AHEAD OF a brief meeting with Pope Benedict XVI in Castel Gandolfo
this morning, Taoiseach Enda Kenny was yesterday unrepentant about his
criticism last year of the Holy See’s response to the clerical sex abuse
crisis in Ireland.
Complaining in the Dáil about the
“dysfunction, disconnection, elitism and narcissism that dominate the
culture of the Vatican to this day”, Mr Kenny suggested that the Holy
See had responded to the sex abuse crisis with the “gimlet eye of a
canon lawyer”.
Asked by The Irish Times if he would feel
“uncomfortable” when meeting the pope this morning for the first time
since the July 2011 speech, the Taoiseach said that he was happy to meet
him.
“I think that the matter that I raised in the Dáil in regard
to the Catholic Church has been beneficial in the sense that it has
brought about a new sense of reality. In my dealings with church
authorities since then, there has been a realism and an understanding
that the scars of the past have to be dealt with and dealt with fully
and that we have to put in place foundations for the future which
demonstrate the sense of values that we have for our country and for our
people."
“All that is reflected in the decision I made on taking
office in appointing a Minister for Children and also that this
Government has also published and nominated a date for the referendum on
child protection. It used to be that children were to be seen
and not heard. Had they been heard and listened to, we might not have
had many of the scars that I have referred to.”
The Taoiseach will
meet the pope this morning as part of a group of delegates attending
the Centrist Democrats International conference in Rome this weekend.
Accordingly, his meeting with the pope will be very brief, restricted to
a handshake and a greeting and leaving no time for an extended,
one-on-one exchange.
Asked if he would be inviting the pope to
visit Ireland, the Taoiseach replied: “It is a matter for the church
authorities to invite him to Ireland . . . ”