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Covering the Catholic sex abuse cover-up
Radio Netherlands Worldwide ^ | 16 December 2011 | Robert Chesal

Posted on 12/16/2011 7:08:45 AM PST by Alex Murphy

Roman Catholic bishops in the Netherlands protected sexual abusers and covered up their crimes, according to a major new report released today. The church-installed Deetman Commission says there were up to 20,000 victims of abuse between the end of World War II and 1981.

Radio Netherlands Worldwide journalist Robert Chesal brought to light the abuse that led to a national scandal. He looks back at how the story unfolded.

You could say that 2010 was the year when the Roman Catholic sex abuse scandal went viral. Until February of that year, abuse of youngsters by Catholic clergy was primarily seen as a problem in Ireland and the United States.

German scandal
But that month, as northern Europe lay buried in snow, a simmering problem began to reach boiling point. Reports from a Catholic boarding school run by Jesuits in the German capital Berlin spoke first of a few, then of a dozen, and then of over a hundred victims of abuse by priests.

One of those reports reached me at the RNW newsroom in mid-February. That same day I read that Pope Benedict XVI had ordered the entire Irish bishops' conference to appear at the Vatican, where they would receive a dressing down for failing to tackle abuse in their dioceses. I decided to investigate what, if anything, had happened in the Netherlands.

Salesians
On the internet I quickly found a testimony by a man named Janne Geraets, now in his late 50s, who claimed to have been abused at a boarding school in the early 1960s. I arranged to meet him the following day and heard his story of the painful and deeply damaging abuse he suffered at the hands of a Salesian father.

As I walked to the bus stop after that interview, my head still filled with the disturbing images Geraets had described, I started thinking about where to look next.

Disturbing signs
I discovered that there were some worrying trends in the Netherlands which were as yet unreported in the mainstream media. For instance, a prominent Dutch jurist told me why he had stepped down as chairman of the assessment board of the Roman Catholic abuse hotline.

In fact, he said, the entire board had resigned because their recommendations on how to deal with known abusers in the church were repeatedly being ignored by the Dutch bishops.

I was confronted with another ominous sign when I rang up the Protestant counterpart to the Catholic hotline and was told that all cooperation between the Protestant and Catholic centres for abuse notification had ceased years earlier.

The representative I spoke to suspected the reason the partnership had broken down was that the Catholic side “had something to hide”. Another hotline employee lamented the fact that the Catholics showed no interest in a new protocol established by the Protestant abuse notification centre which the Protestants were more than willing to share.

Hotbed of abuse

Spurred on by Janne Geraets' insistence that he was just one of many children abused at his school, I enlisted the help of experienced investigative journalist Joep Dohmen at the NRC Handelsblad newspaper. Together, Dohmen and I pieced together a story that revealed the abuse of three minors by Salesians from the same boarding school.

We also brought to light the fact that one of the most respected bishops in the Netherlands, monsignor Ad van Luyn, had taught at that same school, in close proximity to what later appeared to be a hotbed of sexual abuse.

Our first publication on 26 February 2010, sparked an avalanche of abuse reports from former boarding school pupils throughout the Netherlands. The Catholic hotline was completely unable to handle the workload and within weeks the first steps were taken to create a commission of inquiry led by former government minister Wim Deetman.

Pope angers Europe
Meanwhile, it was rapidly becoming clear that the Catholic Church had a scandal of epidemic proportions on its hands in Europe. From Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and Austria, shocking testimonies of abuse and allegations of church cover-ups were making headlines.

There was an angry reaction when Pope Benedict apologised to churchgoers in Ireland for decades of abuse that went unpunished. Why, the Germans and Dutch asked, should we be treated any differently from Irish victims?

The Vatican never gave a satisfactory answer to that question. On the contrary. A cardinal close to the pope called the scandal “petty gossip” and even some bishops who acknowledged wide-scale abuse blamed it on the freemasons, on homosexuality and on the loosening of society's sexual morals following the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s (a particularly odd fallacy, since so many cases of abuse stem from the 1950s and earlier).

On Good Friday, Pope Benedict's own preacher compared the incrimination of priests in the sex abuse scandal to past examples of persecution of Europe's Jews. Public relations are not exactly a strong point in Rome.

Simonis gaffe
The church in the Netherlands hardly made a better impression. The top Catholic figure here, Cardinal Simonis, left mouths agape when he denied that Dutch church leaders were aware of the wide-scale abuse by priests in their midst.

He chose a historically loaded phrase the Dutch normally use to mock feigned German ignorance of the Nazi concentration camps, saying “Wir haben es nicht gewusst”.

But Simonis' words sounded decidedly hollow when we reported, months later, that he had helped move a pedophile priest from one parish to another, allowing abuse of minors to continue.

Long-term damage
Incidents like these are among the many disconcerting facts that the Deetman Commission had to grapple with in its inquiry. Of the estimated 10,000 to 20,000 victims in institutional care between 1945 and the early 1980s, approximately half were repeatedly subjected to sexual abuse for longer than a year, the commission says.

Personal accounts reveal that the physical and psychological damage caused by such extended periods of victimisation is immense and long-lasting.

The commission singled out Roman Catholic boarding schools, orphanages, seminaries and other institutions, reporting that children there ran a greater risk of being abused. The inquiry blasted the institutions' failure to monitor the well-being of minors in their care.

In a first reaction to the 1,200-page Deetman report, Bishop Gerard de Korte said the church leadership had made wrong choices by protecting abusive priests and putting the reputation of the church before the well-being of victims. It's unlikely to be the last word we hear from the bishops on that sensitive point.

Justice a step closer
Along with many other journalists, I crowded into a meeting room in the Dutch political capital The Hague this morning for the official presentation of the report. Afterwards, colleagues asked me if this was a crowning moment in my career. I had to think about that. And my answer was no. Because I did not become a journalist to hold the Roman Catholic Church accountable for sexual abuse.

I did, however, become a journalist out of some kind of desire for justice and truth. And in that sense, I would have to conclude that with the Deetman Commission report, we've gotten one step closer to that goal.


TOPICS: Catholic; Ministry/Outreach; Moral Issues; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: catholic
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I discovered that there were some worrying trends in the Netherlands which were as yet unreported in the mainstream media. For instance, a prominent Dutch jurist told me why he had stepped down as chairman of the assessment board of the Roman Catholic abuse hotline. In fact, he said, the entire board had resigned because their recommendations on how to deal with known abusers in the church were repeatedly being ignored by the Dutch bishops.

I was confronted with another ominous sign when I rang up the Protestant counterpart to the Catholic hotline and was told that all cooperation between the Protestant and Catholic centres for abuse notification had ceased years earlier. The representative I spoke to suspected the reason the partnership had broken down was that the Catholic side “had something to hide”. Another hotline employee lamented the fact that the Catholics showed no interest in a new protocol established by the Protestant abuse notification centre which the Protestants were more than willing to share....

....There was an angry reaction when Pope Benedict apologised to churchgoers in Ireland for decades of abuse that went unpunished. Why, the Germans and Dutch asked, should we be treated any differently from Irish victims? The Vatican never gave a satisfactory answer to that question. On the contrary. A cardinal close to the pope called the scandal “petty gossip” and even some bishops who acknowledged wide-scale abuse blamed it on the freemasons, on homosexuality and on the loosening of society's sexual morals following the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s (a particularly odd fallacy, since so many cases of abuse stem from the 1950s and earlier). On Good Friday, Pope Benedict's own preacher compared the incrimination of priests in the sex abuse scandal to past examples of persecution of Europe's Jews. Public relations are not exactly a strong point in Rome....

....The church in the Netherlands hardly made a better impression. The top Catholic figure here, Cardinal Simonis, left mouths agape when he denied that Dutch church leaders were aware of the wide-scale abuse by priests in their midst. He chose a historically loaded phrase the Dutch normally use to mock feigned German ignorance of the Nazi concentration camps, saying “Wir haben es nicht gewusst” [trans. "We have not known it"]. But Simonis' words sounded decidedly hollow when we reported, months later, that he had helped move a pedophile priest from one parish to another, allowing abuse of minors to continue....

....Incidents like these are among the many disconcerting facts that the Deetman Commission had to grapple with in its inquiry. Of the estimated 10,000 to 20,000 victims in institutional care between 1945 and the early 1980s, approximately half were repeatedly subjected to sexual abuse for longer than a year, the commission says....The commission singled out Roman Catholic boarding schools, orphanages, seminaries and other institutions, reporting that children there ran a greater risk of being abused. The inquiry blasted the institutions' failure to monitor the well-being of minors in their care....

1 posted on 12/16/2011 7:08:47 AM PST by Alex Murphy
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To: Alex Murphy

There actually is psychotherapeutic treatment for these kinds of obsessions wherein the mind is totally absorbed with the sins of the Catholic Church.

However, once the treatment is completed, the individual is able to get on with their own lives and live productively.


2 posted on 12/16/2011 7:26:11 AM PST by veritas2002
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To: veritas2002

Is this the same psycho-therapeutic treatment that the Bishop’s used when they sent pedophiles back into the church to work with children?

Let’s play, “Where in the world is Cardinal Law?”

He’s at the Vatican!

I win!


3 posted on 12/16/2011 7:38:30 AM PST by TSgt (Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself.)
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

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To: Alex Murphy; TSgt
The elephant in the living room which nobody wants to discuss..........from the BBC's article on the same subject:

Institutional Dutch Catholic abuse 'affected thousands'

"It also conducted a broader survey of more than 34,000 people, to gain a more comprehensive picture of the scale and nature of abuse suffered by Dutch minors."

SNIP

"The report also estimates that one in 10 Dutch children have suffered some form of abuse, rising to one in five among those who had attended an institution - regardless of whether it was Catholic.

"Sexual abuse of minors is widespread in Dutch society," the commission reportedly said.

As for the Catholic Church in Holland, I've been waiting for this since 2002 when the US scandals first broke. Holland has been at the forefront of every sort of moral and theological aberration over the past 5 decades, whether it be drug use, homosexuality or promuiscuity. As far as religion goes, the Catholic Church in Holland has been a disaster. It has fallen over itself to embrace every modern fad. I've been amazed that the sex abuse issue has not reared its head earlier, given the overall cultural and religious decay in Holland. The only thing surprising about this news is that it took so long to come out.

Maybe they saved the worst for last.

7 posted on 12/16/2011 9:02:15 AM PST by marshmallow (.)
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To: Alex Murphy

The Dutch Bishops have long been a problem. This has been acknowledged by orthodox Catholics.

It is interesting that the places where Bishops are most tolerant of heresy in matters of doctrine and practice are some of the worst when it comes to sexual crimes and their coverups.


8 posted on 12/16/2011 9:12:37 AM PST by lastchance ("Nisi credideritis, non intelligetis" St. Augustine)
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To: TSgt

still in need of more treatment i am afraid


9 posted on 12/16/2011 9:13:30 AM PST by veritas2002
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To: Alex Murphy

Remember too that the Dutch have long been tolerant of pedophilia.

Any sexual abuse is a grave sin. Keep in mind though that what constitutes sexual abuse can be far ranging especially when it involves minors. It can be anything from showing pornographic literature to someone to forcible rape.

All of this should be treated with the severity it deserves as any attempt to corrupt and/or harm the innocent is a sin against God and a rightly considered a crime. But it does help to know what is what so that an honest picture of the problem can emerge.


10 posted on 12/16/2011 9:18:59 AM PST by lastchance ("Nisi credideritis, non intelligetis" St. Augustine)
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To: Alex Murphy; lastchance
oh, another one of the joke articles you publish! like TV Evangelists Unite to Beam Gospel to the Stars all are funny as they lack utterly in truth. Thanks for giving all a laugh daily!
11 posted on 12/16/2011 9:19:59 AM PST by Cronos (Nuke Mecca and Medina now..)
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To: Cronos

Did you also hit the abuse button?

This is not personal, my FRiend. I completely agree with your postings and just didn’t want you to miss one.


12 posted on 12/16/2011 9:25:12 AM PST by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88

you and abusing the Forum? nooooooooooo /sarc


13 posted on 12/16/2011 9:41:16 AM PST by Cronos (Nuke Mecca and Medina now..)
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To: Cronos

Is the article a made up story? If so, who made it up?


14 posted on 12/16/2011 9:42:26 AM PST by count-your-change (You don't have to be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: count-your-change
Is the article a made up story? If so, who made it up?

Worse yet, who finds it something to laugh at?

15 posted on 12/16/2011 9:45:06 AM PST by Alex Murphy (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2703506/posts?page=518#518)
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To: lastchance

An interesting question too then is why the Catholic church has been so tolerant of the Dutch bishops.


16 posted on 12/16/2011 9:52:08 AM PST by count-your-change (You don't have to be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: Cronos

Abuse is what we have been reading about, my FRiend. The vile pastors and priests who have become drunk on the destruction of these young lives. And, the filthy, pathetic organizations (like Rome and other Protestant headquarters) that have been too polite to call out this demonic evil. I’m with you on your implications...all these groups are bound for darkness.


17 posted on 12/16/2011 9:52:25 AM PST by Dutchboy88
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To: Alex Murphy

All groups cover up the crimes etc of members of their group

It is human nature

Catholic Church is no different than coworkers covering up for drunks , cops covering up for corrupt cops etc etc etc


18 posted on 12/16/2011 9:59:29 AM PST by uncbob
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To: Alex Murphy

The account of a seven year old boy being sodomized is no joke. And the the effect on the child is no fictional story.


19 posted on 12/16/2011 10:13:09 AM PST by count-your-change (You don't have to be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: count-your-change

I agree.


20 posted on 12/16/2011 10:27:53 AM PST by lastchance ("Nisi credideritis, non intelligetis" St. Augustine)
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