Children sadistically tormented and sexually abused at Ettal monastery in Bavaria
Submitted by Jan Rosenkrantz on Sat, 2010-05-01 20:19
Children
were
"sadistically tormented and also sexually abused" at a Catholic
monastery in Pope Benedict's native Bavaria, according to a new report
commissioned by the Roman Catholic Church. A lawyer investigating
accusations of abuse
in a Benedictine monastery school in Ettal presented a final report to
the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising Monday, including 173 pages of
victims' accounts of abuse. Reuters states that: "Investigations quite clearly show that for decades up until around 1990,
children and adolescents were brutally abused in the Ettal monastery,"
Thomas Pfister said in a statement. "The
number of victims' accounts has increased significantly since the
intermediary report of March 5," added Pfister, who said last month that
hundreds of pupils had been beaten and some sexually abused at the
school. An archdiocese spokesman
said he could not comment on the specific number of victims before a
news conference Tuesday. A growing
sex abuse scandal has rocked confidence in Germany's Catholic Church. A survey published Monday found that a
quarter of the country's Catholics were considering quitting the church
in the wake of reports of hundreds of cases, some many decades old, of
sexual abuse by clerics. In
Pfister's report last month, the lawyer said there had been very extreme
cases of mishandling at the school in Ettal in southern Bavaria which
would normally have been punished with long prison sentences. He also said that one monk now dead had
committed "serial sexual harassment and sexual abuse on small and older
children." Last week, clerics in
Germany used Easter sermons to pray for the victims as public sentiment
against the Church turned decidedly negative. Thousands quit the Church
in the last month. A victim
hotline set up last week in a bid to win back trust by Stephan
Ackermann, Bishop of Trier and the Church's expert on abuse, was swamped
with 12,293 calls in its first week and was briefly shut down. Only
calls from 2,670 could be answered. Archdiocese
Vicar General Peter Beer said Monday the Ettal monastery was setting
about the difficult process of dealing with its past in an open and
"impressive way."
Publisher:
Reuters 











