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- <text id=93TT1850>
- <title>
- June 07, 1993: The Secrets of St. Lawrence
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 44
- The Secrets of St. Lawrence
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A Capuchin school provides Catholicism's latest sex-abuse scandal
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD N. OSTLING--With reporting by Elizabeth Taylor/Oconomowoc
- </p>
- <p> Anxiety crackled in the air last week as New York's John Cardinal
- O'Connor summoned all his 1,200 priests to afternoon-long, closed-door
- briefings. The urgent topic: how to handle child-molestation
- cases. The archdiocese faces two civil suits over misdeeds of
- clerics, and O'Connor warns that "a grenade could explode at
- any time, and another and another." He had reason to urge caution.
- Since 1984, most dioceses have been rocked by episodes of priestly
- abuse. And last week a long-awaited document administered a
- new shock to Midwest Roman Catholics.
- </p>
- <p> In Wisconsin a lengthy investigation commissioned by the Capuchins
- said that nine friars stand accused of sexual misconduct at
- a rural boys' boarding school run by the venerable order. The
- report, which mentioned no names, disclosed that at least 21
- students of the school--St. Lawrence Seminary in Mount Calvary,
- Wisconsin--say they were accosted by clerics between 1968
- and 1992. The complaints against six ranged from enticement
- to intercourse with the children, offenses that would have produced
- criminal charges if they had been reported.
- </p>
- <p> The pattern of molestation was compounded by students' reports
- of shocking administrative negligence by friars at the school.
- Some of the allegations emerged in response to inquiries that
- the investigators mailed to alumni. But several students had
- leveled accusations while they were enrolled at St. Lawrence
- and the staff did little. Nor were the boys' parents typically
- notified. The sins of St. Lawrence were not random incidents,
- asserts Robert L. Elliott, an attorney representing several
- alleged victims. "It wasn't a guy or a couple of guys. It was
- a generation of guys. They treated this as a hunting preserve."
- </p>
- <p> The secrets of St. Lawrence began to emerge last November. After
- J. Peter Isely, 32, wrote a piece for the Milwaukee Journal
- on behalf of abuse victims, other alums contacted him. "I found
- out I wasn't alone," explains a man who says he was fondled
- by his geometry tutor. Others began revealing sinister memories
- of homosexual rape and coercive relationships. Weeks later,
- the Journal broke the first story on St. Lawrence. Like victims
- elsewhere, the St. Lawrence graduates have organized Project
- Samuel to share their psychic pain and to lobby for a cleanup.
- In April, Isely founded a therapy center specializing in clergy
- victims, at Rogers Memorial Hospital in Oconomowoc.
- </p>
- <p> When last week's report was issued, St. Lawrence had already
- closed for the school year. Father Kenneth Reinhart, who completes
- his term as Midwest superior of the Capuchins this week, stated,
- "We cannot undo the past, no matter how much we would like to.
- We can only help those who were injured to overcome their trauma
- and lead normal lives." He also pledged future reforms. Elliott,
- however, complained that the report gave no sense of the suffering
- young victims endured. Says Isely: "When the priest stole my
- body, he stole my childhood."
- </p>
- <p> The report is by no means the end of the matter. The investigators
- will give the order dossiers on accused friars and administrators.
- A former St. Lawrence brother, who has pleaded not guilty, will
- go on trial in September. A civil damage suit has been filed
- against the order, and others are likely. Meanwhile there is
- an eerie tie to another scandal. Father Gale Leifeld, identified
- by victims as an abuser, who was promoted to principal of St.
- Lawrence, later became academic dean of Sacred Heart School
- of Theology, near Milwaukee. The school recently removed Leifeld
- and another administrator accused of sexual harassment of five
- seminarians in the past two years. An interim report on those
- incidents is due this week.
- </p>
- <p> As devastated as the Capuchins have been, they can regard last
- week's report as a noteworthy achievement. The order's leaders
- displayed courage in commissioning the independent investigation
- aimed at preventing future abuse. Although the report concludes
- that the Capuchins installed a good policy in 1988 urging employees
- to report suspected abuse, it proposes tighter procedures to
- make the Capuchin system a model for others.
- </p>
- <p> Father Andrew Greeley estimates that the church across the U.S.
- spends $50 million a year on therapy for priests and damage
- judgments to victims--and that 2,000 to 4,000 priests may
- have abused 100,000 underage victims. Some Catholics wonder
- whether the scandals point to underlying problems in the priesthood.
- Robert W. Pledl, a Catholic attorney representing St. Lawrence
- victims, is struck by how insensitive and defensive the clergy
- were. "I just don't think that would happen if priests had families
- of their own," says Pledl, who thinks mandatory celibacy creates
- a priestly world where "women and children are the enemy." Whether
- or not that is fair, the accumulating scandals signal the need
- for reform.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-