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Irish priests beat, raped children: report
Wed May 20, 2009 11:26am EDT
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By Padraic Halpin and Carmel Crimmins
DUBLIN (Reuters) - Priests beat and raped children during decades of abuse in Catholic-run institutions in Ireland, a report said Wednesday.
Orphanages and industrial schools in 20th century Ireland were places of fear, neglect and endemic sexual abuse, the report said.
The Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse, established by the government in 2000, blasted successive generations of priests, nuns and Brothers for beating, starving and, in some cases raping, children in Ireland's network of industrial and reformatory schools between the 1930s and 1990s.
"A climate of fear, created by pervasive, excessive and arbitrary punishment, permeated most of the institutions and all those run for boys," the report said.
"Children lived with the daily terror of not knowing where the next beating was coming from."
The five-volume report, published after a nine-year investigation into institutions now closed down, also slammed the Department of Education for its deferential attitude to the religious orders and its failure to stop the abuse.
The Commission interviewed 1,090 men and women who were housed in 216 institutions including children's homes, hospitals and schools.
Many of the children were sent into church care because of school truancy, petty crime or because they were unmarried mothers or their offspring.
Tom Sweeney, who spent five years at industrial schools including two years at one where the report said sexual abuse was a "chronic problem," said the Artane Industrial School continued to haunt its former residents.
"Anybody that came into Artane did not come out a happy person and unfortunately there are a lot of people that have committed suicide, there are a lot of people that have ended up in hospitals and they have been forgotten about.
"You didn't forget about Artane and you never forget about it."
MORAL AUTHORITY
Revelations of abuse, including a string of scandals involving priests molesting young boys, have eroded the Catholic Church's moral authority in Ireland, once one of the most religiously devout countries in the world.
The inquiry, conducted at a reported cost of 70 million euros ($95.16 million), was announced in 1999 by then Prime Minister Bertie Ahern after he apologized to victims following revelations made in a series of television documentaries.
It recommended that a memorial should be erected to all the victims of abuse in institutions and recommended that national childcare policy be reviewed on a regular basis. Continued...
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