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| Although 70 percent of Chileans describe themselves as Catholic, only a third say they have confidence in the church, a survey showed this week (AFP Photo/ CLAUDIO REYES) |
Santiago (AFP) - Despite a strong Catholic tradition, Chile is witnessing a growing rift between the people and the church, sharpened by a string of sexual abuse scandals that until recently had been ignored by the pope.
The extent
of the rift became clear in January when Pope Francis visited Chile and sparked
outrage by hugging Juan Barros, a controversial bishop who has been accused of
covering up abuses by another priest in the 1980s and '90s.
Questioned
by journalists, Francis responded abruptly, saying there was "not a single
piece of proof" against Barros in remarks that caused widespread anger
among those who had been abused by the other priest, Fernando Karadima.
But the
pontiff apologized and quickly moved to dispatch the Vatican's top abuse
investigator to collect evidence, later acknowledging he had made "grave
mistakes" in his handling of the scandal.
And he also
pledged to meet with the victims, inviting three of them to the Vatican to
discuss the extent of abuse within the church in Chile.
All three
were abused in the 1980s by Karadima, who at the time was an influential priest
who trained seminarians in an affluent area of the capital, Santiago.
It was only
in 2011 that he was convicted of abusing children by the Vatican, which ordered
him to retire to a "life of prayer and penitence" and barred him from
any public ministry.
But the
victims were unable to pursue a criminal case against him in Chile because the
statute of limitations had expired.
80 church
leaders accused
Next month,
the pope will also meet with Chilean bishops to discuss the findings of the
probe by his investigator, Archbishop Charles Scicluna.
Beyond
Karadima, nearly 80 Catholic clergymen have been accused of sexually abusing
children in Chile, according to BishopAccountability, an American NGO that
tracks such cases.
And a
recent poll showed that seven out of 10 Chileans disapprove of the way in which
the Catholic church has handled the scandal.
Aware of
what could be coming down the line, Santiago's archbishop, Ricardo Ezzati,
recently suggested to Barros that he resign "for the good of the people of
God."
The
visibility of the Karadima case and the testimony of the three victims who have
spoken out on behalf of the abused -- Jose Andres Murillo, James Hamilton and
Juan Carlos Cruz -- has dealt a major blow to a church seen as elitist and
distant from the concerns of a modern society.
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Although
most Chileans still identify as Catholic, a growing number feel that
the church
simply doesn't represent them (AFP Photo/Vincenzo PINTO)
|
A growing
disaffection
But Chile's
disaffection with the church began back in the 1990s with the return of
democracy to the country, says Luis Bahamondes, an expert on religion at the
University of Chile.
Despite the
fact that part of the Catholic church sided with those persecuted by the
country's military dictatorship, when democracy returned, it went "from
having a more social role to one that was driven by traditional values,"
distancing itself from many worshipers.
In a
country where some 70 percent of the population describe themselves as
Catholic, only a third say they have confidence in the institution, a Mori
survey revealed this week.
Chileans
had to wait until 2004 before they were able to get divorced, and it was only
in 2017 that women were legally allowed to have an abortion in cases of rape,
or threat to the mother's life or deadly birth defects.
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| On visiting Chile in January, Pope Francis said people needed to see church leaders who were compassionate, who knew how to help people in need (AFP Photo/ MATIAS RECART) |
Same-sex
couples still cannot marry nor can anyone who is transgender change their
identity on a passport, although this year's Oscar's triumph of "A
Fantastic Woman," a Chilean film about a transgender woman, which won best
foreign film, has gone a long way to changing that.
'Increasingly remote from the people'
But
Bahamondes denies talk of a "rift," pointing out that most of the
population still identify as Catholic, saying it is more a sense that they
simple don't feel that the church represents them, which is particularly true
among the youth.
President
Sebastian Pinera, himself a practicing Catholic, on Thursday said he was
saddened by the fact that the church "is increasingly remote, not only
from worshippers but from people in general," which is not only happening
in Chile but across Latin America.
During his
visit in January, Pope Francis himself acknowledge that people prefer leaders
"who know how to be compassionate, how to lend a hand, to stop and help
those who have fallen," while criticizing the "elitist" attitude
of certain clergy.




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