¶ … hurt your children; I love your children.' So thundered Fr. Percival D'Silva, trembling, in his sermon at the Blessed Sacrament Church in Chevy Chase, MD," wrote Maureen Dowd in her weekly column in the New York Times (Dowd, 2002). Fr. Percival has been one of the few to speak out against the defensive attitude of the Catholic Church -- one of obfuscation, dishonesty and callousness to the victims. Fr. Percival called for Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston, co-indicted in several child abuse cases, to resign.
The Catholic Church has been rocked recently by allegations of sexual abuses -- especially against children. The problem is not isolated but all pervading. The cases of child, sexual abuses are about the same percentage as the general population. Most of the cases are not, in the strictest sense pedophilic -- sex with pre-pubescent children, but ephebophilia -- abuse of adolescent children. In a comprehensive study of 2,252 priests for 30 years, only one case of pedophilia was found. It involved a priest with two-six-year-old nieces. Between 5 and 10% of priests were pederasts (ephebophiles). (Jenkins, 1996)
The first nationalized case of child sexual abuse by a priest was in Lafayette, LA; Gilbert Gauthe accused of abusing 37 boys. Gauthe was sentenced to 27 years imprisonment. The biggest case so far has been one of John Geoghan who abused over 130 children between 1962 and 1995. Most recently, 54-year-old Russell Dillard was suspended over allegations of molesting two teenage girls 18 years ago. Older minors have also been abused: In Florida, the bishop of Palm Beach, Anthony O'Connell, was accused of sexually molesting a seminarian who approached O'Connell to complain about abuse by two older seminarians. Bishop Keith Symons of Missouri admitting to molesting five boys earlier in his career. And 165 cases were brought against priests in New Mexico. Under pressure, Cardinal Law turned over the names of 40 priests against whom allegations were brought up. (Cannon & Sheler, 2002)
Cardinal Law and Cardinal Egan -- former Bishop of Bridgeport, CT and now Archbishop of New York -- have also been named in lawsuits. Though no direct allegations have been brought up against these two, they have been held responsible for not holding the priests involved responsible -- Sin of Omission. The response of the Catholic Church has been typically one of ignoring the problem at its root. The natural response was to transfer the priest to another parish where the abuse would continue. The Church would, behind closed doors, admonish the priest. The tragedy of the situation is that no priest was held accountable until the Catholic Church was taken to task recently, under the weight of so many cases coming to light.
So why should the Church comply with the law? Because the sexual abuse, in any way, shape or form, whether perpetrated against a pre-pubescent, teenager or adult is a crime. Non-clergy has been sentenced to several years' imprisonment. Even after their release, pedophilia is the only crime that follows criminals throughout their lives -- Megan's Law (Megan's Law Online, 1996)
From the perspective of the victim: the immediate and long-term suffering of the victim does not change or become alleviated because the perpetrator is a priest. In Biddeford, ME, Michael Doucette abused David Gagnon for three years starting when David was 15. David, now 37, has been in therapy. He has tremendous difficulty with intimacy. David's complain to the diocese was a check for $10,000 and a legal release. (Cannon & Sheler, 2002)
Also, there is ample proof that individuals abused at a younger age become abusers themselves.
In criminal hierarchy (if there is such a thing), pedophilia and pederasty are considered as the lowest of the low crimes.
The victims are defenseless and the consequences are far reaching. Priests who abuse are criminals and should not be exempt from accountability and the consequences of their actions. Wearing the cloth does not in anyway diminish the intensity or the pain caused. On other hand, the suffering might be worse; children are brought up to trust priests, see them as beacons of goodness and human manifestations of Christ.
The frustration Catholics and the general public feel in this matter is exacerbated by the attitude of the Catholic Church -- one of almost irrational defensiveness.
A few priests in their sermons describe the behavior of their brethren as "reprehensible," but never go ahead and call it criminal. In the recent U. S & News Report, Angie Cannon and Jeffrey Sheler have written a comprehensive...
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