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Vatican Confirms Report Of Sexual Abuse And Rape Of Nuns By Priests In 23 Countries
11 March 2011 By Frances
Kennedy
The Catholic Church in Rome made
the extraordinary admission yesterday that it is aware
priests from at least 23 countries have been sexually
abusing nuns.
The Catholic Church in Rome made
the extraordinary admission yesterday that it is aware
priests from at least 23 countries have been sexually
abusing nuns.
Most of the abuse has occurred in
Africa, where priests vowed to celibacy, who
previously sought out prostitutes, have preyed on nuns
to avoid contracting the Aids virus.
Confidential Vatican reports
obtained by the National Catholic Reporter, a
weekly magazine in the US, have revealed that members
of the Catholic clergy have been exploiting their
financial and spiritual authority to gain sexual
favours from nuns, particularly those from the Third
World who are more likely to be culturally conditioned
to be subservient to men.
The reports, some of which are
recent and some of which have been in circulation for
at least seven years, said that such priests had
demanded sex in exchange for favours, such as
certification to work in a given diocese.
In extreme instances, the priests
had made nuns pregnant and then encouraged them to
have abortions.
The US article was based on five
documents, which senior women from religious orders
and priests have presented to the Vatican over the
past decade. They describe a particularly bad
situation in Africa. In a continent devastated by
Aids, nuns, along with early adolescent girls, are
perceived by some as safe sexual targets. The reports
said that the church authorities had done little to
tackle the problem.
The Vatican reports cited
countless cases of nuns forced to have sex with
priests. Some were obliged to take the pill, others
became pregnant and were encouraged to have abortions.
In one case in which an African sister was forced to
have an abortion, she died during the operation and
her aggressor led the funeral mass. Another case
involved 29 sisters from the same congregation who all
became pregnant to priests in the diocese.
The reports said that the
cultures in some African countries made it almost
impossible for a young woman to disobey an older man,
especially one seen as spiritually superior. There
were cases of novices who applied to their local
priest or bishop for certificates of good Catholic
practice that were required for them to pursue their
vocation. In return they were made to have sex. Some
incidents of sexual abuse allegedly took place almost
within the Vatican walls.
Certain unscrupulous clerics took
advantage of young nuns who were having trouble
finding accommodation, writing their essays and
funding their theological studies.
Forced to acknowledge the
problem, the Vatican has tried to play down its
gravity. In a statement issued yesterday the Pope's
official spokesman, Joaquin Navarro Valls, said: "The
problem is known and involves a restricted
geographical area. Certain negative situations must
not overshadow the often heroic faith of the
overwhelming majority of religious, nuns and priests".
One of the most comprehensive
documents was compiled by Sister Maura O'Donohue, an
Aids co-ordinator for Cafod, the London-based Catholic
Fund for Overseas Development.
She noted that religious sisters
had been identified as "safe" targets for sexual
activity. She quotes a case in 1991 of a community
superior being approached by priests requesting that
the nuns be made available to them for sexual favours.
"When the superior refused the
priests explained they would otherwise be obliged to
go to the village to find women and might thus get
Aids."Sister O'Donohue said her initial reaction to
what she was told by her fellow religious "was one of
shock and disbelief at the magnitude of the problem".
While most of the abuse happened
in African countries, Sister O'Donohue reported
incidents in 23 countries including India, Ireland,
Italy, the Philippines and the United States.
She heard cases of priests
encouraging the nuns to take the pill telling them it
would prevent HIV. Others "actually encouraged
abortion for the sisters" and Catholic hospitals and
medical staff reported pressure from priests to carry
out terminations for nuns and other young women.
O'Donohue wrote in her report how
a vicar in one African diocese had talked "quite
openly" about sex, saying that "celibacy in the
African context means a priest does not get married,
but does not mean he does not have children."
The head of the Vatican
congregation for Religious Life, Cardinal Martinez
Somalo, has set up a committee to look into the
problem. But it seems to have done little beyond
"awareness raising" among bishops.
More recently, in 1998, Sister
Marie McDonald, mother superior of the Missionaries of
Our Lady of Africa, put together a paper entitled
The Problem of the Sexual Buse of African Religious in
Africa and Rome.
She tabled the document to the
Council of 16, made up of delegates of the
international association of women's and men's
religious communities and the Vatican office
responsible for religious life. She noted that a
contributing cause was the "conspiracy of silence".
When she addressed bishops on the
problem, many of them felt it was disloyal of the
sisters to send reports.
"However, the sisters claim they
have done so time and time again. Sometimes they were
not well received. In some instances they are blamed
for what happened. Even when they are listened to
sympathetically nothing much seems to be done" One of
the most tragic elements that emerges is the fate of
the victims. While the offending priests are usually
moved or sent away for studies, the women are normally
chased out of their religious orders, they are then
either to scared to return to their families or are
rejected by them. they often finished up as outcasts,
or, in a cruel twist of irony, as prostitutes, making
a meagre living from an act they had vowed never to
do.
One of the few religious in Rome
willing to talk about the report was Father Giulio
Albanese, of MISNA, the missionary news agency.
"Missionaries are human beings, who are often living
under immense psychological pressure in situations of
war and ongoing violence. On one hand it's important
to condemn this horror and it's important tell the
truth, but we must not emphasise this at the expense
of the work done by the majority, many of whom have
laid down lives for witness" said Fr Albanese "The
press only talks about missionaries when they are
killed, kidnapped or are involved in something
scandalous" he added.
As the Vatican digests the
unpalatable evidence of how their own priests are
ruining the lives of their sisters, many Catholics
hope a strong message may come from on high. With the
American bishops, the Pope spoke in clear terms about
paedophile priests, telling them this was a scourge
that had to be faced. Some now hope that he may be
equally courageous in denouncing an evil which has
been covered by silence and shame for too long.
Source: The Independent
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