Home     Xml Feed    Submit Articles     Editor Login Contact us
  RSS Feeds   Add us to favorites
  Make us your home page
CATEGORIES
Advice
Alternative Energy
Anger Management
Apple Iphone
Arts & Entertianment
Attorney Info
Automotive
Autoresponders
Blogging
Business - General
Careers & Jobs
CD Duplication
Celebrity Gossip
Child Care
Cigars
Computer Security & Online Safety
Computers & Internet
Credit Repair
Criminology
Dating & Personals
Diamonds/Jewelry
Diet
Ebay
Economy
Education News
Email Marketing
Entertainment News
Exercise
Ezine Marketing
Finance & Investment
Fishing
Food & Drink
Gardening & Landscaping
Google Adsense
Headline News
Health & Fitness
Home & Family
Home Improvement
Hunting
Infants
Insurance
Internet Marketing
Investments
Ipod Video
Legal
Money
Mortgages
MySpace
Online Business
Other
Outdoor Equipment
Personal Health
Pets & Animals
Podcasting
Politics & Government
Radio
Real Estate
Reference & Education
Relationships
Tantra
Religion & Faith
Remote Control
Retirement Planning
Scams
Self Improvement/motivation
Sitemaps
Social
Sports & Recreation
Sunglasses
Teeth
Top News
Travel & Leisure
Vacations
Various
Video Cameras
Video Games
Video Streaming
Viral Marketing
Web Design
Writing & Speaking
Youtube


Abuse Activist gets threatened by Priest
 Author: David Townsend
 Website: http://www.articlesofinfo.com
 Added: Fri, 19 Sep 2008 09:36:02 -0500
 Category: Various

Printable version | Email | Bookmark

The leader of Maine's Roman Catholics has taken the unusual step of threatening to punish an outspoken advocate for people who were sexually abused by priests.


Paul Kendrick of Freeport has been banned from the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and warned in a letter that if he tries again to contact Portland Bishop Richard Malone he risks losing any right "to participate fully in the sacramental life of the church."


Kendrick, a co-founder of the lay reform group Voice of the Faithful, has been a vocal critic of how church leaders have responded to abuse claims and treated victims.


"It's a not-so-subtle attempt to silence me," Kendrick said Monday. "My response is that it's not about me. It's about protecting children today and helping and supporting those who were abused. He will not silence me from speaking out on those issues."


Sue Bernard, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Portland, said the bishop doesn't object to criticism, but she said Kendrick's actions have gone far beyond that.


Kendrick has protested outside churches, inundated the diocese with mail and e-mail, participated in a public confrontation with Malone and even showed up at an out-of-state meeting the bishop attended, Bernard said. She called it a campaign of harassment that ultimately could undermine Malone's ministry.


"For five years, we've really looked the other way. The bishop let him have free rein basically but we want him to know that from this point on, he must stop," she said.


Nicholas Cafardi, a canon lawyer and former dean of Duquesne Law School, said bishops across the country have been the targets of similar aggressive tactics. But he said he'd never heard of a bishop using church law, in this case the threat of an "interdict," against activists.


"It's extremely unusual," said Cafardi, who had been an original member of the National Review Board, the lay panel the U.S. bishops created in 2001 to monitor their response to the abuse scandal.


Kendrick got word of the potential penalty after he told the bishop in a letter that he planned to attend Christmas Eve Mass.


The activist then received a criminal trespass order that barred him from the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Portland, the chancery and Malone's residence. He was also served an order to cease and desist from harassing Malone.


In a letter, the vicar general, the Rev. Andrew Dubois, further warned Kendrick of church-imposed penalties if he fails to abide by terms of a church order, which forbids Kendrick from coming within 500 feet of the bishop or of being in the same building when he's present.


The Rev. Tom Doyle, a priest and advocate for victims who is representing Kendrick, said the church has threatened to prevent Kendrick from receiving Holy Communion if he doesn't comply. There has been no threat of excommunication, which would be the ultimate penalty, Doyle said.


Doyle, who works from Virginia, said he can't find any basis for the diocese's actions, but he said church leaders have been angered by the aggressive tactics of some activists. Doyle's work with abuse victims cost him a promising career as a canon laywer in the church.


"One of the biggest sins in the Catholic Church is to criticize a bishop," Doyle said.


Paul Kellen of the National Survivor Advocates Coalition described Kendrick as a committed Christian whose heart is in the right place.


"Just sitting back and saying, 'This is too bad,' is not enough. The point is if you call yourself a Christian, then you're called to get off your butt and do something," said Kellen, of Medford, Mass., who has protested outside the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Boston.



source: the boston channel

RSS to JavaScript

View all David Townsend's articles


About the Author:

More Various articles

   ARTICLE SEARCH
  
Search our article database!






:- Recent Articles
iPod iPhone 3GS Firmware Download

:- Top Resources

-->
<

Copyright 2010 Articlesofinfo.com. All Rights Reserved.


Powered by: Content Management