ROME — In one of his most concrete actions since a sexual abuse scandal began sweeping the Catholic Church in Europe, Pope Benedict XVI on Monday appointed a high-profile team of prelates, including the archbishop of New York, to investigate Irish dioceses and seminaries.
The pope had announced that he would open the investigation in a strong letter to Irish Catholics in March, in which he expressed “shame and remorse” for “sinful and criminal” acts committed by members of the clergy, following two scathing Irish government reports documenting widespread abuse in church-run schools and other institutions.
On Monday the pope also accepted the resignation of Richard Burke, an Irish-born archbishop in Benin City, Nigeria, who had been suspended after he acknowledged having a 20-year relationship with a woman. In a statement, the bishop apologized and denied accusations of child abuse. He said the sexual relationship began when the woman was 21. The woman has said it began when she was 14.
Although the pope has spoken out against abuse in recent weeks and accepted the resignation of five Irish bishops who admitted to covering up abuse, Monday’s announcements seemed aimed at showing that the Vatican is committed to combating the crisis with actions as well as words.
Ireland is an important test case for Pope Benedict, who has encouraged the Catholic Church to become a “creative minority” in increasingly secular Europe. Shaken by reports of decades of systemic abuse and a widespread cover up, it in some ways represents an uncreative majority whose dominant Catholic institutions, deeply intertwined with the state, have not kept pace with modernity.
In a statement on Monday, the Vatican said the investigation, called an Apostolic Visitation, would begin this fall. It will first examine four dioceses, Dublin, Armagh, Cashel and Emly, and Tuam, as well as seminaries and religious orders. It will then be extended to other dioceses, the statement said.
Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, a former archbishop of Westminster, was appointed to investigate the Archdiocese of Armagh, the Northern Irish city that is the seat of the All-Ireland Primate Cardinal Sean Brady. Cardinal Brady said last month that he would remain in his position despite calls for his resignation because he encouraged two children not to come forward in a notorious abuse case in the 1970s.
The archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, will investigate the Archdiocese of Dublin.
And the archbishop of New York, Timothy Dolan, a former rector of the North American College in Rome, will oversee an investigation into Irish seminaries, including the Pontifical Irish College in Rome. Ireland’s seminaries, like those in many countries have experienced a significant decrease in enrollments in recent years.
Garry O’Sullivan, the editor of The Irish Catholic, Ireland’s leading Catholic weekly newspaper, said the visitation appeared to be more significant than he expected. “This shows Rome means business,” he said. “The fact that there are two cardinals and three archbishops is a sign of intent. It is a high-powered group and the scope appears to have widened.”
Maeve Lewis, the director of One In Four, an Irish organization that provides counseling and advocacy for victims of sexual violence, said she welcomed the visitation but was unclear why it would examine the dioceses of Dublin, Ferns and Cloyne, which had already been extensively examined by the Irish government for its reports last year.
“It would help to know what the purpose of the visitation is,” Ms. Lewis said. “Is it about the renewal of faith or is it about sexual abuse?”
In a statement, the Vatican said the visitators would “explore more deeply questions concerning the handling of cases of abuse and the assistance owed to the victims; they will monitor the effectiveness of and seek possible improvements to the current procedures for preventing abuse.”
The goal of the visitation, the statement said, was “to contribute to the desired spiritual and moral renewal that is already being vigorously pursued by the Church in Ireland.”
The Vatican is also sending the archbishops of Toronto and Ottowa as visitators, while religious orders will be investigated by two priests and two nuns, including an American, Sister Sharon Holland, who was the first woman to direct a Vatican office before she retired in 2008.
Last month, Benedict said that sin inside the church, not attacks from outside, posed the greatest threat, a significant shift in rhetoric after other high-ranking Vatican officials as well as some outsiders had blamed the abuse crisis on attacks by the media.
In an interview on Sunday in Corriere della Sera, Italy’s leading daily, Enrico Bernabei, a former director of RAI, Italy’s state broadcaster, said that “the lobby of globalized finance” was behind “attacks” on the church over sex abuse. He added that “attacks by Protestant and Jewish” financial interests in Italy had harmed Italian television.
On Monday, the Vatican bank and the editor of the Vatican newspaper sought to distance the Vatican from Mr. Bernabei’s comments
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