SNAP Aotearoa Welcomes Catholic Diocese Of Dunedin’s Decision To Rename Kavanagh College
SNAP Aotearoa also fully supports the official request to
rename
Christchurch’s Marylands Reserve and Marylands
Pl along with two other
streets named after Catholic
places associated with horrific clerical
and religious
child sexual abuse.
SNAP encourages the renaming of
all religious institutions that honour
persons who failed
to protect children. It is senseless for relative
Church
and Council authorities to wait until the Royal
Commission
publishes its final reports before doing the
right thing.
SNAP is grateful to the Metropolitan
Archbishop of Aotearoa-New
Zealand John Cardinal Dew for
his efforts to address these
complex
issues.
However, claims that Canon Law and
the order of the day justify the
transferring of abusive
priests to another location so as to avoid
accountability
under criminal law and prevent personal embarrassment,
is
another example of actions devoid of Catholic morality. It
is also
an act of hypocrisy by church
administrators.
SNAP does not agree with claims that
bishops who sent abusive priests
away for treatment,
while ignoring the consequences on those actually
abused,
acted appropriately. Victms’ needs were ignored.
Morally
deficient Canon Law cannot be used to justify
inappropriate practises
that were nothing more than a
deceitful coverup.
Bishop Kavanagh is not the only
bishop who failed to act on complaints
of sexual abuse by
his priests. SNAP has complaints against other
Catholic
bishops including the late Cardinal McKeefry (who also has
a
school named after him). These complaints also need to
be
investigated.
SNAP, in seeking justice, advocates a victims-centred response at all times.
SNAP encourages Bishop Dooley of Dunedin to
reach out to all people
wounded by clerical and religious
abuse in his
diocese.