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Home News

Education essential for abuse prevention

byCNS
18 February 2015 - Updated on 1 April 2021
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Cardinal Sean O'Malley

Protecting children: Head of the Pontifical Commission for Child Protection Cardinal Sean O'Malley speaks at a news conference at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome on February 16. The news conference was held to officially inaugurate the launch of the Centre for Child Protection. Photo: CNS/Paul Haring

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Cardinal Sean O'Malley
Protecting children: Head of the Pontifical Commission for Child Protection Cardinal Sean O’Malley speaks at a news conference at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome on February 16. The news conference was held to officially inaugurate the launch of the Centre for Child Protection.
Photo: CNS/Paul Haring

POPE Francis, who has called for zero tolerance for the “despicable” crime of sexual abuse of minors, has praised new efforts aimed at helping the Church better protect children.

In letter to president of the Centre for Child Protection at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University Jesuit Father Hans Zollner, the Pope said he was “happy about what you are doing and I sincerely congratulate you”.

Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley read the letter aloud at a news conference on February 16 inaugurating the official launch of the centre and its activities. The launch followed a three-year pilot project phase.

The Pope wrote that he was confident “all this work will bear fruit”.

The centre, which offers an onsite and online prevention and child protection program and diploma, was established in 2012 as a way to help build awareness and train religious and lay leaders globally about the problem of abuse.

Cardinal O’Malley, 70, who heads the Pontifical Commission for Child Protection, said he remembered “being raised without much awareness” about abuse and only later saw how the “climate of secrecy and shame” caused so much damage.

While the pontifical commission will be focusing on helping the Church develop better policies and procedures for protecting minors, it will also put extra emphasis on real accountability for bishops who do not comply with child protection norms adopted by their bishops’ conferences and approved by the Vatican.

The Centre for Child Protection, on the other hand, will focus on training, education and raising awareness as well as promoting more research on the scope of abuse in the Church and its causes.

While many abuse survivors emphasised the need to hold Church leaders accountable, many underestimated the continued need for education, said United States Monsignor Stephen Rossetti, a licensed psychologist who has many years’ experience teaching pastoral studies and leading the St Luke Institute, a treatment centre in Maryland for priests and religious with addictions and psychological problems.

“Education is really the key, it really makes the difference. It sounds trite, but it’s true,” he told Catholic News Service.

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Msgr Rossetti, who is now teaching at the Gregorian University, said because of greater awareness of the risks and problem of abuse, the Church, parents and “children are more on notice”.

“It changes the whole system,” he said.

The Church now was “more hostile to an abuser”, making it a place where an abuser would not be tolerated, he said.

Think of the Church as a bank, he said, “and which bank are you going to rob …? The less vigilant one. So you work to make the bank stronger” and more resilient against those whose motives were to harm.

“Education has become the most important part” in abuse protection, he said, even though much media attention right now was on leadership accountability.

While bishops must respond to allegations and be held accountable, “the 15 cases you stop because of an education program” don’t make the news, he said. “It’s something you don’t see.”

CNS

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