"I did not want to make this book controversial. I want to express my feelings 
and to explain what happened to me... I want people to know how I have 
suffered," she told The Independent last night, speaking from the town of 
Kozhikode. "People say that everything is OK, but I was in the convent and I 
want them to know what goes on. I have concerns for others."
 

Amen: Autobiography of a nun has infuriated Kerala
 Former nun tells of sex and suffering inside Indian convent

Catholic Church stung by autobiography recounting harassment and abuse
By Andrew Buncombe in Delhi

Friday, 20 February 2009
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/former-nun-tells-of-sex-and-suffering-inside-indian-convent-1627077.html
 


ALAMY
Kerala nuns at prayer. An ex-nun who wrote about life in a Kerala convent says 
she fears for those still living there


 
A former nun's tell-all story which details illicit relationships, sexual 
harassment and bullying in the convent where she spent three decades is causing 
ructions in the Catholic Church in the south Indian state of Kerala.

In Amen – an autobiography of a nun, Sister Jesme says when she became a nun 
she discovered priests were forcing novices to have sex with them. There were 
also secret homosexual relationships among the nuns and at one point she was 
forced into such a relationship by another nun who told her she preferred this 
kind of arrangement as it ruled out the possibility of pregnancy.
"I did not want to make this book controversial. I want to express my feelings 
and to explain what happened to me... I want people to know how I have 
suffered," she told The Independent last night, speaking from the town of 
Kozhikode. "People say that everything is OK, but I was in the convent and I 
want them to know what goes on. I have concerns for others."

Sister Jesme, who quit last year as the principal of a Catholic college in 
Thrissur, alleges senior nuns tried to have her committed to a mental 
institution after she spoke out against them.

In her book, she says that while travelling through Bangalore, she was once 
directed to stay with a purportedly pious priest who took her to a garden "and 
showed me several pairs cuddling behind trees. He also gave me a sermon on the 
necessity of physical love and described the illicit affairs that certain 
bishops and priests had". The priest took her to his home, stripped off his 
clothes and ordered her to do the same.
She also alleges that while senior staff turned a blind eye to the actions of 
more experienced nuns, novices were strongly punished, even for minor 
transgressions. She was not allowed to go home after she learnt her father had 
died. "I was able to see [the body of] my father barely 15 minutes before the 
funeral," she writes. "The [response] of the superiors was that the then senior 
sisters were not even lucky enough to see the bodies of their parents."
When she resigned as a college principal, she claimed convents had become 
"houses of torture", saying: "The mental torture was unbearable. When I 
questioned the church's stand on self-financing colleges and certain other 
issues, they accused me of having mental problems. They have even sent me to a 
psychiatrist. There are many nuns undergoing ill-treatment from the order, but 
they are afraid of challenging it. The church is a formidable fortress."
The allegations are not the only controversy to rock the Catholic Church in 
Kerala. Last summer, a 23-year-old novice committed suicide and left a note 
saying she had been harassed by her Mother Superior. Reports suggest there have 
been a number of similar suicides. And in November, police in Kerala arrested 
two priests and a nun in connection with the killing of Sister Abhaya in a 
notorious 1992 murder.
Last night, a spokesman for the Syro-Malabar order of the Catholic Church, Dr 
Paul Thelakkat, dismissed Sister Jesme's allegations as a "book of 
trivialities". "It's her experiences, but these are things that might creep 
into a society of communal living," he said. Asked if the church would be 
shocked by the allegations, he replied: "Absolutely not. The church knows about 
these things."


With Regards

Abi
 

Knowledge is the best gift, and manner is the best transaction
- Ali


      

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