Tag Archives: Benedict

A family with no mother

Whatever your feelings about Maureen Dowd, there’s no denying that she’s now number one with a bullet when it comes to commentary on the Catholic church, its despicable Pope, and its love affair with pedophilia.

From today’s New York Times:

To circumscribe women, Saudi Arabia took Islam’s moral codes and orthodoxy to extremes not outlined by Muhammad; the Catholic Church took its moral codes and orthodoxy to extremes not outlined by Jesus. In the New Testament, Jesus is surrounded by strong women and never advocates that any woman — whether she’s his mother or a prostitute — be treated as a second-class citizen.

Negating women is at the heart of the church’s hideous — and criminal — indifference to the welfare of boys and girls in its priests’ care. Lisa Miller writes in Newsweek’s cover story about the danger of continuing to marginalize women in a disgraced church that has Mary at the center of its founding story:

“In the Roman Catholic corporation, the senior executives live and work, as they have for a thousand years, eschewing not just marriage, but intimacy with women … not to mention any chance to familiarize themselves with the earthy, primal messiness of families and children.” No wonder that, having closed themselves off from women and everything maternal, they treated children as collateral damage, a necessary sacrifice to save face for Mother Church.

As the A.P. reported [on Friday], the Oakland diocese recommended defrocking Father Stephen Kiesle in 1981. The priest had pleaded no contest and was sentenced to three years’ probation in 1978 in a case in which he was accused of tying up and molesting two boys in a church rectory.

In 1982, the Oakland diocese got what it termed a “rather curt” response from the Vatican. It wasn’t until 1985 that “God’s Rottweiler” finally got around to addressing the California bishop’s concern. He sent his letter urging the diocese to give the 38-year-old pedophile “as much paternal care as possible” and to consider “his young age.” Ratzinger should have been more alarmed by the young age of the priest’s victims; that’s what maternal care would have entailed.

While the Vatican sat on the case — asking the diocese to resubmit the files, saying they might have been lost — Kiesle volunteered as a youth minister at a church north of Oakland. The A.P. also reported that even after the priest was finally defrocked in 1987, he continued to volunteer with children in the Oakland diocese; repeated warnings to church officials were ignored.

The Vatican must realize that the church’s belligerent, resentful and paranoid response to the global scandal is not working because it now says it will cooperate with secular justice systems and that the pope will have more meetings with victims. It is too little, too late.

The church that through the ages taught me and other children right from wrong did not know right from wrong when it came to children. Crimes were swept under the rectory rug, and molesters were protected to molest again for the “good of the universal church.” And that is bad, very bad — a mortal sin.

Criminals

The ever-forthright Matt Taibbi weighs in on the critical-mass collapse going on in the Catholic church right now.

He makes two very good points: celibacy is a profoundly cruel practice which leads directly to sexual abuse, and any group that condones the latter to protect the former is a criminal organization, and should be prosecuted as such.

But I think it’s time we started considering that what the church is is even worse than that. It’s possible we should start wondering if the church is also a criminal organization that in this country, anyway, should be broken up using RICO statutes.

One of the few areas where I agreed with George Bush was in the notion that a country providing safe haven to terrorists should itself be treated as a terrorist organization. Morally this isn’t a difficult one to figure out; a country that keeps house for a bin Laden and doesn’t assist other countries in trying to catch him is a rogue state, one that should be booted out of the community of nations.

We don’t permit countries that harbor terrorists to participate in international society, but the Catholic Church — an organization that has been proven over and over again to systematically enable child molesters, right up now to the level of the Pope — is given a free pass. In fact the Church is not only not sanctioned in any serious way, it gets to retain its outrageous tax-exempt status, which makes its systematic child abuse, in this country at least, a government-subsidized activity.

Somewhere underneath all of this there is a root story that has to do with celibacy. The celibate status of its priests is basically the Catholic church’s last market advantage in the Christian religion racket, but human beings are not designed to be celibate and so problems naturally arise among the population of priests forced to live that terrible lifestyle. Just as it refuses to change its insane and criminal stance on birth control and condoms, the church refuses to change its horrifically cruel policy about priestly celibacy. That’s because it quite correctly perceives that should it begin to dispense with the irrational precepts of its belief system, it would lose its appeal as an ancient purveyor of magical-mystery bullshit and become just a bigger, better-financed, and infinitely more depressing version of a Tony Robbins self-help program.

Therefore it must cling to its miserable celibacy in order to keep its sordid business scheme going; and if clinging to its miserable celibacy means having to look the other way while children are serially molested by its sexually stunted and tortured employees, well, so be it.

Infallible

Pope Ratzinger is finished.

In a universe filled with one hundred billion galaxies, in a galaxy which contains one hundred billion stars, a people that judges itself unique among the heavens exhibits not so much arrogance as it does willful ignorance. But down here on Earth, close-up as it were, it’s easy to mistake the two. Easier still when you consider a figure like Ratzinger, figurehead of a religion which has proclaimed him infallible. Despite ponderous evidence to the contrary, religions of all stripes accept as a given that their beliefs comprise a unique universal truth. The Catholic Church, whose cosmology depends upon the proposition that its Pope is incapable of error when addressing issues of faith or morality, provides what may be the best rebuke to that claim.

In 1979, a preist under Ratzinger’s supervision in Munich admitted raping several young boys. Rather than report him to the police, Ratzinger sent him for psychiatric evaluation. Unsurprisingly, the psychiatrist warned that he should not be allowed to work with children. Immediately thereafter, Ratzinger’s deputy returned the man to service in the church, with Ratzinger’s explicit knowledge. The man then went on to continue raping young boys for years to come. He was allowed to continue working in the church until last week – 33 years after the initial offense.

This week we’ve learned that in 1996, then-Cardinal Ratzinger was informed by letter that a priest in Milwaukee had raped as many as 200 boys in his care. His response? Silence. The man was allowed to continue as a priest, working with – and raping – children until his death in 1998. The church – under Pope Ratzinger, fought to keep the letter secret. It was only made public as a result of a lawsuit filed by five of the boys – now adults – who were raped by the priest.

To view these cases as exceptions to the rule – a few bad apples as it were – is to ignore the overwhelming preponderance of the evidence. During the past decade alone, over 3,000 priests have been submitted to the Vatican for accusations of rape – presumably a fraction of a larger number who actually committed the offense. Of these, only about 300 lost their positions as priests. Last Fall, in an almost Freudian slip of statistical ignorance, the Vatican’s UN representative, Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, tried to minimize the incidence of child rape within the Catholic clergy by claiming that “‘available research’ showed that only 1.5%-5% of Catholic clergy were involved in child sex abuse.” Had he bothered to do the math, he would have realized that he was implicating between 6,000 and 20,000 priests as child rapists.

The church’s self-imposed tradition of defending its reputation before caring for its parishioners – arguably the original sin that allowed the disease of pedophilia to metastasize within its ranks over the years – made their response to this week’s revelations inevitable. Lashing out in the daily Osservatore Romano, the Vatican condemned anyone who might mistake their endemic secrecy for something other than “transparency”:

Transparency, firmness and severity in shedding light on the many cases of sexual abuse committed by priests and clergy: these are the criteria that Benedict XVI has indicated with constancy and serenity to the whole Church. A way of operating — coherent with his personal history and more than two-decade activities as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith — that is evidently feared by those who don’t want the truth affirmed and those who would prefer to be able to instrumentalize, without any foundation in fact, horrible episodes and sorrowful events uncovered in some cases from decades ago.

How could Ratzinger be at fault? This all happened so long ago. 1996 is fourteen long years behind us.

But how could the Catholic church claim otherwise? They’ve declared as a first principle that Ratzinger is infallible. If that is true, how could his actions have been wrong?

You could be forgiven for mistaking willful ignorance for arrogance.