St John Paul II’s actions on abuse questioned before canonisation

Supporters of St John Paul II have defended his track record on dealing with clerical sexual abuse in the hours leading up to his canonisation.

At a briefing 48 hours before the ceremony, papal biographer George Weigel said there was an “information gap” between the United States and the Holy See up to 2002.

“But once he [John Paul] became fully informed in April of that year, he acted decisively to deal with those problems,” Weigel added.

Former Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Vallis said that at first the former pope did not understand the “cancer” of clerical sexual abuse.

But addressing this scandal started “very clearly” under John Paul’s pontificate, he said.

Critics say that the Pope should have acted against Fr Marcial Maciel, the disgraced founder of the Legionaries of Christ who was found to have been a serial abuser.

John Paul II had praised Maciel and promoted the Legionaries during his time as Pope.

Msgr Slawomir Oder, the postulator of John Paul II’s cause, said an investigation had been carried out and found “there was no personal involvement of the Holy Father in this matter”.

But Fr Thomas Doyle wrote in the National Catholic Reporter that there was never an information gap between the US and the Holy See on clerical abuse.

Fr Doyle had worked in the Vatican embassy in the US in the 1980s and had first-hand experience of the information transfer on this issue.

“It is hard to believe that this pope, who was supposed to be one of the smartest men alive at the time, could not have understood the gravity of significant numbers of priests raping and violating little children,” Fr Doyle said.

John Paul’s actions after 2002 were ineffectual, and he was ultimately responsible for short-circuiting the investigation of Marciel, he wrote.

“Perhaps the most egregious nonaction was completely ignoring the pleas of thousands of victims, many of whom wrote directly to him,” Fr Doyle charged.

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