Pope Admits Clerical Abuse of Nuns Including Sexual Slavery
Pope Francis
has admitted that clerics have sexually abused nuns, and in one case they were
kept as sex slaves.
He said in
that case his predecessor, Pope Benedict, was forced to shut down an entire
congregation of nuns who were being abused by priests.
It is
thought to be the first time that Pope Francis has acknowledged the sexual
abuse of nuns by the clergy.
He said the
Church was attempting to address the problem but said it was "still going
on".
Last
November, the Catholic Church's global organisation for nuns denounced the
"culture of silence and secrecy" that prevented them from speaking
out.
The Pope's
comments come amid long-running allegations of sexual abuse of children and
young men by priests at the Church.
Speaking to
reporters while on a historic tour of the Middle East on Tuesday, the
pontiff admitted that the Church had an issue, the roots of which lie in
"seeing women as second class".
He said that
priests and bishops had abused nuns, but said the Church was aware of the
"scandal" and was "working on it", adding that a number of
clerics had been suspended.
"It's a
path that we've been on," he said.
"Pope
Benedict had the courage to dissolve a female congregation which was at a
certain level, because this slavery of women had entered it - slavery, even to
the point of sexual slavery - on the part of clerics or the founder."
Pope Francis
said sexual abuse of nuns was an ongoing problem, but happened largely in
"certain congregations, predominantly new ones".
"I
think it's still taking place because it's not as though the moment you become
aware of something it goes away."
The female
congregation dissolved in 2005 under Pope Benedict was the Community of St
Jean, which was based in France, Alessandro Gisotti of the Vatican press office
told CBS News.
In 2013, the
Community of St Jean admitted that priests had behaved "in ways that went
against chastity" with several women in the order, according to the French
Roman Catholic newspaper La Croix.
In a
separate case in India last year, a bishop was arrested over allegations
that he raped a nun 13 times between 2014 and 2016. Bishop Franco
Mulakkal, who headed the diocese in Jalandhar in the northern state of Punjab,
has denied the accusations.
In Chile,
reports of abuse of nuns carried out by priests led the Vatican to launch an
investigation last year. The women were reportedly removed from the order after
highlighting the abuse.
Last year,
the Associated Press news agency reported cases of abuse in Italy and
Africa.
Just days
ago the Vatican's women's magazine, Women Church World, condemned the
abuse, saying in some cases nuns were forced to abort priests' children -
something Catholicism forbids.
The
magazine's editor, Lucetta Scaraffia, said Pope Francis's acknowledgement of
the abuse "can be of some help", but warned that the Church needs to
act.
"If the
Church continues to close its eyes to the scandal... the condition of
oppression of women in the church will never change," she wrote.
The magazine
said the #MeToo movement meant more women were now coming forward with
their stories.
Last year,
French website Le Parisien reported the case of "Christelle" (in
French), a former nun whose name was changed to preserve anonymity.
Christelle
said she had suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a priest of her congregation
in France between 2010 and 2011.
"His
gestures became more and more inappropriate," she said, adding: "But
he kept going... until the day he raped me.
"He was
unable to control himself... he had a split personality."
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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