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Face facts, says LCWR official, sisters have been part of abuse scandal

Dan Stockman
Holy Cross Sister Sharlet Wagner delivers her presidential address
Holy Cross Sister Sharlet Wagner delivers her presidential address Aug. 15, 2019, in Scottsdale, Ariz., during the Leadership Conference of Women Religious Assembly. Sister Wagner completed her one-year term as president and was succeeded by Sister Jayne Helmlinger, general superior of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange. She was chosen president-elect at the 2018 assembly. CNS photo/Dan Stockman, courtesy Global Sisters Report

Catholic sisters must face the reality that they have also been part of the sexual abuse scandal in the church, said Holy Cross Sister Sharlet Wagner.

“We have all been affected by this scandal. We have listened to the trauma of survivors, and we have felt shame for the church we love and outrage over the crimes committed,” Sister Wagner said Aug. 15 during the Leadership Conference of Women Religious Assembly in Scottsdale.

“We have journeyed with our lay sisters and brothers as they have grappled with what it means to continue to be faithful in this moment in our church,” she said. “And we have heard the stories of women religious, both in the United States and around the world, who have themselves been abused by clergy or other religious.”

But the guilt does not fall on priests and bishops alone, she said.

“It is a source of deep pain for us that in some instances, our own sisters have been perpetrators of the abuse,” she said. “This is a truth we must not attempt to avoid.”

She spoke on the issue in her presidential address. Her one-year term as LCWR president ended during the Aug. 13-16 assembly, which drew nearly 700 women religious and guests.

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Sisters also must recognize that abuse has made it difficult for many to see religious leaders as signs of hope, said Sister Wagner.

“We must recognize that we serve during a time in which too many of our religious leaders have given grave scandal,” she said. “The stories that continue to emerge of abuse in our church shock the conscience. Bodies have been violated, and souls have been abused by some of those charged with shepherding God’s people.”

Sister Wagner said there is no easy answer for addressing the issue, but it must be faced head-on.

“We can begin by listening, by being present to the pain, by rejecting the path of cover-ups and secrecy, by calling for perpetrators to be held accountable, by resolving to do what we can to promote a church in which both body and soul are held sacred and each one’s dignity is respected,” she added.

Sister Wagner’s words came one day after members of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, had scheduled a protest outside the convention hall, saying LCWR has failed to address abuse by nuns.

The protest never took place, however, because security personnel at the resort where the assembly was held denied demonstrators access to the property, which extends for blocks around the hotel and convention center.

SNAP officials say while they remain highly critical of how the church’s bishops have handled the abuse crisis, they say sisters are acting “far more recklessly, callously and secretively” than bishops are.

While most bishops publish the names of credibly accused abusive priests, have adopted a national policy on abuse and let abuse victims speak to their full assembly, sisters have done none of those things despite repeated requests, the group said in its announcement of the protest.

“We believe there are more priest victims than nun victims, but we also believe there are more nun victims than anyone would imagine,” said SNAP’s northwest district director Mary Dispenza in the statement, which accused LCWR of overlooking abuse victims and refusing “to do any real outreach,” which leaves many of these victims “trapped in shame, silence and self-blame.”

In response, LCWR officials pointed to a Feb. 13 statement on “sexual abuse by Catholic sisters,” in which they noted they worked with a team of professionals to create a bibliography of written materials, speakers, websites and audiovisual materials that congregations can use to educate their members on abuse.

LCWR also worked with partners to help congregations develop and evaluate policies, practices and procedures, and to identify and develop additional resources for congregations to draw on, according to the statement.

“LCWR and its members are deeply committed to responding justly and compassionately to allegations of past misconduct and to preventing future incidents,” it said.

Stockman is national correspondent for Global Sisters Report.

 


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