ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Priest abuse was hidden for 16 years

Priest abuse was hidden for 16 years


A cardinal, several bishops and gardai in the Republic faced criticism today
over revelations a serial paedophile priest was free to abuse for 16 years.


A previously censored report revealed the Vatican wanted ‘Fr Filth’ Tony Walsh
sent to a monastery for 10 years, while Dublin's Catholic hierarchy wanted
him ordered out of the Church.


The state inquiry revealed the archdiocese was more concerned about a Garda
investigation into Walsh than the gardai themselves.


It branded Walsh as probably the most notorious child sexual abuser to have
come to its attention.


Officers had been alerted to the attacks as far back as 1991 but a
investigation was effectively shelved because the Church was running its own
inquiry.


His attacks date to the 1970s.

Read more at www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk
 

Vatican Dismisses Local Priest

Amplify’d from manhattan.ny1.com


Vatican Dismisses Local Priest






By: NY1 News




A New York priest has been dismissed by the Vatican after a church court found him guilty of sexually abusing a minor in the 1970s.

The New York Archdiocese first learned of the allegations against Monsignor Charles Kavanagh in 2002, when the accuser wrote a letter in to Edward Cardinal Egan, the then-archbishop.

Kavanagh was removed from his priestly duties pending an investigation and trial.

After learning of the verdict, Archbishop Timothy Dolan issued a statement, apologizing to the victim.

Kavanagh's sister, who also served as his attorney, said the church court did not grant him a fair trial.










Read more at manhattan.ny1.com
 

The Religion Newswriters Association releases its annual Top 10 story list

Amplify’d from www.statesman.com
Joshunda Sanders

If this feels like deja vu, it’s because I posted my personal Top 10 two weeks ago. The Religion Newswriters Association, which I belong to with hundreds of other religion writers around the country, just released theirs yesterday, after polling its membership. The complete Top 10 Religion Stories of 2010, in order from first to tenth (with some additional items of note this year) are below, with this comment from Debra Mason, RNA president:

Public debate and controversy over a planned Islamic community center and mosque to be built near New York’s Ground Zero ignited a national debate about religious freedom that kept the story in the news for months.
The story was voted the No. 1 religion story of 2010 in the annual Top 10 Religion News Stories of the Year poll of Religion Newswriters Association members. The center’s leading proponent, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, was voted the 2010 Religion Newsmaker of the Year.
Public opinion and outcry over the mosque reached a peak when a pastor of a small Florida church threatened to burn a Qu’ran in protest, a bravado that fueled fears of international backlash against the United States until the pastor backed down.
  1. A proposal to build an Islamic center and mosque near Ground Zero leads to a national debate on religious freedom, with strong statements on both sides as the 9/11 anniversary approached. A Gainesville, Fla., pastor, who vowed to burn copies of the Qu’ran in protest, backs down.

  1. The catastrophic earthquake in Haiti sparks relief efforts by many and varied faith-based groups. One by Idaho Southern Baptists leads to child-smuggling accusations, as well as to examinations of others’ practices. Leader Laura Silsby is imprisoned for four months.

  1. Pope Benedict XVI is accused of delaying church action against pedophile priests in Ireland, Germany, the United States and other countries when he led the Vatican office in charge of discipline 1981 to 2005. Several bishops resign. Benedict continues to criticize the church’s handling of past cases.

  1. The rise of the Tea Party movement is seen by some as a return to political prominence for the religious right; others see it as stressing economic rather than social issues. Mormon Glenn Beck pushes a Washington rally. Election results are mixed. One Tea Party candidate who loses, however, is Delaware Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell, who was pilloried for responding to critics with an ad that stated, “I am not a witch.”

  1. President Obama signs the health-care reform bill for which many faith-based groups labored. Near year’s end the Catholic bishops repeat their strong opposition to it due to the belief that it provides funding for abortions, and lament support some Catholics gave it.

  1. Sexuality continues as a hot topic among mainline congregations. The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church USA votes for the fourth time to lift the ban on noncelibate gay clergy; the presbyteries are again voting on it. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America suffers scores of defections after its 2009 vote on the issue. The Episcopal Church is asked by the archbishop of Canterbury to take a lesser role in the Anglican Communion after a lesbian assistant bishop is ordained.

  1. The prolonged economic slump spells trouble for additional churches and ministries. In the highest profile case, the Crystal Cathedral declares bankruptcy after downsizing efforts fall short. The Lutheran publishing house, Augsburg Fortress, drops its pension plan; Focus on the Family cuts 110 employees; the Seventh-day Adventist publishing arm removes top executives.

  1. Bullying draws attention with several suicides attributed to it, including a New Jersey college student. Religious groups strongly condemn it, but some see it as having religious roots, especially in regards to homosexuality. Several religious voices take part in the “It gets better” YouTube video project to encourage gay youth not to commit suicide or succumb to depression.

  1. The U.S. Religious Knowledge Survey released by the Pew Forum offers some surprising findings, including that atheists, agnostics, Jews and Mormons had the highest correct answers.

  1. The U.S. Supreme Court convenes for the first time ever without a Protestant in its number (6 Catholics and 3 Jews). The court hears arguments in the case of the Kansas church that loudly protests at the funerals of servicemen; the decision will come this spring. The Court earlier allows a cross to remain at least temporarily on National Park land in the Mojave Desert, but then the cross is stolen.

The other items on the ballot, ranked 11 to 20:

  1. Faith-based aid workers are slain in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Half of Iraq’s 750,000 Christians have left it since 2003.

  1. Faith-based environmental groups gain new impetus from the BP oil spill, building on efforts in recent years to place creation care at the top of religious leaders’ priorities.

  1. Faith-based groups continue to press for immigration reform. Southern Baptist leader Richard Land calls for giving illegal immigrants “a compassionate, just pathway to earning citizenship or legal status.”

  1. In November, more than 80 percent of state voters approved a measure amending the Oklahoma Constitution to prevent state courts from using Islamic law or international law. After a federal judge temporarily blocks the ruling, Oklahoma state attorneys vow to appeal the federal block.

  1. U.S. Courts of Appeals rule on a large number of religion-related issues, with mixed results. The 7th OKs a moment of silence in schools and says a college student group cannot be denied funds because of its religious activity; the 9th reverses its ‘02 ruling on “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance, saying the phrase is not a prayer; the 10th bans metal crosses for deceased Utah police; the 11th says feeding the poor does not qualify as free exercise of religion; the 2nd invalidates FCC indecency policy.

  1. Pope Benedict XVI warns against “aggressive secularism” on the first visit of a pope to the United Kingdom in 28 years. Meanwhile, a new survey shows church attendance in Britain has stabilized or gained a little after decades of decline. The UK coalition government said it plans to fund religious schools with state money.

  1. The Rev. Franklin Graham, son of Billy Graham, is disinvited from a Pentagon National Day of Prayer observance because of previous criticisms of Muslims. The Day of Prayer continues despite legal attempts to stop it.

  1. President Obama makes a strong pitch for religious tolerance on his visit to Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim country. Meanwhile, he continues to seek reconciliation between Jews and Muslims in Palestine.

  1. President Obama signs an order reforming the White House faith-based office to improve transparency and clarify rules for religious groups that receive federal grants; members of his advisory committee are generally pleased. The question of hiring and firing on a religious basis will be decided case by case.

  1. Hinduism gains more of the spotlight through the book “Eat, Pray, Love” and word of star Julia Roberts’ conversion to it. At least one prominent conservative Protestant leader gains attention-criticizing yoga.

Results are based on an online survey of more then 300 journalists with a response rate near 30 percent. The Religion Newswriters Association is the world’s premier association dedicated to helping journalists write about religion with balance, accuracy and insight. Founded in 1949, the association is headquartered at the Missouri School of Journalism. The association has conducted its Top 10 Religion News Stories of the Year for nearly 30 years.

Read more at www.statesman.com
 

Dublin investigation: Vatican tried to stop pedophile Irish priest from being defrocked

Amplify’d from www.mjtimes.sk.ca

Dublin investigation: Vatican tried to stop pedophile Irish priest from being defrocked

DUBLIN - A previously censored chapter from Ireland's investigation into church coverups of child abuse says the Vatican tried to stop Irish church leaders from defrocking a particularly dangerous pedophile priest.

The chapter, released Friday, details how Dublin leaders ordered Catholic priest Tony Walsh defrocked in 1993 following 15 years of child-abuse complaints. But the Vatican overruled the verdict and ordered him sent to an Irish monastery instead.

Rome relented in 1996 after police opened a criminal probe and Walsh attacked a boy in a pub restroom following a family funeral.

Walsh was imprisoned for raping boys last week.

The Dublin Archdiocese investigation, published last year, found that Catholic officials shielded dozens of priests from prosecution for decades.

Canadian Press
See more at www.mjtimes.sk.ca
 

Paedo priest anger

Amplify’d from www.wigantoday.net

Paedo priest anger

editorial image

Massive pervert - William Green

VICTIMS sexually abused by a Wigan priest are demanding to know why he is still a clergyman – two years after being jailed.



Fr William Green (pictured above), formerly of Holy Family RC Church in New Springs, is currently serving a six-year prison sentence after pleading guilty to 27 counts of sexual assault in 2008.

Green, 69, abused six pupils aged 11 to 15 while working as a religious education teacher at St Bede’s Boys’ School in Whalley Range, Manchester, between 1975 and 1987.

Following Green’s conviction, church chiefs vowed that he would never minister to the public again as he agreed to be defrocked or “laicised” – a process involving the Vatican which would see him stripped of his priesthood and privileges.

A spokesman for the Diocese of Salford said that the laicisation was on-going and was out of their hands.

Green was asked by the Diocese of Salford in January 2009 to apply for laicisation, which he did.

The application went to the Bishop, who then sent it to Rome to be considered by the Congregation for the Defence of the Faith (CDF).

This application is still with the CDF, and the diocese could not confirm a time-frame when things might begin to move.

Fr Barry O’Sullivan, safeguarding co-ordinator at the Diocese of Salford, said: “The most important thing for the victims to know is that now he has been held to account of his offences, he will never work again as a priest. It is an ongoing process which we don’t actually control. We can’t determine the length of the process.”

But two years on, the process is still incomplete and victims and former parishioners are questing what is taking so long.

One of his former parishioners, who does not wish to be identified, said: “There seems to be a very big gap between what the church says it will do in such cases and what actually happens.

“During the summer of 2010, the Catholic bishops seemed keen to remind us that Pope Benedict XVI had led changes to church law that included fast-track dismissal from the clerical state for offenders.

“However, in practice, these processes seem to run very slowly, if at all, in the Diocese of Salford.

“William Green has still not been laicised more than two years after he was convicted and sentenced.”

In 2001, the Nolan Report was published in the wake of damaging disclosures of clerical sexual abuse and cover ups at the start of the decade.

It was designed to root out sex offenders and prevent paedophiles from entering the priesthood.

Recommendation 78 of the Nolan Report states that “if a bishop, priest or deacon is convicted of a criminal offence against children and is sentenced to serve a term of imprisonment of 12 months or more, then it would normally be right to initiate the process of laicisation. Failure to do so would need to be justified.

“Initiation of the process of laicisation may also be appropriate in other circumstances.”

Read more at www.wigantoday.net
 

Vatican tried to keep Irish child rapist as priest

Amplify’d from www.tuscaloosanews.com
Vatican tried to keep Irish child rapist as priest
By SHAWN POGATCHNIK
Associated Press


The Vatican tried to stop Dublin church leaders from defrocking a particularly dangerous pedophile priest and relented only after he raped a boy in a pub restroom, an investigation reported Friday.













Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said he fully accepted the findings of the latest chapter in Ireland's investigation into child abuse by Dublin priests who were shielded from the law by Catholic leaders.

Martin called Tony Walsh an "extremely devious man" who should never have been ordained a priest, and said the report highlighted how the church had grown too powerful and arrogant in 20th century Ireland.

A state-ordered investigation into Dublin Archdiocese cover-ups reported last year that Catholic officials had shielded scores of priests from criminal investigation over several decades and didn't report any crimes to the police until the mid-1990s. The findings sent shock waves through the church and forced three Irish bishops to resign, although the Vatican refused to accept the resignations of Martin's two junior bishops.

A chapter dealing with Walsh was censored from the original report because he was still facing a criminal trial. The Department of Justice published the chapter Friday following the 56-year-old Walsh's Dec. 6 conviction for raping three boys over a five-year period three decades ago. He received a 12-year prison sentence.

The investigators - a judge and lawyers acting independently of the Irish government - concluded that Walsh actually raped and molested hundreds of boys and girls while serving as a Dublin priest from 1978 to 1996, a reign of terror that church leaders never effectively stopped.

They described Walsh as "probably the most notorious child sexual abuser" of the 46 cases they investigated covering the years 1975-2004. Walsh often performed as an Elvis impersonator in a traveling Catholic song-and-dance production popular with children called the "All Priests Show." The report found this increased his easy access to victims, as did his interest in scouting groups and taking altar boys on visits to the Dublin seminary, Clonliffe College.

The fact-finders based their conclusions on previously confidential Dublin and Vatican documents and interviews with key church figures that took five years to gather. They found that Dublin Archdiocese leaders spent several years arguing over whether Walsh should be defrocked, sent to counselors in England, or assigned to duties that kept him away from children.

Martin, a veteran Vatican diplomat appointed to clean up the Dublin scandals in 2004, handed over the archdiocese's previously secret abuse files to the investigation. His predecessor, Cardinal Desmond Connell, had refused.

Martin said the church concealed child abuse easily for so long because its power in 20th century Ireland "had grown beyond what is legitimate. It acted as a world apart. It had often become self-centered and arrogant. It felt that it could be forgiving of abusers in a simplistic manner and rarely empathized with the hurt of children."

He noted that, just two days into Walsh's first parish assignment in Dublin's impoverished Ballyfermot district in 1978, the priest was accused of molesting a boy.

"He probably should never have been appointed at that stage without investigating the matter," Martin said.

Instead the report found that the church made only patchy, ill-coordinated efforts to look into a string of abuse complaints against Walsh until 1986, when he was transferred to another Dublin parish "to avoid further scandal in Ballyfermot."

There, the parochial house's maid reported finding copious evidence that Walsh was abusing boys in his room and using her own stolen clothing. A senior legal official from the church interviewed Walsh several times about his pedophilia.

"He denied nothing," the Dublin Archdiocese's chancellor and canon lawyer, Monsignor Alex Stenson, wrote after one 1985 interview. He advised Walsh to see a psychiatrist.

The report found that the Dublin Archdiocese should have reported Walsh to police by 1979 when evidence of his pedophilia was already evident. But it also faulted police for repeatedly deferring to church authority.

Detectives in 1990 and 1992 received reports that Walsh was molesting children - once when he was spotted trying to coax a boy into his car - but dropped interest after being told that church officials were handling the problem internally.

The report found that then-Archbishop Connell fought his own legal advisers to convene a 1993 canonical trial of Walsh that ended in his temporary defrocking.

But Walsh appealed to the church's appellate court, the Rome Rota, and won a reprieve. The Rota judges reinstated him as a priest and ordered Irish officials to reassign him to a monastery for 10 years.

In May 1994, Walsh sexually assaulted a boy in a pub restroom following the funeral of the boy's grandfather. Months later, a Dublin mother accused Walsh of driving her son to the brink of suicide after abusing him while "baby-sitting" one night.

Police finally opened an investigation in earnest. Church documents showed that Stenson ordered Walsh to stay away from children and no longer wear the priest's uniform - or risk having his pay reduced.

Walsh was convicted of attacking the boy in the pub restroom in February 1995 and received a 12-month sentence. He was later convicted of sexually assaulting several more boys and received a further 10-year sentence that was reduced in a 1997 appeal to six years.

During these criminal trials Connell wrote first to the Rome Rota explaining he could not find a monastery willing to house Walsh and could not reassign him to a parish overseas - a longtime church practice for managing pedophile priests - because he had been charged with crimes.

Finally he appealed in a letter seeking the personal intercession of Pope John Paul II to defrock Walsh. "The archbishop humbly begs the Holy Father graciously to grant him this favor in the interests of the well-being of the church," he wrote.

The report documented how the future pope, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, replied in January 1996 confirming that John Paul had expelled Walsh from the priesthood.

But after Walsh was paroled from prison in 2002, the report said, he continued to travel around Ireland masquerading as a priest and winning the confidence of children, more than 20 of whom reported sexual assaults.

He faced fresh charges when three more of his victims from Ballyfermot in the late 1970s and 1980s came forward. Last week he received prison sentences that total 123 years - the greatest ever imposed on a pedophile priest in Ireland - but the system will recognize only the first 12 years.

"I sleep better now that he is in prison rather than wandering the streets of Dublin," Martin said.

---

Online:

Walsh chapter of Dublin Archdiocese report, http://bit.ly/ej4yyf

Read more at www.tuscaloosanews.com
 

The Pope may say that dictators are evil, but he loves doing business with them

Amplify’d from www.secularism.org.uk

The Pope may say that dictators are evil, but he loves doing business with them

By Terry Sanderson

Aleksandr Lukashenko jails opponents, fixes elections and abuses human rights without a thought. Just the sort of chap the Vatican likes to do business with.

The Pope (who will brook no dissent from his teachings) said last week that “dictators boast that they will change the world, but just bring destruction.”

The pontiff’s reflections on what he calls history’s “false prophets” came in off-the-cuff remarks on Sunday while visiting a Rome church. Mr Ratzinger says the last few centuries witnessed ideologues who created “empires, dictatorships, totalitarianism.”

He says they changed the world, but only in a destructive way. He also added that only “the silent light of truth,” not cruel and violent revolutions, can change the world.

These are big words from a man who heads a church that has made self-serving pacts with some of the worst tyrants who have ever lived. Hitler? Sure, the Vatican signed up with him. Franco? The Catholic Church was his main support.

But that’s all in the past, you might say. The Catholic Church wouldn’t do that sort of thing now. Oh really?

The Interfax News Agency has just announced that a concordat has been readied for signature between the Vatican and Belarus. Belarus is under the iron grip of Aleksandr Lukashenko, described as “Europe’s last dictator”. He jails opponents, fixes elections and abuses human rights without a thought. Just the sort of chap the Vatican likes to do business with.

Read more at www.secularism.org.uk
 

Celebrating the spirit of the Reformation

Celebrating the spirit of the Reformation
Lutherans have invited Pope Benedict to join with them in organising “an ecumenically accountable commemoration” of the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation. At an audience in the Vatican on Thursday, the Lutheran World Federation President, Bishop Munib Younan invited the Holy Father “to work together with us in preparing this anniversary, so that in 2017 we are closer to sharing in the Bread of Life than we are today”. Underlining the need to recognise both the damaging aspects of the Reformation and the progress that has been made in ecumenical relations, Dr Younan noted that for Lutherans ‘there is joy in the liberating power of the Gospel proclaimed afresh by the reformers”.
Addressing the seven member LWF delegation, Pope Benedict expressed gratitude for the “many significant fruits” of the Catholic-Lutheran dialogue, saying in the years leading up to 2017, “Catholics and Lutherans are called to reflect anew on where our journey towards unity has led us and to implore the Lord’s guidance and help for the future”.
Among those accompanying Dr Younan at the papal audience was the new General Secretary of the LWF, Rev Martin Junge. Philippa Hitchen caught up with him after the audience to find out more about the meeting and about plans for the forthcoming Reformation anniversary….
Listen… RealAudioMP3
"We are indeed going to remember with joy the 500 years of Reformation...but never in a triumphalistic way......We very much look forward to discovering together what we can say today and we should not miss this anniversary to come together and say together what we can say together...thus being a witness that the Risen Lord is alive in the lives of our Churches".
"We are aware that we have a special responsibility for the 500th anniversary..it is our very particular legacy out of which we interpret and understand our Christian faith....what we committing ourselves is to do that in ecumenical accountability....we do not want to celebrate our 500 years of Reformation in undoing what has been done and written and achieved in recent years.."
"Reformation took place within the Church Catholic and we continue aspiring that this could be understood as a contribution to the Church as a whole, to the Body of Christ.".
"Our bi-lateral commission is developing a joint statement on the significance of 2017.....my personal wish is ...to find that symbolic action, that concrete gesture that can speak way beyond our Christian Churches...and bear witness together"
Read more at www.oecumene.radiovaticana.org
 

Vatican wanted 'Fr Filth' to serve monastery sentence

Vatican wanted 'Fr Filth' to serve monastery sentence


The Vatican wanted a dangerous Irish paedophile priest to serve 10 years in a
monastery rather than force him out of the Catholic Church, an inquiry
revealed today.


Irish clerics wanted to dismiss Tony Walsh - jailed for 16 years last week on
17 counts of child abuse - but Rome urged that he be allowed to remain in
the clergy.


Nicknamed Fr Filth, he attacked a young boy in the toilet of a pub in Dublin
in May 1994 after attending the funeral of his victim's grandfather as the
Catholic hierarchy in Rome debated how he should be dealt with.


Pope John Paul II dismissed Walsh in 1996 after a direct appeal for action by
Cardinal Desmond Connell.


The Commission hit out at Rome's handling of the case - listed in the report
under the randomly selected but seemingly inappropriate pseudonym Fr Jovito.


"The handling of that appeal in Rome was unsatisfactory," it said.


"The fact that the original decision of dismissal was replaced with a sentence
that would have confined Fr Jovito to a monastery for 10 years suggests that
after the 10-year period, Fr Jovito might have been entitled to resume his
clerical ministry.


"The whole process was unduly cumbersome and at one stage it was suggested to
the Archbishop that he should start all over again and initiate a new
canonical process."


The report went on to say that a major factor in Rome's decision to push for
monastery service appears to have been an inability to charge him by reason
of paedophilia.


Walsh was posted to Ballyfermot Parish in west Dublin in 1978.


Two days after he arrived he was accused of a sex attack on a young boy.

Read more at www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk
 

Vatican: Pope Compares Fundamentalism With Secularism

Amplify’d from www.nytimes.com

Vatican: Pope Compares Fundamentalism With Secularism

By GAIA PIANIGIANI


Pope Benedict XVI compared religious fundamentalism to secularism on Thursday, decrying violent attacks on Christians in the Middle East and more subtle hostility from Western institutions. “It should be clear that religious fundamentalism and secularism are alike in that both represent extreme forms of a rejection of legitimate pluralism and the principle of secularity,” he said. He also decried “hostility and prejudice” against Christians in Asia, Africa and in the Middle East, citing the October attack on a Syrian Catholic church in Baghdad in which 58 people died. “Christians are the religious group which suffers most from persecution on account of its faith,” he said.


Calling on Europe to be “reconciled with its own Christian roots,” the pope offered harsh, if oblique, criticism of recent decisions in European courts allowing the removal of crucifixes from public buildings and the legalization of gay marriage.


“Whenever the legal system at any level, national or international, allows or tolerates religious or antireligious fanaticism, it fails in its mission, which is to protect and promote justice and the rights of all,” he said. 

Read more at www.nytimes.com