Australian nun’s canonisation focuses attention on Catholic child abuse

THE Catholic Church was hoping, no doubt, that its planned canonisation of an Australian nun would serve to divert attention from all the bad press it’s been attracting in recent years over clerical child abuse.

Mary MacKillop

No such luck. Oz’s National Broadcaster ABC, according to this report, intends screening a documentary on October 10 which reveals that Mary MacKillop, soon to become Australia’s first Catholic saint, was briefly excommunicated by the church in part because she exposed a paedophile priest.

MacKillop, who will be canonised by Ratzinger next month, was known as a tireless educator and founder of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart order of nuns which ventured into remote outback areas.

But the documentary paints her as a woman who also spoke up to church authorities about allegations of child molestation by priests.

Father Paul Gardiner, a campaigner for MacKillop’s sainthood, told the documentary makers:

The story of the excommunication amounts to this: that some priests had been uncovered for being involved in the sexual abuse of children.

MacKillop and her nuns told their superiors and severe action was taken, including sending one priest back to Ireland, and this so enraged other priests that they swore to take revenge against MacKillop’s order.

Part of this revenge included encouraging the then Bishop of Adelaide Laurence Shiel to excommunicate MacKillop, something he duly did in 1871.

Gardiner elaborated:

She [MacKillop] submitted to a farcical ceremony where the Bishop had… lost it. He was being manipulated by malicious priests.

The man sent back to Ireland continued as a priest.

Gardiner added:

Were they covering up sexual abuse? Well, I suppose you could put it that way …

From his deathbed some five months later, Shiel instructed that MacKillop be absolved, and the Melbourne-born woman went on to grow her order around the country, attracting hundreds of women to her cause.

Calls for MacKillop’s canonisation began shortly after her death in 1909.

The Sisters of St Joseph do not dispute the findings of the documentary.

Meanwhile, it is reported from Italy that victims of child abuse by Catholic priests in in that country gathered this week in Verona, and called for such abuse to be made a crime against humanity.

Dozens of victims and their families went to the public meeting, the first of its kind in Italy.

Organiser Salvatore Damolo, a former victim and an ex-priest, said the aim was to give victims a platform to talk about their experiences.

Salvatore Damolo

He appealed for help in seeking justice for those who have been abused.

Italian bishops say around 100 cases of abuse have been investigated by Church authorities in the past decade. But organisers of the conference say the true number of victims is much higher.

Sixty-seven deaf-mute children at Verona’s Catholic Antonio Provolo institute were allegedly abused by priests and lay staff between the 1950s and 1980s, according to testimony obtained by AP in 2009.

Next month they will hold a demonstration outside the Vatican, to which US abuse victims have also been invited, the Italian news agency Ansa reports.

Hat tip: Chris (MacKillop report) and BarrieJohn