A PROMINENT survivor of clerical child sexual abuse last night said many victims would not still be suffering if Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Sean Brady had done their jobs properly.
Dubliner Andrew Madden was responding to comments made in Rome
at the beatification ceremony which defended the late Pontiff from
criticisms that he did not deal quickly and adequately with paedophile
priest scandals that came to light during his reign.
Entering the controversy, the Primate of All-Ireland Cardinal Sean Brady said: "I don't know how much he knew about the abuse. Perhaps he should have done more. I don't know."
But
Dr Brady, who last year resisted calls for his resignation over his
role in pledging to secrecy young victims of paedophile monk Brendan
Smyth, insisted that if Pope John Paul "felt that he should have done
more, he would have done it".
Dr Brady added: "So I think we will just have to leave that to the mercy of God."
But
Mr Madden, who was the first Irish victim to make public his abuse by
the notorious former priest Ivan Payne, said he had spent the day
thinking of the victims who suffered from the ''cover-ups'' of Pope John
Paul and Dr Brady.
"It was a day when it came into my mind the
welfare of all clerical sex abuse victims which need not have happened
if John Paul and Cardinal Brady had done the right thing," he told the Irish Independent.
Meanwhile, last Sunday night at a special Mass in Dublin's Pro-Cathedral in celebration of Pope John Paul, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin prayed for renewal in the church.