The Vatican has always dragged their feet when it comes to sexual abuse within the church. In this case 30 years.
Vatican launches inquiry into 'abusive' religious order
The Vatican has launched an investigation into the Legionaries of
Christ, a religious order whose secretive founder stands accused of
sexually abusing numerous children over decades.
While the Vatican has been rocked by numerous sex-abuse scandals in
recent decades, through it all one religious order seemed immune to
scrutiny: The Legionaries of Christ, also known as the Legion of
Christ, a conservative group with some 800 priests, 2,500 seminarians,
and a following of 70,000 across 21 countries, including the United
States.
The Pope has convened an "apostolic visitation," or council of
bishops, to investigate the group's nearly 70-year-long history, its
controversial founder Maciel Degollado, and the accusations of sexual
assault and financial mismanagement now swirling around the recently
deceased religious leader.
And the investigation may have to grapple with an uncomfortable
question: If the entire religious order was based on lies and
deception, should it be disbanded?
In an article at GlobalPost, reporter Jason Berry states:
The issue facing Benedict has no precedent in modern
church history: whether to dismantle a movement with a $650 million
budget yet only about 700 priests and 2,500 seminarians, or to keep the
brand name and try to reform an organization still run as a cult of
personality to its founder. Excessive materialism and psychological
coercion tactics continue Maciel’s legacy.
Founded in 1941 by Maciel Degollado -- a Mexican national who at the
time was so young he hadn't even been ordained as a priest -- the
Legionaries of Christ developed a large following and unquestioning
support from numerous popes over the years.
For decades, the Legion shunned the media while Maciel
cultivated relationships with some of the most powerful, conservative
Catholics in the world. He also forced his priests and seminarians to
take vows never to criticize him, or any superior. The legion built a
network of prep schools and an astonishing database of donors. ...
Behind the silence he imposed, Maciel was corrupt — abusing seminarians
and using money in ways that several past and present seminarians liken
to bribery, in forging ties with church officials.
The silence Maciel imposed on his followers allowed Maciel to pursue a double life.
Maciel, who was born into a wealthy ranching family in Mexico, wooed
cardinals and bishops with money, fine wines, $1,000 hams and even a
new car — and in so doing secured support for his religious order
inside the Roman Curia.
in the 1990s, as sex abuse scandals linked to the Catholic church
came to light, victims of Degollado's sexual abuse began to come
forward. Though the Vatican first recognized the claims in 1998, it
wasn't until 2004 that Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, then Pope John Paul
II's right-hand man, launched the first inquiry into Degollado's
actions.
Starting in 2004, at least 30 witnesses testified to
Msgr. Charles Scicluna, the C.D.F. investigator, that Maciel abused
them as youths. But the 2006 Vatican order punishing Maciel failed to
specify what exactly he had done, nor did it acknowledge the victims.
Last week, the UK's Independent ran a profile
of the Legionaries of Christ, in which the paper described Degollado as
a "narcissistic sociopath" whose religious schools "brainwashed"
children into submission.
Parents of youngsters recruited as Legionaries described
it as a cult that targeted the young and naive in particular, some of
them just 13, and then "brainwashed" them. But it is Maciel himself who
has proved most controversial. Nuestro Padre was, according to one
biographer, "a narcissistic sociopath" with a taste for flights on
Concorde and five-star hotels. He is acknowledged by the Legion to have
fathered at least one child – a 23-year-old daughter said to be called
Norma Hilda and now living in Madrid.
...
Much has been made of the power wielded by the secretive Opus Dei
under John Paul II, not least by Dan Brown in The Da Vinci Code, but
many Vatican-watchers believe that the Legion of Christ was bigger,
richer (annual budget £435m), more influential, and even more sinister.
In Maciel's case, it took 30 years – until 2006, after John Paul's
death – for the new pope, Benedict XVI, finally to issue a public
rebuke, and then it was simply an order that he should see out his days
in private prayer rather than face a court. The long delay is evidence,
some have suggested, that the Vatican still does not take the issue of
paedophile priests sufficiently seriously.
As the investigation into the Legionaries of Christ gets underway,
it appears for now that things are still business as usual for the
religious order. Last week, the Southern Catholic College in Atlanta announced it is partnering with the Legion of Christ, adding to the legion's already impressive roster of 176 schools across the world.
Source: http://rawstory.com/blog/2009/07/religious-order-faces-possible-extinction/
Be the first to rate this post
- Currently 0/5 Stars.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5