A group of men from a northwestern Ontario First Nations community
are suing a Winnipeg-based Roman Catholic order and others to seek
redress for alleged sexual abuse they suffered at the hands of their
community priest as young boys.
The six men from the Lac La Croix First Nation near Fort Francis seek
unspecified financial damages from the federal government, a Catholic
diocese in Thunder Bay and the order of Les Oblats de Marie Immaculee du
Manitoba, along with a priest who lived and worked on the reserve in
the 1960s.
The men range in age from 55 to 61.
In separate statements of claim, each alleges his life has been
deeply and negatively affected by the aftershocks of sexual assaults he
was subjected to -- abuse the men say they felt powerless to speak out
about given the priest's position of power in their small community.
One man states that when he was 10 or 11 years old, the priest took
him to his on-reserve home several times during the summer months and
anally raped him. The behaviour continued until he was 13 or 14, the
now-56-year-old says.
The other men make similar claims, one alleging he was abused more
than two dozen times at the priest's home and in a schoolhouse room.
Another claims he was assaulted by the priest in a hotel room during a
trip to Minnesota.
The priest died in May 1986.
The allegations have not been proven, and no statement of defence has
been filed. No court date has been set to test the men's claims.
The men state the Order and the Thunder Bay diocese should be held
indirectly responsible for the actions of the now-late priest, who was a
member of the order and an employee of the diocese, their lawsuits say.
"The Order and the Diocese held out (the priest) as an individual
that embodied the values of the Roman Catholic faith such that it was
implied that he could be trusted and that he would do no harm," one
lawsuit states.
The two organizations should have known there would be a "power
imbalance" given the emphasis the faith places on obeying the wishes of
its clergy, and the power the priest had over the "immortal souls" of
the faithful in the community.