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News ID: 56673
Publish Date : 26 August 2018 - 20:40

Pope Asks for Forgiveness for ‘Scandal and Betrayal’

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DUBLIN/KNOCK, Ireland (Dispatches) -- Pope Francis Sunday asked for forgiveness for the "scandal and betrayal" felt by victims of sexual exploitation by Catholic priests as he toured Ireland where years of abuse scandals have shattered the Church's former dominant role in society.
On the first papal visit to Ireland in almost four decades, Francis met privately with eight victims of ecclesiastical, religious and institutional abuse Saturday and said he would seek a greater commitment to eliminating this "scourge."
But pressure on the pope over the issue increased Sunday when a former top Vatican official accused Francis of having known of allegations of sex abuse by a prominent U.S. cardinal for five years before accepting his resignation last month.
Years of sexual abuse scandals have shattered the credibility of the Church which four decades ago dominated Irish society.
The declining influence of the Catholic Church has been demonstrated by crowds far smaller than those that met Pope John Paul II during the last Papal visit in 1979, when more than three-quarters of Ireland's population turned out.
Francis, facing sexual abuse crises in several countries, wrote an unprecedented letter to all Catholics last week asking each one of them to help root out "this culture of death" and vowing there would be no more cover ups.
At Knock, Francis also condemned the treatment by Catholic religious orders of children who were "distanced from their mothers, abandoned and left with painful memories," an apparent reference to homes for unmarried mothers that operated until the 1990s, where many babies were separated from their mothers.
During the 20th century tens of thousands of unmarried pregnant women, including rape victims, were sent to give birth at so-called mother-and-baby homes. Many of the children were adopted and during the 1930s-1950s the mortality rate for the "illegitimate" children was far higher than that for those born to married parents.
Vatican officials on Sunday declined immediate comment on the 11-page letter in which Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano said he had told Francis in 2013 that Cardinal Theodore McCarrick had faced extensive accusations of sexual abuse.