Based on the findings of
the eight reviews of child protection published yesterday, we can
conclude that much has been achieved by Catholic Ireland in this fraught area.
But
it is remarkable that, yet again, another missionary society has
demonstrated it too, apparently, has been quite oblivious to the abuse
crisis that has engulfed the church and the possible implications this
may have for the behaviour of some of its members.
It
is as though superiors of these societies have felt that because
members work abroad they were somehow immune to practices found among
some fellow clergy at home, or that because they were in foreign
countries it was acceptable to do things differently there.
Not only do those superiors help sustain, if
not facilitate, the abuse of children through a casual approach, they
have also helped damage the good name of a great majority of our
missionaries. It is a pattern witnessed before in Ireland, where the
bishops were concerned.
Superiors of some missionary congregations, it
would seem, are slow learners.
It is astonishing 20 years after Fr Brendan Smyth was first jailed for abusing children that the review of St Patrick’s Missionary Society,
Kiltegan, yesterday found that “accused priests were afforded too much
tolerance and so found it too easy to avoid being held accountable for
their actions”.
Children abroad
Worse, there appears to be a two-tier response by the society.
The review
found “the identification of abuse of a child on the missions did not
always evoke the actions that evidence an empathic response to the
experiences of victims.
The society must ensure into the future that
there is no lower standard of safeguarding afforded to children abroad
than that which is available to Irish children.”
The
Kiltegans are not alone.
A 2012 review by the National Board for
Safeguarding Children of the Sacred Heart Missionaries, found it
“difficult to express adequately the failure of this society to
effectively protect vulnerable children”.
The congregation, it said,
“failed to take account of admissions by perpetrators by passing them on
to the appropriate authorities”.
A 2012 review by
the board of the Spiritans (Holy Ghost Fathers) found that suspected
abusers were often moved, within Ireland or abroad, provoking concern
that victims had yet to come forward here or in countries such as the
US, Canada and Sierra Leone.
It said congregation files made for “very sad reading” with “unacceptable failures” to prevent the abuse of children.
It
is not as if missionary societies face insurmountable difficulties when
it comes to implementing and ensuring proper child protection. This was
illustrated in the review of the Society of African Missions published last April.
It
found that within this congregation, which has personnel in seven
African countries, “there was recognition of the need to ensure that the
safeguarding standards which apply in Ireland are implemented by all
SMA members internationally”.
Reports to police
of abuse allegations received had been made by the SMA’s “without any
unnecessary delay in all cases”, while it “removed all priests from
ministry while investigations were conducted into the complaints”.
If the SMAs can do it, why not other missionary societies?
The
reviews of the six dioceses published yesterday were positive in the
main, with Cashel and Emly particularly impressive due in no small part
probably to the often uncompromising leadership of Archbishop Dermot Clifford, former administrator of Cloyne diocese.
Armagh archdiocese also came out well, where Cardinal Brady has surrounded himself with a strong child protection team.
Vatican advice
It was Cardinal Brady himself who made the point yesterday the Irish Catholic Church could play a useful role in advising the new Vatican commission on child abuse, set up by Pope Francis last week.
The
Irish Catholic Church has much to teach the world about the subject.
Few national churches have had as much experience of the disasters and
successes that can mark institutional handling of this awful scandal.
An often bitter experience in Ireland has bred an expertise that is rare, and which would be of value far beyond these shores.