2012-06-14 15:57:34

Papal representative meets Ireland’s abuse victims, asks forgiveness


(June 14, 2012) The Pope’s personal representative to the weeklong International Eucharistic Congress taking place in Dublin, Ireland, visited the nation’s traditional penitential pilgrimage site on Tuesday to seek God’s forgiveness for priests who sexually abused children in Ireland and other parts of the world and prayed for healing for abuse victims. “We have learned over the last decades how much harm and despair such abuse has caused to thousands of victims,” Cardinal Marc Ouellet said on Tuesday in his homily during Mass at St. Patrick’s Basilica at Lough Derg in County Donegal. “In the name of the Church, I apologize once again to the victims, some of whom I have met here in Lough Derg,” said the Canadian cardinal who is Prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops. “I come here with the specific intention of seeking forgiveness, from God and from the victims, for the grave sin of sexual abuse of children by clerics,” said Cardinal Ouellet during the visit as part of the 50th International Eucharistic Congress in Dublin, which is running from June 10-17. He said the Church “learned too late” that some of her leaders responded to the crimes of abuse in a way that was “often inadequate” in stopping the crimes.
Before Mass, Cardinal Ouellet held a two-hour meeting with survivors of institutional and clerical abuse from different parts of Ireland. He listened to each survivor discuss his or her abuse experience and its effects on their lives. He said he was deeply moved by the meeting and would report on it to the Pope. “The tragedy of the sexual abuse of minors perpetrated by Christians, especially when done so by members of the clergy, is a source of great shame and enormous scandal,” the cardinal said in his homily. “It is a sin against which Jesus himself lashed out.” He drew on Pope Benedict’s March 2010 pastoral letter to the Catholics of Ireland, which discussed the difficulties abuse victims have in forgiving. The Pope expressed the “shame and remorse” of the Church and asked victims not to lose hope. Cardinal Ouellet reaffirmed the Catholic Church’s commitment to creating a “safe environment” for children.







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