Year For Priests : The Clerical Abuse Scandals – the Future
By
Michael Smith SJ
June, 03, 2010, 10:00 Hrs ( Michael Smith SJ):
The
Holy See has announced that the Apostolic Visitation to the
Archdiocese of Armagh will be overseen by Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor,
who ten years ago commissioned a review of cases of abuse in
the Church in England and Wales. Following Lord Nolan’s
report, the Church has taken measures to prioritise the safety
of children and vulnerable adults. Michael Smith SJ, the Safeguarding
Co-ordinator for the British Jesuits, explains the policies
currently in effect and looks to the further transformation
in the Church in the future.
This article builds on that of Fr Brendan Callaghan SJ, published
by Thinking Faith. Here, I address two further issues: what
is being done in Great Britain to ensure that the situation
changes; and secondly, what still needs to be done to ensure
that the future could not bring a slide back into the situation
as before.
The recent cases which have caused so much anger and distress
have shown that people can be fairly forgiving about a priest
or religious brother or sister who offends by sexually abusing
a child (though they expect him or her to be dealt with effectively),
but reserve a particular anger and condemnation for the bishop
or congregation leader who did not transparently take effective
action when an allegation was made. Most of the cases which
are being dealt with in Great Britain at the moment are ‘past
cases’, in which the abuse occurred a number of years
ago. The figures for 2007 – the last year for which the
figures are broken down by the year in which the abuse is alleged
to have occurred[1] – show that in England and Wales,
out of 53 referrals to safeguarding co-ordinators (note that
a referral is not necessarily a case of actual abuse), ten related
to that year, another eight to the earlier years of this century,
a further 22 to the 70s, 80s and 90s, and the remaining 13 to
the 60s or earlier.
It’s not really surprising that cases that arose all those
years ago should have been mishandled by what might be referred
to as the Catholic Church management. Child sexual abuse only
became a public issue of concern in the United States in the
1970s, and in Great Britain around ten years later, and it was
even later that anyone really understood its psychology and
how it should be dealt with. The watershed in Great Britain
was the passing of the Children Act in 1989. It was then that
awareness grew of the presence of abuse in our caring provision,
and of the many difficulties involved in dealing with it, especially
that the sexual abuse of children is so compulsive that there
is little likelihood of a change of behaviour on the part of
the abuser. Before that awareness grew, church leaders gave
the offenders some good advice, perhaps advised confession and
more prayer, and then sent them to a different parish for a
fresh start. The fresh start certainly happened, but not the
one that was intended. It was when these same people cropped
up again as repeat offenders that anyone realised just how badly
things had gone wrong, and how misguided had been the management
of these previous cases.
Around the year 2000, Cardinal Murphy O’Connor was accused
of having previously mishandled a case in this way. In fact,
there was not much evidence that he had, but he decided to try
to sort things out once and for all. He asked Lord Nolan to
chair a commission with a brief to decide what the Catholic
Church in England and Wales needed to do to deal effectively
with these issues. The Nolan report made a number of recommendations,
including the establishment of a national body to ensure a single
set of policies and good practices throughout England and Wales,
and that the Catholic Church should become a beacon of excellence
in dealing with abuse. Crucially, this national body would be
led by a lay person, managed by a largely lay commission, and
all the commissions which dealt with case referrals in dioceses
and religious orders would consist mainly of lay people drawn
from professions that regularly dealt with cases of abuse. Bishops
and congregation leaders, their deputies, and all members of
the trustees of the dioceses and religious orders, were excluded
from these commissions. It wasn’t just that the trustees
and other leaders had a conflict of interest between preserving
their assets and reputations, as against listening with care
and sensitivity and giving practical help to the victims of
abuse; religious leaders would also be spared the conflict of
being the person entrusted with the pastoral care of their priests
or religious, and of simultaneously being the tough and unbiased
disciplinarian of those same people when they were accused.
The price of this separation of roles was that they would have
to learn to accept the recommendations of their commissions
in the actions needed to deal with accused clergy and religious.
These largely professional commissions also took on the responsibility
of training church workers for their roles and in how to create
safe environments for everyone in all the works the Church does.
And they brought their experience and insight to the task of
trying to do whatever could be done to help victims come to
terms with their distress. And so in every parish and every
other significant work of the Catholic Church in England, Wales
and Scotland there is a link person who knows how to manage
the screening of church workers, how to monitor the implementation
of safe working practices, and how to refer allegations and
concerns to their commission. There are similar systems in some
other parts of the world too. And the system is working well:
cases are dealt with professionally, transparently and quickly;
there are sound safeguarding polices in almost all church works;
and good quality training is continually provided. It’s
not as good as it would be if there were no abuse, but it’s
as good as a human institution is likely to get.
But, in the long term, it’s not yet reliably safe.
It has been said that now that there are successful working
systems throughout the Church, people in church management can
relax. Cases will be properly and transparently dealt with,
good policies will be implemented, and people will stop attacking
us. But what of the badness of heart which made these supposedly
holy and responsible people abuse the smallest and weakest clients?
What of the authorities who didn’t deal with it effectively?
To tackle that, we have to consider the culture which pervades
our Church.
In his previous article on this topic, Brendan Callaghan wrote
a sentence which he realised would make people angry, at least
until they thought about it. This article also has a sentence
with the same potential to make people angry: the Church is
not just the pope, maybe with the bishops, it is not even all
the clergy, but all the people who belong to it; and it’s
every one of the people who belong to the Church who must share
in the responsibility for the culture which made the sexual
and physical abuse, and the subsequent cover-ups, of young or
vulnerable people possible. This is not a cynical attempt to
shift the blame onto the laity; please read on to see why we
are all sharers in that responsibility.
A small review of recent abuse cases within the Catholic Church
threw up a remarkable fact: that in almost all cases of abuse
by clergy and religious, whether sexual or physical abuse, there
were people who must have known what was going on, or possibly
were terribly naïve, or even colluded in the abuse. Here
is an example of this, basically true but very much modified
to keep people’s private lives private. A priest ran an
altar servers group, and once a week they would have a meeting.
Some of the more distant children were picked up by the priest
in his car. In one case he would drive up to the house, and
the mother of the eight-year old altar server would put his
coat on him and make him go off with the priest. The young boy
hated this. He was clearly desperately afraid, so much so that
one day he wet himself in his terror. His mother took him upstairs,
changed his clothes and sent him off with the priest, who took
him to the park as usual, sexually abused him as usual, took
him on to the altar servers’ meeting, and then afterwards
brought him back. The key question here is: what did the child’s
mother think was going on? Could she not understand and interpret
her own child’s terror?
Whenever questions like this are asked, the answer given is
along the lines of: it is because of how priests were looked
up to, and that no-one would question what a priest thought
should be done. The status of a priest was so high that what
he said was law, and he was always right. This exaggerated status
of the priest was of course given to him by the laity, but they
would say that the priest and other hierarchy demanded it. That
is certainly true. It is equally true that while that culture
persists in the Catholic Church, the problems of abuse by clergy
and religious sisters and brothers will not be solved. And that
is why people are so angry when church workers abuse children
and vulnerable people – they were entrusted with status,
authority and power, but they used them to have their way with
vulnerable people, and to prevent discovery of their misdeeds.
Every member of the Church has a responsibility for the culture
of the Church, but the problem is that we leave it to one small
section to establish it. Think of the way that in England, for
example, cabinet members are held responsible when some poor
child is abused when more adequate social services could have
intervened, and compare that with the silence and secrecy that
have hitherto characterised the response within the Catholic
Church to abuse by clergy and religious. Those three seducers
– status, authority and power – have supplanted
the humble service of authority called for by Jesus Christ.
A little gospel meditation on the criticisms made by Jesus Christ
of the religious authorities of his time will show how many
of them could be made of the religious authorities of our Church
and in our day.
We need to change this culture where it exists in our Catholic
Church. Such a shift of culture, if the majority of the members
of the Church insist on it, would transform the Church’s
way of working, and introduce to the Church authorities a sense
of accountability for the Church they have created.
The new systems introduced since Lord Nolan’s report have
been very effective in the parts of the international Church
where they are applied, and some other parts of the Church have
different and equally effective systems. Such policies counteract,
to some extent at least, the tendency of the Church to disown
the abuse or the abusers, and recognise the duty of the Church
to try to help those who have been abused. They also counterbalance
the right and proper attitude of religious authorities who have
to care for and defend the priests and religious entrusted to
them. But precisely because the safeguarding commissions, or
their equivalent, are separate from the management of the Church,
whether the hierarchy or the trustees of dioceses and religious
congregations, there is a danger that we will think that the
problem is sorted and someone is dealing with it. There are
few signs at the moment that the fundamental shift in culture,
which is needed within the Church if future generations of vulnerable
people are to be safe, is actually occurring.
People who deal with these cases notice that the real anger
is not with the priests and religious who abuse; they are human
and do not leave their human and sinful tendencies behind when
they join. The real anger is reserved for the leaders of dioceses
and congregations who did not deal effectively with cases that
came to their attention. Once again we are led to challenge
the culture from which they operated.
All of us who are members of the Catholic Church have to take
on our responsibility to establish the culture in the Church
which Jesus Christ taught us. If we can do that, the Church
will have moved forward in its accountability to all its members.
If we don’t then all of these problems will still be with
us in twenty years’ time.
(Fr Michael Smith SJ is the Safeguarding Co-ordinator for
the British Province of the Society of Jesus.)
[1] Cf. www.csas.uk.net – Documents; subsequent annual
reports are prepared by the National Catholic Safeguarding Commission,
and are at
www.catholicsafeguarding.org.uk/documents.htm
http://www.thinkingfaith.org