The priest as a predator

The priest as a predator

Just as some Nigerians were breathing easy that the avalanche of
sexual abuse that has rocked the Catholic world in the west will bypass us, the
case of Richard Burke surfaced this week. An Irish Bishop, Burke served as an
Archbishop in the Diocese of Benin City in Edo State and during his stint as a priest
in Warri, had a sexual relationship with a Dolores Atwood.

So far the priest has not denied the act, except to say that the
girl was twenty-one when they, “had a caring relationship that began in the
latter part of 1989, when she was 21 and I was 40. I was posted back to Ireland
in March 1990, and returned to Nigeria in April 199.” Atwood says she was 14
when the priest had sex with her, which would make it a case of sexual abuse.
In his letter of resignation Richard Burke apologized for failing to honour his
vow of celibacy.

That this singular case of sexual abuse by a Catholic priest has
surfaced in Nigeria shouldn’t be surprising at all, what is somewhat puzzling
is that many more have not. Research shows that membership of the Catholic
Church in Africa skyrocketed from 1.9 million in 1900 to 130 million in 2000
and Nigeria boasts of about 25million out of that, yet only one case of sexual
abuse has come to light. Considering the fact that we live in a country where
talk about sexual abuse is almost non-existent we may never get to the bottom
of the issue. Even as we speak, many are more likely to berate Ms. Atwood
instead of questioning the priest’s wrong doing.

Revelations in the United States and Europe have also shown that
many of the sexually abused are young boys. In a society like ours, will any
Nigerian boy or man be able to come out and say, “I was sexually abused by my
priest”? Or if there are abused boys, would they understand what happened to
them as abuse? Many would rather die with the hurt and pain or simply dismiss
the encounter, while the priest walks free to prey on; such is the respect we
sometimes have for men of the cloth.

It is instructive that the St Patrick’s Missionary society ‘
found no evidence to corroborate the allegation of child sexual abuse.” But the
Vatican is investigating further.

We live in a society where many laws are often disregarded and
often rarely enforced, a double tragedy because any errant priests would know
this and their abused victims would too. What will come of it if he or she were
to confess, apart from the priest resigning? Will our government seek redress
for its citizens? Do we have a solid judiciary system that will address the
issues?

It will be interesting to see how the Pope and the Vatican
respond to Ms. Atwood’s case in Nigeria. We have seen how the other nations
like America and Britain have shaken an apology out of the hesitant Holy Papal.

We never ask for apologies and very soon we start to hear “let’s
forgive and forget, nobody is perfect, everything is in God’s hands”; then
follows the usual – let us pray about it. But while we are praying about
priests sexually abusing our young ones, we should also start talking about it
and loudly too.

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