Pedophilia – the crime and illness of adults who prey on children –
remains one of the most disturbing problems in our society.
And it seems
as if it has become an all-too-frequent story:
•
Wilmington attorney Tom Neuberger has just released a jarring book
about the more than 100 sexual abuse cases involving the priests of the
Diocese of Delaware and Catholic orders.
•
Last week the attorneys for the most sickening of Delaware’s
pedophiles, pediatrician Earl Bradley, finally gave up their hopeless
fight to overturn his 14-plus life sentences for raping his young
patients.
• Also
last week the Boy Scouts of America finally agreed to turn over to
authorities the names of hundreds of adult leaders who molested Scouts
since 1965.
•
Pennsylvania State University still is wrestling with the aftermath of
the predatory actions of its assistant football coach, Jerry Sandusky,
who is due to be sentenced tomorrow.
•
And how many other stories have we heard recently about teachers and
coaches, male and female, having sexual relations with boys and girls
for whom they were responsible.
Delawareans
might well think an epidemic has swept our state, considering what
trials have revealed about the crimes of some Catholic priests and the
Sussex County sexual ogre who dared call himself a doctor.
Many
readers probably will cringe when they read Neuberger’s “When Priests
Become Predators: Profiles of Childhood Sexual Abuse Survivors.”
The
actual testimony of 10 victims is so much more graphic, and therefore
alarming, than the news accounts of trials that necessarily had to be
toned down.
The
book provides the vivid, stomach-turning testimony that demonstrates how
the clergy who were trusted by these boys (and a girl) made these
youngsters their playthings, how fellow priests and church hierarchy
failed to act when they knew about the outrages.
And, perhaps worst of
all, how the victims’ polluted childhoods affected them in their adult
lives.
When
Delaware passed the Child Victim’s Act in 2007, upheld four years later
by the state’s Supreme Court, it opened a two-year window for victims to
sue their predators.
Delaware criminal and bankruptcy courts gave these
victims a forum to tell their stories.
The Boston Globe five years earlier had exposed similar crimes in
Massachusetts. Soon Pennsylvania and almost every corner of the country
(and abroad in Ireland, Belgium and elsewhere) learned of these child
abuse cases. What was almost as disturbing as the victims’ stories was
the evidence that fellow priests and officials of the church up to the
ranks of bishops did next to nothing about this epidemic.
By
reprinting much of the court records in this book, Neuberger says, the
public can understand “the face of human suffering and the courage of
these survivors of childhood sexual crimes who have come forward.”
As a
lead attorney for the victims, Neuberger minces no words in attacking
“the opposition and dirty tricks which the Roman Catholic Church could
muster.”
The suits were against the church and the Catholic orders that
ran Archmere Academy and Salesianum School. The victims won millions of
dollars.
While
reading this book can prove to be a harrowing experience we should
remind ourselves that the criminal action of these clergymen should not
result in a blanket denunciation of the entire church. Many priests were
as outraged as we are.
We
hope that books such as this, and trials such as are detailed here,
will have brought about a realization all the way to Rome that such
actions cannot be swept under the rug.
Neuberger also hopes that this
book’s testimony will “be invaluable for diagnostic and treatment
purposes of adult victims of childhood sex crimes.”
It’s
often harrowing to read “When Priests Become Pedophiles” but eyes will
be opened and often filled with tears reading this testimony.