfaced, told daily Berliner Zeitungthat
the 205 known victims would share about €1 million in damages payments
from the Jesuit order, meaning each would receive roughly €5,000.
But Weiner, who attended the Canisius College along with many members of
his group, said he remained uncertain of whether the offer was real or
simply a declaration of intent.
Eckiger Tisch had demanded damages of some €82,000 per abuse victim.
A spokesman for the order in Munich told news agency AFP that the
Jesuits had sent the offer in letters and emails to the around 200
victims who had come forward, in which it was noted that the sum "could
never compensate for the suffering incurred."
The onslaught of sexual and physical abuse revelations within the
Catholic Church began in January 2010 when it emerged that priests at
Canisius committed dozens of assaults on pupils in the 1970s and 1980s.
Since then more than 200 cases of such abuse at Church institutions
throughout the country have emerged.
But many of these cases cannot be prosecuted because they have passed the statute of limitations.
SIC: DE/INT'L