-Caveat Lector-

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-2244480,00.html

>>>The unfortunate thing -- albeit a "Catch-22" sort of dilemmal conundrum -- is that 
>Law
is let off the hook when he should be forced to confront the errors of his ways on a 
daily
basis.  The best thing would be to keep him right where he is and in a sort of good 
old New
England pillory where he can be accessible to peoples' criticisms (overripe vegetables
optional) and offer himself up to proof that he's a true penitent.  Maybe one of those
updated medieval dunking machines would be good (a few 'maters then a bath).  Of
course, no one wants him around to run things as they are and were.  Hence the 
Catch-22.
A further consideration is to do with him like they did with Hirohito and want to do 
with
Hussein: keep him handy but put the mitre on someone else's head.  A<>E<>R <<<

Church Woes Remain After Law Resignation


Saturday December 14, 2002 11:40 AM


BOSTON (AP) - Cardinal Bernard Law said he hoped his resignation would bring ``healing,
reconciliation and unity'' to the Boston Archdiocese, after an agonizing year of 
revelations of
sexual abuse by priests and failures by the church to confront the problem.

But Law's departure will not end the legal entanglements that he and the Boston
Archdiocese face. Nor will it relieve the pressures that have brought the archdiocese 
to the
brink of financial ruin.

Law is scheduled to be questioned by lawyers representing alleged victims of abuse 
starting
Tuesday, and he has also been subpoenaed by the state's attorney general, who is
investigating a possible cover-up by church officials.

Law arrived at Rome's Fiumicino airport Saturday, a day after tendering his 
resignation. An
airport employee who refused to give his name later confirmed that Law left on a 
flight, but
would not specify his destination. Vatican press officials gave no details about the 
cardinal's
travel plans.

The cardinal had tendered his resignation to a ``deeply saddened'' Pope John Paul II in
Rome, becoming the highest-ranking U.S. church leader toppled by the furor engulfing 
the
Roman Catholic Church.

``It is my fervent prayer that this action may help the Archdiocese of Boston to 
experience
the healing, reconciliation and unity which are so desperately needed,'' Law said in a
statement released by the Vatican. ``To all those who have suffered from my 
shortcomings
and mistakes, I both apologize and from them beg forgiveness.''

Law's resignation only partly mollified the archdiocese's critics, many of whom had
clamored for months for him to step aside.

``It's too little too late,'' said Anthony Muzzi, who says his priest molested him 
three
decades ago. ``It's gone beyond where it ever should have gone, with too much hurt to
everybody.''

The pope named Richard G. Lennon, an auxiliary bishop in Boston, to take temporary
charge of the archdiocese, the fourth largest in the country with about 2 million 
Catholics.

Lennon offered prayers for the victims of sex abuse and pledged ``to work toward 
healing
as a church and furthering the mission of Jesus Christ within our community.''

It was in Boston that the abuse scandal first erupted nearly a year ago, spreading 
across
the country and plunging the church into an unprecedented moral and financial crisis. 
And it
was Law who many felt was at the core of the malignancy.

He first offered his resignation in April, but the pope rejected the idea and the 
cardinal went
back to work. The crisis intensified as more sordid details came to light, including
allegations of priests using drugs and abusing teenagers training to be nuns, telling 
them it
was God's will.

Since his appointment as head of the archdiocese in 1984, the 71- year-old Law had
become one of the pope's closest American advisers.

But in January court papers showed that Law had reassigned former priest John Geoghan
despite numerous accusations of sex abuse. The scandal quickly spread to dioceses 
across
the country, as more victims came forward and Catholics demanded greater accountability
from their leaders.

At least 325 priests have been removed from duty or resigned this year because of
molestation claims. U.S. bishops scrambled to come up with a new policy for handling 
sex
abuse allegations, rules that are still being reviewed by the Vatican.

In recent weeks, thousands more pages of personnel files from the Boston archdiocese
were released, some offering disturbing details of misdeeds by priests. And earlier 
this
week, 58 Boston-area priests issued a petition asking Law to step down.

The lawyers who obtained and released the files are scheduled to question Law beginning
Tuesday in the lawsuit brought by alleged victims of the Rev. Paul Shanley.

``No one should believe that with the resignation of Cardinal Law this problem has 
ended,
though this church is moving in a positive direction with this resignation,'' said 
attorney
Roderick MacLeish, who represents more than 200 alleged victims.

Another plaintiffs' attorney, Mitchell Garabedian, said Friday he intended to file an 
additional
50 to 60 lawsuits against the archdiocese within another month.

The archdiocese is considering filing for bankruptcy protection in response to suits 
filed by
more than 400 alleged victims.

``This is an extraordinary crisis we're going through, and it's not ending now,'' said 
the
Rev. Robert Bullock, one of Law's critics. ``We have a daunting task of rebuilding, and
that's going to take a lot of wisdom and a lot of cooperation and effort by the church 
- not
just from the leaders, but from church members.''

The scandal prompted the formation of a laity group called Voice of the Faithful, 
which was
started by a handful of Catholics in the basement of a Wellesley church and now claims
25,000 members across the country.

Jim Post, president of the group, said Law's resignation brought relief and hope, but 
also
sorrow. He said he believes Law thought he was doing the right thing when he kept
allegations against priests secret and tried to deal with offending priests within the 
church
structure.

``The great sadness here was that everything he was doing was sowing the seeds for
where we are today,'' Post said.









Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002

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