Great damage has been done to the credibility of the Church in
Ireland as a result of the handling of child abuse allegations in the
Diocese of Cloyne, the Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said.
Speaking
to Mass-goers at Dublin's Pro-Cathedral, Dr Martin said he was angered
at the response, or non-response, by Church authorities to children
whose lives were ruptured by abuse.
"Irish religious culture has
radically changed and has changed irreversibly. There will be no true
renewal in the Church until that fact is recognised. The Church cannot
continue to be present in society as it was in the past,” he said.
"Those in Church and State who have acted wrongly or inadequately should assumer responsibility."
What
was at stake here was “not just the past, but the future of our
children and our young people and the need to foster a healthy
environment across the board in which our upcoming generations are
cherished and can grow to maturity,” he said.
Archbishop of Cashel
and Emly Dermot Clifford also expressed remorse for the consistent
failure to report abuse allegations, saying the people of the diocese
were entitled to expect the complaints to be handled according to church
guidelines.
“I also apologise again for the consistent failure to report allegations to the civil authorities and for the mistakes and omissions which were made over a number of years in the diocese,” the senior cleric overseeing the Diocese of Cloyne said in an open letter to parishioners.
“The people of Cloyne were entitled to expect that all such complaints would be handled according to the official church guidelines. This was not the case, and for this I am truly sorry.”
“I also apologise again for the consistent failure to report allegations to the civil authorities and for the mistakes and omissions which were made over a number of years in the diocese,” the senior cleric overseeing the Diocese of Cloyne said in an open letter to parishioners.
“The people of Cloyne were entitled to expect that all such complaints would be handled according to the official church guidelines. This was not the case, and for this I am truly sorry.”
Dr Martin said his
first thoughts on reading the Cloyne report, published last Wednesday,
went back to the liturgy of lament and repentance at the Pro-Cathedral
some months ago, “to those who organised it and took part in it.”
He
continued: “I asked myself: what are they thinking today? Are they
asking themselves if that entire liturgy was just an empty show? Were
they being used just to boost the image of the Church? Were their
renewed hopes just another illusion about a Church which seems unable to
reform itself? Was their hurt just being further compounded?”
As he pondered this “the first emotion that came to me was one of anger," he said.
It
was “anger at what had happened in the diocese of Cloyne and at
response – or non-response - that was made to children whose lives had
been ruptured by abuse; anger at the fact that children had been put at
risk well after agreed guidelines were in place which were approved by
all the Irish bishops.”
He felt angry “at how thousands of men and
women in this diocese of Dublin must feel, who have invested time and
training to ensure that the Church they love and hope can be different
would truly be a safe place for children.”
He felt anger “at the
fact that there were in Cloyne - and perhaps elsewhere - individuals who
placed their own views above the safeguarding of children, and
seemingly without any second thought placed themselves outside and above
the regime of safeguarding to which their diocese and the Irish bishops
had committed themselves.”
These people did so while
“paradoxically, appealing somehow to their own interpretation of Canon
Law they had put themselves even above and beyond the norms which the
current Pope himself has promulgated for the entire Church.”
The
Catholic Church in Ireland was “a much safer place today than it was
even in the recent past. Much is being said, on the other hand, that
despite words the Church has not learned the lessons. Both statements
are true," he said.
All of us needed “to have in place systems of
verification and review which help us to identify mistakes made or areas
where more can be done or things can be done better. We need to
continue to build a cooperative climate where all the institutions of
the Church work in a constructive way together and with the institutions
of the State, which bears the primary responsibility for child
safeguarding in the country,” he said.
He thanked “the priests and
lay persons in this diocese who have committed themselves to
implementing our child safeguarding policies and I appeal to them not to
be become frustrated or indifferent.”
Public recognition was due
“to the mobilisation within the Church of so many volunteers who are in
the front line in our parishes and organizations in child safeguarding,”
he said.
He appealed that “those priests who have ministered
untarnished and generously over years – indeed for an entire lifetime”
should not be made “scapegoats and objects of hate.”
They should be recognised “for the good they do and they need the support of their people.”
He
also appealed “to those priests who have become demoralised and
half-hearted not to give in to cynicism but to heed the Lord’s call to
renewal and conversion.”
Early results from the most recent census
indicated “that there will be a significant growth in the numbers and
the proportion of children and young people in our population in the
coming years. This will inevitably require significant investment,” he
said.