Centre
for Child Protection steps up work to combat sex abuse
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has sent a message of support to
the Centre for Child Protection which has moved its headquarters to Rome to
scale up its work of preventing the sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable
adults.
At a ceremony on Monday evening at Rome’s Gregorian University,
Cardinal Sean O’Malley, head of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of
Minors joined directors of the Centre to underline the work that still needs to
be done in Churches across the world to keep children safe.
In his message to all those involved with the Centre for Child
Protection, Pope Francis says he’s greatly encouraged by their work which he
knows will bear much fruit. Over the past three years since its foundation, the
CCP has been running an e-learning course, offering online training in
awareness, prevention and care for survivors of child sexual abuse. Working
with Church and non-religious institutions around the world, it has drawn on
the expertise of theologians, canon lawyers, psychologists and social
scientists to provide a multidisciplinary approach to one of the most serious
problems facing the Church today. A problem that Cardinal O’Malley of Boston,
America’s “ground zero” of the sex abuse crisis, knows only too well…
“We are painfully aware of the many places in the world where
the issues of clerical sexual abuse has not been adequately addressed and we
hope that the Pontifical Commission and the outstanding work of the Centre will
make a difference”.
The executive director of the Centre, Belgian professor Karlijn
Demasure explained how the work will be scaled up to offer more research
opportunities and, from 2016, a new diploma course at the Gregorian for
students wanting to specialise in the safeguarding of minors and vulnerable
people. The Centre’s president, German Jesuit Father Hans Zollner noted that
while there has been successful cooperation with partners in 10 countries so
far, it’s vital now to reach out to Churches and religious organisations in
countries where there is still no awareness, no education and no financial
resources…
“We want to go there, where there is little or nothing and to do
this in a culturally sensitive way….you have to know not only the language of
the place, but also the language of the heart of the place where we go to….”
The Centre is seeking new partnerships with academic
institutions to further critical research and to pioneer new ways of working
with parishes, dioceses and national Church bodies to become a model of
safeguarding and child protection for the wider society. Education in
seminaries, training for new bishops and courses for those serving here in the
Roman Curia are key parts of the programme. As is the question of the
accountability of Church leaders to deal effectively with any priest or
religious suspected of abusing people in his or her care. Cardinal Sean
O’Malley again:
“Certainly one of the topics that the Pontifical Commission is
dealing with is accountability and we’re currently working with theologians and
canonists to come up with a concrete plan to put to the Holy Father….because
obviously we are very concerned about the whole area of accountability”
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