The founder of the group that advocates for priest abuse victims has
stepped down after three decades of campaigning to force the Catholic
Church to recognize the extent of the scandal and compensate thousands
of people affected.
Barbara Blaine, president and founder of the
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said she was abused
herself and the organization was created through her efforts to reach
out to other victims, the Chicago Tribune reported.
"I
knew there were other survivors out there and wondered if they felt the
same debilitating hurt and if so, how they coped with it. I thought
they might hold the wisdom I lacked. I looked for other survivors and
asked if they would be willing to talk," Blaine said in a statement.
Blaine
did not say why she resigned. She and several other top SNAP officials
were sued last month by a former employee who says she was fired shortly
after asking superiors whether SNAP was referring potential clients to
attorneys in return for donations.
SNAP announced at the end of
January that another one of those top officials, former Executive Direct
David Clohessy, had resigned. Blaine and Clohessy both said their
resignations were unrelated to the lawsuit.
Blaine founded SNAP
in 1988, years after she was abused as an 8th grader by a Toledo, Ohio
priest who taught at the Catholic school she attended, according to the
organization's website. Her pleas for help to Toledo's bishop were
ignored. The first SNAP meeting of victims was held at a Holiday Inn in
Chicago.
The group gained prominence in 2002 after the Boston
Globe's stories on the priest sexual abuse scandal rocked the Catholic
Church.
The organization now has more than 20,000 members and support groups meet in over 60 cities across the U.S. and the world.
"Her
tenacity and fortitude helped expose abuse globally during the past
three decades," SNAP board member Mary Ellen Kruger said in a statement.
Blaine's resignation took effect Friday.