Sunday, July 20, 2008

'Thánh' xin lỗi dài dài

Các "đấng chăn cừu" của "Tòa Thánh" hay đem mấy con "cừu" non ngoan ngoãn khờ khạo của mình ra lợi dụng tình dục, và vì được "sự che chở của 'thánh' bề trên" nên "các đấng chăn cừu" này đã được tha hồ tự do hoành hành trong nhiều thập niên. Khi xã hội tiến bộ hơn, các con cừu non sau khi trưởng thành mới dám lên tiếng mạnh mẽ tố cáo những chuyện bậy bạ của các "đấng chăn cừu". Những vụ tố cáo này bùng nổ vào năm 2002 ở Mỹ đã gây ra một cuộc khủng hoảng niềm tin lớn trong các đàn cừu ở thế giới phương tây và góp phần làm trầm trọng thêm tình trạng khan hiếm các "đấng chăn cừu" và "cừu" mới để thay thế.
Nhằm cố gằng lấy lại uy tín của mình để tiếp tục bắt "cừu" mới , "Thánh" đã có những tuyên bố xin lỗi trong những chuyến đi thăm những cộng động "cừu" của mình trên thế giới. Những nạn nhân ở Úc sau khi thấy "Thánh" lên tiếng xin lỗi nạn nhân ở Mỹ trong chuyến thăm Mỹ vừa rồi đã đòi hỏi "Thánh" phải xin lỗi họ luôn, và cuối cùng "Thánh" đã phải làm như vậy trong buổi lễ của chuyến đi dự "World Youth Day" do Vatican tổ chức ở Úc. "World Youth Day"? Toàn bộ thanh niên trên thế giới này là của Vatican? Nói về tiếm danh thì cái "Tòa Thánh" này không biết ngượng là gì!
Vì những vụ xin lỗi trên, trong cuộc viếng thăm Ireland sắp tới đây, một nơi có nhiều vụ tố cáo các "cha chăn cừu" lạm dụng tình dục "cừu" non của mình, chắc "Thánh" cũng sẽ phải làm như vậy cho công bằng.
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The Pope's Next Apology Tour?

Friday, Jul. 11, 2008 By JEFF ISRAELY/ROME
Pope Benedict XVI
Pope Benedict XVI
Dario Pignatelli / Reuters
A papal precedent has the power to reverberate to all corners of the planet. So as Benedict XVI sets out for Australia, on what will be the longest and farthest voyage of his papacy thus far, many are wondering what effect the Pope's bold response to priest sex abuse during his recent American trip will have on his visit Down Under and on other travels that will follow.
Catholics from Staten Island to Sydney will remember that coverage of Benedict's April visit to the United States was dominated by his unprecedented attempts to heal the wounds from the clergy sex abuse crisis, including a series of heartfelt remarks and a private meeting in Washington with five victims from the Boston Archdiocese, which was hardest hit by pedophile priests. But though the scandal in the U.S. may have been the most widespread, and certainly most public, there are, in fact, cases of sex abuse all around the Catholic world — as there are, as the Vatican always points out, in all walks of life. In Australia, victims' rights groups are calling on the Pope to respond as he did in the U.S. This comes as news that the Catholic Church in Australia has been forced to review allegations of sexual assault by a priest committed more than 20 years ago. The Melbourne-based support group Broken Rites says it has been contacted by 3,500 people in the past two decades complaining of Church-related abuse.
The trip raises a broader question of whether the Pope set a precedent for himself with his forthright response in the U.S., making it a virtual requirement to address the issue in every country that has suffered from abusive priests. In the same way the pontiff traditionally meets with local leaders of other religions, priests, and political representatives, will the faithful expect a private encounter with victims on each new trip? Or was his response in the United States expected to cover the matter for the Pope?
There are reports that Benedict will travel next year to Ireland, another country where the local Church has been besieged by allegations of priest sex abuse in recent years, where nothing short of the kind of response offered in the U.S. is likely to satisfy local faithful.
The itinerary for the trip in Australia, which includes a four-day rest period after the Pope's plane touches down Sunday following the long flight, does not indicate whether the issue will be confronted. The Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, has indicated that the Pope will apologize in some way for past abuse.
Though he got high marks for his frank and sensitive response in the U.S., some Vatican officials fear that sex abuse issue could overshadow the original objectives of his travels. The main purpose that the 81-year-old Pope is flying so far to reach a country with some five million Catholics is to preside over World Youth Day in Sydney. Benedict's first trip as Pope three years ago was to attend the same event in Cologne, Germany.
The Pope is expected to address the plight of Australia's Aborigines, which John Paul II eloquently brought up during his visit in 1986. The German pontiff will spend the first four days of his visit resting at a retreat outside of Sydney run by the conservative Catholic group Opus Dei.
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Pope apologizes for clergy sex abuse in Australia
By ROHAN SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer Sat Jul 19, 7:00 AM ET
SYDNEY, Australia - Pope Benedict XVI used some of the strongest language yet in his apology Saturday for the sexual abuse of children by Australia's Roman Catholic clergy, but his words were just more of the same for the victims.
The pope said he was "deeply sorry" for the sexual abuse, delivering a strongly worded apology that described their acts as evil and a grave betrayal of trust.
"I am deeply sorry for the pain and suffering the victims have endured and I assure them as their pastor that I too share in their suffering," Benedict said during an address at a Mass at the church's World Youth Day in Sydney.
"Those responsible for these evils must be brought to justice," he said.
The pope said the scandal had badly damaged the church.
"These misdeeds, which constitute so grave a betrayal of trust, deserve unequivocal condemnation," he said. "They have caused great pain, they have damaged the church's witness."
Anthony Foster, the father of two Australian girls who were allegedly raped by a Catholic priest, said he was disappointed that the apology repeated the church's expressions of regret but offered no practical assistance for victims.
"What we haven't had is an unequivocal, unlimited practical response that provides for all the victims for their lifetime," he said. "The practical response needs to include both financial help ... and psychological help."
Support groups for victims of church abuse in Australia, whose numbers are not known but who activists say are in the thousands, say the church covered up of the scale of the problem and fought compensation claims lodged in civil courts.
"Sorry is not enough. Victims want action, not just words," the Broken Rites group said in a post on its Web site.
"It is just a drop in a bucket — a bucket full of tears that all of us who work with victims have been sitting with for 25 to 30 years in Australia," said Helen Last from the victims' group In Good Faith and Associates.
Benedict has expressed regret before about the clergy abuse scandal that has rocked the church in recent years — notably during a visit to the United States in April when he also met privately with a small number of victims.
But the language of Saturday's apology was stronger than the pope's comments in the United States.
Vatican spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi said the pope added the words that he was deeply sorry to the original text given to reporters because he wanted to "personally underline" that he felt close to the victims.
There was no immediate word whether Benedict would meet with victims during his Australia trip, which ends Monday. Foster has said he wants a meeting with the pontiff during the trip.
The pontiff is in Australia to lead hundreds of thousands of pilgrims in World Youth Day, a global celebration meant to inspire a new generation of Catholics. They welcomed the apology.
"I think it's a good gesture, but the person who is responsible for these actions should be made responsible," said Daniel Bidinger, 25, of Germany. "The church should be open about it and shouldn't cover up these incidents."
During his appearances in Australia, Benedict has spoken about the need to strengthen traditional Christian values including charity and chastity, and decried the selfishness and greed of today's "cult of material possessions."
About 500 people protested against the Vatican's policies opposing contraception, abortion and homosexuality, holding a contest for the T-shirt that would most annoy Roman Catholics and chanting: "The pope is wrong, put a condom on!"
The boisterous protest at a square in the city's center included inflated condoms floating above the crowd and some participants dressed as nuns and priests. There were speeches supporting sex education and safe sex practices.
Police on horseback and on foot patrolled the protest. Police led away a protester who had thrown condoms at pilgrims.
Papal apologies have been few in the church's long history, mostly confined to correcting historical errors such as condemning Galileo for maintaining that the Earth is not the center of the universe.
But Benedict also said he was "deeply sorry" regarding remarks on Islam he made in Germany in 2006 that linked the religion to violence and set off a fury across the Muslim world.
Some cardinals resisted Pope John Paul II's plan for a sweeping apology timed for the new millennium in 2000. But he went ahead, asking forgiveness for the sins of Catholics, including wrongs inflicted on Jews, women and minorities.
Benedict joined more than 100,000 pilgrims who camped out at a horse racetrack in Sydney. As they waved candles and sat on their sleeping bags, the pope stressed the importance of their faith.
"From the forlorn child in a Darfur camp, or a troubled teenager, or an anxious parent in any suburb, or perhaps even now from the depth of your own heart, there emerges the same human cry for recognition, for belonging, for unity," he said.
He will return to the track on Sunday to lead a Mass marking the culmination of the World Youth Day festival. A crowd estimated at more than 200,000 is expected.
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Associated Press writer Tanalee Smith contributed to this report.











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