Suzanne Breen in Paris
One of Ireland’s best-known priests has called on the Catholic church to halt recruitment to the priesthood until it has properly addressed the issue of clerical child abuse.
Fr Aidan Troy accused the church of “a wholly inadequate response to the horrendous abuse that has been uncovered”. He said the hierarchy must “take radical action rather than engage in window dressing”. The church here should ask the pope to visit Ireland to publicly apologise for the destruction of children’s lives, he said.
Troy came to prominence as parish priest of Holy Cross in north Belfast. For three months, he walked with the Ardoyne schoolchildren and their parents past a violent loyalist protest.
Troy wanted to stay in Belfast but was controversially moved to Paris last year. “I’m ashamed by the church’s response to the Ryan report. It has been more about improving the church’s image than tackling fundamental problems,” he said.
“In the 1970s, I was sent around schools to recruit pupils to the priesthood. I couldn’t do that now. Back then, parents were delighted if their sons chose to become priests. Now, most would understandably oppose it and try to talk them out of it.”
Troy said the church couldn’t continue as before because trust had been shattered: “The church must halt recruitment, reform and reorganise, then begin again. Instead, it says ‘this abuse is awful’ but continues its old failed ways. We have a broken, wounded church and those wounds are self-inflicted.”
Troy also questioned the way priests are moved from parishes: “I received a phone call saying I was out of Ardoyne. That was it. The procedure was hardly sensitive or democratic.”
Troy was saddened but not surprised by recent rioting in Ardoyne where there is a rising dissident presence: “The area, like many others, has seen no peace dividend in terms of jobs, housing or education. It has been let down.”
He called for dialogue with dissidents: “Somebody needs to point out the absolute error of their ways to them, but to talk to them with respect.”
August 23, 2009 Sunday Tribune.
the people of Ireland must abolish the priest and brother hood because it is only a place for them to do there dirty work on children without been prosecuted because if they were caught out side they would be certainly sent to prison for many years and that is a fact and the bishops and hierarchies should give up there collars ant stop saying nothing has happened they think it is quit normal for them fondle little children from my view they should be all castrated for what they have done and no mistake or better when they enter the priest hood or brother hood the must be castrated yours j a mc cormack
Respect is earned!
“Somebody needs to point out the absolute error of their ways to them, but to talk to them with respect.”
So says Padre Troy. But he’s not talking about the Creators of the malcontented “dissidents” in the Ardoyne, namely, the Roman Catholic Emperors, is he.
I’ve heard Aidan Troy talking on Irish radio many times and I’m not at all impressed by him; he comes across as a two-faced ****** to me, i.e., a die-hard Roman Catholic himself!
Andrew (above) is right. It will take a century (best part thereof) to sort out the catastrophic mess Rome has made of the collective Irish psyche. As the saying goes “Rome wasn’t built in a day”. And it took a long time to make the Irish (per se) the fear-ridden people they are today.
Back to my bunker!
It would take a century to sort out the problems the catholic church has in Ireland.
Patsy McGarry’s piece in the IT –
http://tinyurl.com/warpedview
discusses the warped view of sexuality withing the church here since the Famine.