Catholic bishops will be held accountable for not protecting youths, Pope says
July 7, 2014 -- Updated 2035 GMT (0435 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: "Let's not mistake this meeting today for real action," victim's group head says
- Pope meets with victims, says leaders will be "held accountable"
- Francis has called for "zero tolerance" of sexual abuse by clerics
- The victims were moved by meeting with Francis, spokesman says
But without strong action
to back up those words, such groups are likely to view Francis'
comments as little more than lip service. Vatican officials have so far
been reluctant to take action against bishops accused of concealing
abuse.
In a homily given during a
private Mass with six victims of church sexual abuse, Francis
apologized for the abuse and asked for forgiveness.
"I beg your forgiveness,
too, for the sins of omission on the part of Church leaders who did not
respond adequately to reports of abuse made by family members, as well
as by abuse victims themselves," Francis said in the homily, according
to a text of the statement provided by the Vatican.
U.N. denounces Vatican over child abuse
Advocate: 'Today wasn't just a gesture'
"This led to even greater
suffering on the part of those who were abused and it endangered other
minors who were at risk," he said.
In his homily, Francis
said that "all bishops must carry out their pastoral ministry with the
utmost care in order to help foster the protection of minors, and they
will be held accountable."
Despite the strong words,
a victims advocacy group, the Survivors Network of those Abused by
Priests, or SNAP, said Monday's session failed to advance the cause of
preventing molestation by priests, arguing that "no child on earth is
safer today because of this meeting."
"Let's not mistake this
meeting today for real action," SNAP President Barbara Blaine told CNN.
"The meeting today will not make children safer."
"I think that Pope
Francis has yet to take strong action that will protect children and he
could do that by firing the bishops who have been complicit and who are
transferring predators," she said.
Francis has called for "zero tolerance" of sexual abuse by clerics, and last week a Vatican tribunal defrocked Polish Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski after finding him guilty of sexual abuse of minors.
CNN religion commentator Rev. Edward Beck said that was a sign of change.
"So what people have
been calling for with regards to the hierarchy needing to accept
responsibility and action be taken against them has already begun to
happen," he said.
Blaine rejected the
notion Wesolowski's defrocking was a major shift, saying church
officials had covered up for him in the past and have failed to do
enough to facilitate his prosecution in the Dominican Republic, where at
least some of the abuse was alleged to have occurred.
Monday's meeting between
Francis and the six victims of church sexual abuse was not the first
such meeting between a pontiff and survivors, but it was the first of
Francis' papacy.
It involved three men
and three women from Britain, Ireland and Germany who met privately with
Francis for about 30 minutes in his private residence at Casa Santa
Marca, Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi told reporters.
The abuse survivors also celebrated Mass with Francis.
Lombardi said the victims emerged from the meeting moved by what he described as a "profound spiritual encounter and dialogue."
"If you had seen the
people coming out of the meeting, it would have been totally, absolutely
clear that it was not a publicity stunt," Lombardi said, reacting to a
statement last month by SNAP calling the meeting "self-serving."
"The most important
thing the Pope hopes to come out of this occasion, is that the victims
themselves felt welcomed and listened to," Lombardi said.
In his homily, Francis acknowledged that sexual abuse by priests has had profound consequences on victims.
"Many of those who have
suffered in this way have also sought relief in the path of addiction,"
he said. "Others have experienced difficulties in significant
relationships, with parents, spouses and children. Suffering in families
has been especially grave, since the damage provoked by abuse affects
these vital family relationships."
"Some have even had to
deal with the terrible tragedy of the death of a loved one by suicide,"
Francis told the victims. "The deaths of these so beloved children of
God weigh upon the heart and my conscience and that of the whole
Church."
Francis became Pope in
March 2013. While critics have said he should have met with victims
earlier, Francis has said he believes the Church has been unfairly
attacked.
The Pope asked Cardinal Sean O'Malley, the archbishop of Boston, to help organize the meeting.
O'Malley is a member of a
new commission spearheaded by Francis -- the Commission for the
Protection of Minors -- to advise him on ways to help move forward after
the Church's sex abuse crisis.
One member of the group is a woman who was a sex abuse victim.
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