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Summary of the Response to Mr Eamon Gilmore,
Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade of Ireland, concerning the Cloyne Report
On 14 July 2011, following the publication of the Report of the Commission of
Investigation into the Diocese of Cloyne (Cloyne Report), Mr Eamon
Gilmore, Deputy Prime Minister (Tánaiste) and Minister for Foreign
Affairs and Trade of Ireland, in the course of a meeting with the Apostolic
Nuncio in Ireland, Archbishop Giuseppe Leanza, conveyed the Irish Government’s
request for a response from the Holy See to the Report and to the Government’s
views in its regard.
1. General remarks about the Cloyne Report
The Holy See has carefully examined the Cloyne Report, which has brought
to light very serious and disturbing failings in the handling of accusations of
sexual abuse of children and young people by clerics in the Diocese of Cloyne.
The Holy See wishes to state at the outset its profound abhorrence for the
crimes of sexual abuse which took place in that Diocese and is sorry and ashamed
for the terrible sufferings which the victims of abuse and their families
have had to endure within the Church of Jesus Christ, a place where this
should never happen. It is very concerned at the findings of the Commission
concerning grave failures in the ecclesiastical governance of the Diocese and
the mishandling of allegations of abuse. It is particularly disturbing that
these failures occurred despite the undertaking given by the Bishops and
Religious Superiors to apply the guidelines developed by the Church in Ireland
to help ensure child protection and despite the Holy See’s norms and procedures
relating to cases of sexual abuse. However, the approach taken by the Church in
Ireland in recent times to the problem of child sexual abuse is benefitting from
ongoing experience and proving more and more effective in preventing the
recurrence of these crimes and in dealing with cases as they arise.
2. Issues raised by the Cloyne Report
The Holy See’s Response addresses in detail the various charges made against it,
which seem to be based primarily on the Cloyne Report’s account and
assessment of the letter addressed to the Irish Bishops on 31 January 1997
by the then Apostolic Nuncio, Archbishop Luciano Storero, concerning the
response of the Congregation for the Clergy to the document Child Sexual
Abuse: Framework for a Church Response (the Framework Document). The
Commission of Inquiry asserts that this response gave comfort to those who
dissented from the stated official Church policy and was unsupportive especially
in relation to reporting to the civil authorities.
The Holy See wishes to state the following in relation to the response of the
Congregation for the Clergy:
- The Congregation described the Framework Document as a “study document”
on the basis of information provided by the Irish Bishops, who described the
text not as an official document of the Irish Bishops’ Conference, but, rather,
as a “report” of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Advisory Committee on Child
Sexual Abuse by Priests and Religious, recommended “to individual dioceses
and congregations as a framework for addressing the issue of child sexual abuse.”
- The Irish Bishops never sought the recognitio of the Holy See for the
Framework Document, which, in accordance with canon 455 of the Code of Canon
Law, would have been required only if they intended it to be a general decree of
the Conference binding on all its members. However, the lack of recognitio
itself did not preclude the application of the document’s guidelines, since
individual Bishops could adopt them without having to refer to the Holy See.
This is, in fact, what generally happened in Ireland.
- The Irish Bishops consulted the Congregation to resolve difficulties relating to
some of the content of the Framework Document. The Congregation offered
advice to the Bishops with a view to ensuring that the measures which they
intended to apply would prove effective and unproblematic from a canonical
perspective. For this reason, the Congregation drew attention to the requirement
that these measures should be in harmony with canonical procedures in order to
avoid conflicts that could give rise to successful appeals in Church tribunals.
The Congregation did not reject the Framework Document. Rather, it
wanted to ensure that the measures contained in the Framework Document
would not undermine the Bishops’ efforts to discipline those guilty of child
abuse in the Church. At the same time, it is important to bear in mind the
decision of the Holy See in 1994 to grant special provisions to the Bishops of
the United States to deal with child sexual abuse in the Church. These
provisions were extended to the Bishops of Ireland in 1996 to assist them to
overcome difficulties that they were experiencing at that time (cf. Part Six of
the Response).
- Meeting canonical requirements to ensure the correct administration of justice
within the Church in no way precluded cooperation with the civil authorities.
The Congregation for the Clergy did express reservations about mandatory
reporting, but it did not forbid the Irish Bishops from reporting accusations of
child sexual abuse nor did it encourage them to flout Irish law. In this regard,
the then Prefect of the Congregation, Cardinal Darío Castrillón Hoyos, in his
meeting with the Irish Bishops at Rosses Point, County Sligo (Ireland), on 12
November 1998 unequivocally stated: “I also wish to say with great clarity
that the Church, especially through its Pastors (Bishops), should not in any way
put an obstacle in the legitimate path of civil justice, when such is initiated
by those who have such rights, while at the same time, she should move forward
with her own canonical procedures, in truth, justice and charity towards all.”
It should be noted that, at the time, not only the Church but also the Irish
State was engaged in efforts to improve its own legislation on child sexual
abuse. To this end, the Irish Government organized an extensive consultation on
mandatory reporting in 1996 and, after taking into account the reservations
expressed by various professional groups and individuals in civil society –
views broadly in line with those expressed by the Congregation – it decided not
to introduce mandatory reporting into the Irish legal system. Given that the
Irish Government of the day decided not to legislate on the matter, it is
difficult to see how Archbishop Storero’s letter to the Irish Bishops, which was
issued subsequently, could possibly be construed as having somehow subverted
Irish law or undermined the Irish State in its efforts to deal with the problem
in question.
3. Issues raised by Irish political leaders
The Holy See wishes to state the following in relation to some of the reactions
of Irish political leaders:
- While the Holy See understands and shares the depth of public anger and
frustration at the findings of the Cloyne Report, which found expression
in the speech made by the Taoiseach, Mr Enda Kenny, in Dáil Éireann
on 20 July 2011, it has significant reservations about some aspects of the
speech. In particular, the accusation that the Holy See attempted “to
frustrate an Inquiry in a sovereign, democratic republic as little as three
years ago, not three decades ago” is unfounded. Indeed, when asked, a
Government spokesperson clarified that Mr Kenny was not referring to any
specific incident.
In fact, accusations of interference by the Holy See are belied by the many
Reports cited as the basis for such criticisms. Those Reports – lauded for their
exhaustive investigation of sexual abuse and the way it was managed – contain no
evidence that the Holy See meddled in the internal affairs of the Irish State or
was involved in the day-to-day management of Irish dioceses or religious
congregations with respect to sexual abuse issues. Indeed, what is impressive
about these Reports, and the vast information that they rely upon, is that there
is no support for these accusations.
In this regard, the Holy See wishes to make it quite clear that it in no way
hampered or sought to interfere in any inquiry into cases of child sexual abuse
in the Diocese of Cloyne. Furthermore, at no stage did the Holy See seek to
interfere with Irish civil law or impede the civil authority in the exercise of
its duties.
- The Holy See would also point out that the text of the then Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger quoted by Mr Kenny in his speech is taken from No. 39 of the
Instruction on the Ecclesial Vocation of the Theologian, published by the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on 24 May 1990. This text is
concerned neither with the manner in which the Church should behave within a
democratic society nor with issues of child protection, as Mr Kenny’s use of the
quotation would seem to imply, but with the theologian’s service to the Church
community.
- In his meeting with the Apostolic Nuncio, the Tánaiste and Minister for
Foreign Affairs and Trade, Mr Eamon Gilmore, stated that “among the most
disturbing of the findings of the Cloyne report is that the Vatican authorities
undermined the Irish Church’s own efforts to deal with clerical child sexual
abuse by describing the framework document adopted by the Bishops’ Conference as
a mere ‘study document’.” As is made clear in the Holy See’s Response this
description was based on the explanations of its nature as provided by the Irish
Bishops and in the published text itself. In no way was it a dismissal of the
serious efforts undertaken by the Irish Bishops to address the scourge of child
sexual abuse.
- With regard to the motion passed in Dáil Éireann on 20 July 2011, and by
Seanad Éireann a week later, deploring “the Vatican’s intervention
which contributed to the undermining of the child protection framework and
guidelines of the Irish State and the Irish Bishops” the Holy See wishes to
clarify that at no stage did it make any comment about the Irish State’s child
protection measures, let alone seek to undermine them. The Holy See observes
that there is no evidence cited anywhere in the Cloyne Report to support
the claim that its supposed “intervention” contributed to their
“undermining”. As for those of the Irish Bishops, the Response offers
sufficient clarifications to show that these were in no way undermined by
any intervention of the Holy See.
4. Concluding remarks
In its Response, the Holy See offers a presentation of the Church’s approach to
child protection, including the relevant canonical legislation, and refers to
the Holy Father’s Letter to the Catholics of Ireland, published on 19
March 2010, in which Pope Benedict indicates his expectation that the Irish
Bishops will cooperate with the civil authorities, to implement fully the norms
of canon law and to ensure the full and impartial application of the child
safety norms of the Church in Ireland.
The publication of the Cloyne Report marks a further stage in the long
and difficult path of ascertaining the truth, of penance and purification, and
of healing and renewal of the Church in Ireland. The Holy See does not consider
itself extraneous to this process but shares in it in a spirit of solidarity and
commitment.
In a spirit of humility, the Holy See, while rejecting unfounded accusations,
welcomes all objective and helpful observations and suggestions to combat with
determination the appalling crime of sexual abuse of minors. The Holy See wishes
to state once again that it shares the deep concern and anxiety expressed by the
Irish authorities, by Irish citizens in general and by the Bishops, priests,
religious and lay faithful of Ireland with regard to the criminal and sinful
acts of sexual abuse perpetrated by clergy and religious. It also recognizes the
understandable anger, disappointment and sense of betrayal of those affected –
particularly the victims and their families – by these vile and deplorable acts
and by the way in which they were sometimes handled by Church authorities, and
for all of this it wishes to reiterate its sorrow for what happened. It is
confident that the measures which the Church has introduced in recent years at a
universal level, as well as in Ireland, will prove more effective in preventing
the recurrence of these acts and contribute to the healing of those who suffered
abuse and to the restoration of mutual confidence and collaboration between
Church and State authorities, which is essential for the effective combating of
the scourge of abuse. Naturally, the Holy See is well aware that the painful
situation to which the episodes of abuse have given rise cannot be resolved
swiftly or easily, and that although much progress has been made, much remains
to be done.
Since the early days of the Irish State and especially since the establishment
of diplomatic relations in 1929, the Holy See has always respected Ireland’s
sovereignty, has maintained cordial and friendly relations with the country and
its authorities, has frequently expressed its admiration for the exceptional
contribution of Irish men and women to the Church’s mission and to the
betterment of peoples throughout the world, and has been unfailing in its
support of all efforts to promote peace on the island during the recent troubled
decades. Consistent with this attitude, the Holy See wishes to reaffirm its
commitment to constructive dialogue and cooperation with the Irish Government,
naturally on the basis of mutual respect, so that all institutions, whether
public or private, religious or secular, may work together to ensure that the
Church and, indeed, society in general will always be safe for children and
young people.
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