PRESS CONFERENCE:CARDINAL SEÁN Brady and four of his fellow bishops yesterday strenuously defended the spiritual value and potentially healing quality of their two-day meeting in Rome with Pope Benedict XVI and senior members of the Curia.
Asked if he was worried that Irish public opinion might see the meeting as a disappointment, given that it failed to produce an invitation for the Irish victims of clerical abuse to meet with the pope, Cardinal Brady said: “I hope not, the question of the victims was a main concern right throughout the meeting. The meeting was held to help the Holy Father put the final touches to his letter which will address the victims . . . appropriately.”
He continued: “The discussion was frank, the difficulties were raised but at the centre of it all was concern about how to help the victims heal completely.
“This is one step that will have to be taken. Ultimately the Holy Father will give us a message of encouragement to deal with this matter honestly and courageously and then it will be up to us to continue the work which is not just beginning now, it has been going on for many years. This meeting has given us new courage.”
Cardinal Brady was speaking at a news conference held at Vatican Radio yesterday afternoon, following the third and final session of the meeting with the pope.
He was flanked by Bishop Joseph Duffy of Clogher, Bishop Michael Smith of Meath, Bishop Dennis Brennan of Ferns and Bishop Brendan Kelly of Achonry.
All five church leaders said that their meeting with Pope Benedict had been exceptionally positive and helpful.
Cardinal Brady said they had had two days of “intense discussions”, adding that the Holy Father is “extremely concerned about this issue”.
Dr Smith admitted that prior to the meeting, he had had reservations about just how useful it might prove to be, adding: “I found it was as productive a meeting as I have ever attended, with very clear, frank and open discussions . . . The bishops were listened to and responded to.”
He continued: “The pope was there for all the meeting, showing tremendous engagement and he thanked everyone for their openness, frankness, honesty and adherence to truth.”
Dr Duffy struck the same note of gratitude, saying: “We came to Rome in a mood to listen, to listen to each other and with the expectation that we would be listened to. I would say that both of those expectations were fulfilled. We listened to each other and, extraordinary as it sounds, we heard stories from each other that we hadn’t heard before, a measure of the intensity of the discussion and the openness of it. We were listened to by the Holy Father himself, who is a marvellous listener.”
Dr Brennan said that he had been impressed by having “the Holy Father listening to us for a day and a half”, adding: “[The pope] was listening to the story of the Irish church and especially the sad story at the moment. I was also struck by how pained he was by this issue . . . People don’t always realise how painful it is for him to listen to these stories. This was a wonderful opportunity and a great privilege.
“The Holy Father encouraged us in our ongoing dialogue with the victims and survivors and this is what we are taking out of this, this is not the end of anything, it is the beginning and the continuation of the dialogue and the meetings and the caring that we’ve tried to have with the victims. I take that with me as an encouragement to continue the work of healing at home.”
Cardinal Brady rejected media suggestions that the Irish bishops were divided on how to handle the sex abuse crisis. While admitting “tensions”, he strenuously claimed that “there is no disunity amongst the Irish bishops concerning the importance of safeguarding of children”.
In relation to the position of Bishop Martin Drennan of Galway, whose resignation has been sought by victims’ groups, Cardinal Brady said that the issue was one for the Holy See and not for this week’s two-day meeting.
Cardinal Brady did, however, acknowledge the need for all the bishops to do a “real act of penance”, saying: “There have been failures in our leadership. As one of the victims told us down in Maynooth, the only way we will regain credibility will be through our humiliation. That is what we are setting out to do. Tomorrow is the beginning of Lent, the time of penance and we must begin with ourselves, do a real penance and have a change of heart.”
Asked if he felt that the Irish bishops had been scapegoats, abandoned by the Vatican, the real source of the policy of systematic cover-up of abusive priests, Cardinal Brady said: “We do not feel like scapegoats, on the contrary we are very encouraged by the offers of help from various Curia cardinals.”
In response to questions about the refusal of the papal nuncio in Ireland to appear before a Dáil foreign affairs committee to answer questions linked to the Murphy report, Cardinal Brady said: “I have raised that matter today with the secretary of state. What they tell me is that the commitment of the Holy See and the people in the nunciature is to strengthen relationships between the Holy See and Ireland, but it is not the practice that a nuncio should appear before a parliamentary committee.”
Finally, all the bishops rejected any suggestion that the absence of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin from yesterday’s news conference was due to tensions among the bishops. This was “most certainly not” the case, said Cardinal Brady.