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Given below is the text of the note
issued on 9 March [2010] by Vatican Radio Director Fr Federico Lombardi,
SJ, concerning cases of the sexual abuse of minors in ecclesiastical
institutions.
"For some months now the very serious
question of the sexual abuse of minors in institutions run by
ecclesiastical bodies and by people with positions of responsibility
within the Church, priests in particular, has been investing the Church
and society in Ireland. The Holy Father recently demonstrated his own
concern, particularly through two meetings: firstly with high-ranking
members of the episcopate, then with all the ordinaries. He is also
preparing the publication of a letter on the subject for the Irish
Church.
"But over recent weeks the debate on the
sexual abuse of minors has also involved the Church in certain central
European countries (Germany, Austria and Holland). And it is on this
development that we wish to make some simple remarks.
"The main ecclesiastical institutions
concerned
—
the German Jesuit Province (the first to be involved, through the case
of the Canisius-Kolleg in Berlin), the German Episcopal Conference, the
Austrian Episcopal Conference and the Netherlands Episcopal Conference
—
have faced the emergence of the problem with timely and decisive action.
They have demonstrated their desire for transparency and, in a certain
sense, accelerated the emergence of the problem by inviting victims to
speak out, even when the cases involved dates from many years ago. By
doing so they have approached the matter 'on the right foot', because
the correct starting point is recognition of what happened and concern
for the victims and the consequences of the acts committed against them.
Moreover, they have re-examined the extant 'Directives' and have planned
new operative guidelines which also aim to identify a prevention
strategy, so that everything possible may be done to ensure that similar
cases are not repeated in the future.
"These events mobilise the Church to
find appropriate responses and should be placed in a more wide-ranging
context that concerns the protection of children and young people from
sexual abuse in society as a whole. Certainly, the errors committed in
ecclesiastical institutions and by Church figures are particularly
reprehensible because of the Church's educational and moral
responsibility, but all objective and well-informed people know that the
question is much broader, and concentrating accusations against the
Church alone gives a false perspective. By way of example, recent data
supplied by the competent authorities in Austria shows that, over the
same period of time, the number of proven cases in Church institutions
was 17, while there were 510 other cases in other areas. It would be as
well to concern ourselves also with them.
"In Germany initiatives are now rightly
being suggested, promoted by the Ministry for the Family, to call a
'round table' of the various educational and social organisations in
order to consider the question from an appropriate and comprehensive
viewpoint. The Church is naturally ready to participate and become
involved and, perhaps, her own painful experience may also be a useful
contribution for others. Chancellor Angela Merkel had justly recognised
the seriousness and constructive approach shown by the German Church.
"In order to complete these remarks, it
is as well to recall once again that the Church exists as part of civil
society and shoulders her own responsibilities in society, but she also
has her own specific code, the 'canonical code', which reflects her
spiritual and sacramental nature and in which, therefore, judicial and
penal procedures are different (for example, they contain no provision
for pecuniary sanctions or for the deprivation of freedom, but for
impediment in the exercise of the ministry and privation of rights in
the ecclesiastical field, etc.). In the ambit of canon law, the crime of
the sexual abuse of minors has always been considered as one of the most
serious of all, and canonical norms have constantly reaffirmed this, in
particular the 2001 Letter De delictis gravioribus,
sometimes improperly cited as the cause of a 'culture of silence'. Those
who know and understand its contents are aware that it was a decisive
signal to remind the episcopate of the seriousness of the problem, as
well as a real incentive to draw up operational guidelines to face it.
"In conclusion, although the seriousness
of the difficulties the Church is going through cannot be denied, we
must not fail to do everything possible in order to ensure that, in the
end, they bring positive results, of better protection for infancy and
youth in the Church and in society, and the purification of the Church
herself".
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