www.dublindiocese.ie
www.cps.dubindiocese.ie

 

Home 
About Us 
Child Protection Guidelines 
Complaints Process 
Support Service 
State Inquiry 
In The News 
Press Releases 
Training and Development 
Best Practice 
FAQs 
Links 
Contact Us




Advanced Search

Subscribe to the Child Protection Service newsletter.
E-mail
Name
Subscribe
Unsubscribe

 
In The News


Archbishop 'violently angry' at child abuse
By Nicola Tallant (Sunday Independent)
Oct 1, 2006, 00:00

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

This section is reprinted from the Sunday Independent, October 1, 2006. Author is Nicola Tallant. View original link at http://www.unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ca=9&si=1698227&issue_id=14715


 

The Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has described how he felt "violently angry" on hearing stories of priests abusing children.

 

The former Vatican observer who took over the job in the capital in 2003 says his strict new child protection guidelines for priests are the only way to attempt to regain the trust of parents and bring people back to the church.

 

Archbishop Martin says he is aware he has angered some priests who say the measures are "over-strict" and often result in clergy being stood aside from ministry when they are innocent.

 

"The credibility of the Church has suffered. If I talk to parents about child sex abuse, they are horrified to imagine their own child at risk," he says.

 

"It is now a question of regaining confidence - and you have to earn it. I try to do that by having norms in place to deal with any future allegations. There have been priests taken out of ministry who are innocent. They can be very angry with me and have a right to be angry with me," he said.

 

"I do believe that anyone in any caring profession against whom a reasonable accusation emerges should stand aside until that is fully investigated. That is because of the need to protect the most vulnerable, who are children, in this very painful process."

 

But he admitted: "Sometimes those who are innocent go through horrendous suffering and the assessments are extremely invasive."

 

In an interview to be screened in a new One to One series on RTE television today, the Archbishop admits he didn't want the job back in Dublin when he was appointed three years ago to sort out the clerical abuse mess.

 

"I had been away for a long time. I didn't think I was the person to deal with it - and not just the clerical and sex abuse questions.

 

But Archbishop Martin says when he did begin the job he made it his business to trawl through the abuse files from the early to mid-Forties to the mid-Eighties, to see if any areas of abuse had not been discovered.

 

He says the details of the abuse left him furious and having to remind himself that the abusers "are people too".

 

"When you listened to some of the stories, you couldn't but be violently angry. At one stage I went out to a school and asked to see eight-year-olds. I had just seen someone who was raped when they were eight and it was a terrible thing. I was so furious - you couldn't but be.

 

"It has changed me and it makes me see this question in a very different way."

 

Some 102 priests in the Dublin diocese have had accusations made against them involving between 350 and 390 victims since 1940. He insists that the only way forward for the Church is to follow the Our Children Our Church document on child protection.

 

Taken from an interview with Áine Lawlor on One to One, RTE One, 12.15pm Sunday 1st October 2006

 

© Sunday Independent



Top of Page

Latest Articles
  The Future of the Catholic Church in Ireland

  Letter a step towards renewal, says Martin

  Archbishop defends child protection

  Pastoral Letter of the Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI to the Catholics of Ireland

  'No division' in hierarchy about child protection

  Vatican Statement

  Archbishop Diarmuid Martin admits archdiocese in 'deep crisis'

  Statements from Cardinal Brady, Archbishop Martin

  Irish Bishops meet with Pope

  Statement issued by the Irish Bishops’ Conference at the end of the first day of their Winter General Meeting in Maynooth

  Fallout from child abuse report to dominate meeting of bishops

  30 years of church and State cover-up of child sex abuse

  No words of apology will ever be sufficient, says archbishop

  'It's the end of a very long fight and a very hard road'

  'Regret' as report not published in full

  Commission finds Church covered up child sex abuse

  Report on clerical child abuse claims in archdiocese to be published this week

  Edited report on Dublin abuse cleared for release

  Victims and archbishop broadly welcome decision

  Minister wants sex abuse report published quickly

  Anxiety grows over delays in clerical abuse report

  Full publication of clerical child sex abuse report may take years

  Child Protection Director to take HSE post

  Ruling on abuse report due next week

  Court to hear legal arguments on abuse report

  Report into sex abuse cases sent back to court

  Report into sex abuse cases set to be published next week

  Ruling on child sex abuse report ready

  Judgment reserved on what parts of child sex abuse report can be disclosed

  Date fixed for abuse report court hearing

  Court hearing on diocesan abuse report next month

  Abuse report case for court mention

  Minister to receive Dublin clerical abuse study

  Dublin inquiry into how 19 senior clergy handled sex claims

  Archbishop 'couldn't keep reading' abuse details

  Priest stands aside during inquiry

  Archbishop says abuse report 'will shock us all'

  Church policy aims to show way in safeguarding child from abuse

  Guidelines on child sexual abuse

  Prompt reporting to civil authorities compulsory

  Archbishop hails guidelines for clerical abuse database

  Dublin child abuse report delayed by months

  Dublin Diocese holds more abuse meetings

  Priests abused up to 400 children in Dublin diocese

  Sex abuse claims against 150 priests

  Catholic Church launches new website for the faithful

  Time to face up to facts of sexual abuse of children

  Pope feels the 'pain' caused by abusive priests in Ireland

  Church in Dublin must regain goodwill of all, says Archbishop

  Safeguarding children in Church: Meeting the challenge



Home | Conditions of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Map | Contact Us
Copyright © 1999-2004 Archdiocese of Dublin | Site developed by Willows Consulting.