Colin writes: << As for the Bishop of Boston, surely at the very least he should be jailed for aiding and abetting serious crimes? >>
Colin, I have never agreed with you more. But sadly -- and disgracefully -- Cardinal Law (or Cardinal Above-the-Law, as he is called on one radio call-in show here in Boston) will never see the inside of the prison cell that, in my opinion, he deserves to be in for the rest of his life. If this fiend had been a politician, or an educator, or a police official, or anyone else who had allowed these horrific crimes against children -- numbering at least in the hundreds -- to go on and on for decades, he would have been cheerfully locked up years ago and the key would have been gleefully thrown away. It's hard to imagine that any institution could be powerful enough to protect such a monster, but the Catholic Church is that powerful, especially here in Boston. In fact, while 40 protesters called for the Cardinal's resignation outside Boston's Cathedral of the Holy Cross this past Sunday, 600 parishioners on the inside gave him a standing ovation. Tears come to my eyes when I think of how the victims must feel when they hear such news reports. What's more, many wealthy and influential local Catholics (such as Peter Lynch from Fidelity Investments, who reportedly gave $10 million to the Archdiocese of Boston last year) have remained absolutely silent on the matter. Can you believe that anyone could remain silent about the rape of children? Can you believe that people who profess to do God's work could actually cover up such despicable crimes? Well, it happened, and it is more than likely still happening throughout the world. I wish I could feel assured that this little meeting of American Cardinals with the Pope would make things better, but as long as the likes of Cardinal Law are in power, I see very little hope for change. I was not the brightest child in the world, but for some reason I saw and was repulsed by the hypocrisy of the Church from a very young age. (If my parents did nothing else right, I was lucky enough to be sent to public school, rather than parochial.) The fact is, my first confession was my last, and I managed to tune out the Church until I was a teenager and joined a Protestant youth group. I always saw very plainly that the Church had more than its share of bad men and women, but I never could have imagined -- even with my very low opinion of the Church -- that the Church would ever be complicit in the rape of hundreds, and most likely, thousands of children throughout the world. But that's not all. A local class action lawsuit recently awarded a large group of victims of priest rape about $87 million, I think it was. Now the Archdiocese of Boston is whining about how they're going to pay for all the damages, and they are asking parishioners to dig a little deeper to help defray these costs. Excuse me? I would think that in an age when van Goghs sell for $100 million, Vatican officials could find some long-forgotten art work in some out-of-the-way storage room in Rome and come up with what would amount to chump change for these victims who have suffered way more than most of us can ever imagine. And for any good Catholics out there -- and I know there are literally millions of them in the world -- if you feel offended by this post, please go back and read it again. Unless you are raping and/or covering up the abuse of children, or supporting slimeballs like Law, it's simply not about you. --Bob