Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Jesuit abuse expert Hans Zollner explains decision to resign from Vatican safeguarding commission

father hans zollner prays with head bowed in his clerics with a gold cloth-covered wall behind him; the purple caps of bishops or cardinals are blurred in front of him in the foregroundJesuit Father Hans Zollner, a leading expert on child protection, prays during a summit on the protection of minors in the church at the Vatican Feb. 23, 2019. Cardinal Angelo De Donatis, papal vicar for Rome, announced March 3 that Father Zollner will be a consultant for the Diocese of Rome's office dedicated to safeguarding minors and vulnerable people. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

ROME (CNS) — The pope’s safeguarding commission, preparing to move into a fresco-ceilinged palace in Rome’s historic center, must not be merely engaged in “PR,” but become a refuge for those abused by clergy and silenced by the church, said leading safeguarding expert Jesuit Father Hans Zollner.

Speaking to journalists April 17 about his decision to leave the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, Father Zollner expressed his hope that the commission’s new home will push the commission to take seriously the principles of “transparency, compliance and responsibility,” the lack of which he cited as the reason for his departure.

The new center must be “a central focus point of encounters with victims from around the globe,” he said. “This is what people are looking for.”

After nearly 10 years of serving on the pope’s advisory body, Father Zollner said that “it is a continuous impression on the part of victims that they are not listened to,” and without naming individuals, he said there are people in the church, who “for personal or emotional reasons, create obstacles” in the fight against abuse.

Father Zollner cited “structural and practical issues” with the commission in a statement released March 29, the date his resignation became public.

Currently about 20 members serve on the commission, whose task, according to Pope Francis when he established it, is to advise him on “the most opportune initiatives for protecting minors and vulnerable adults” and “to promote local responsibility in the particular churches.”

Father Hans Zollner clarified that his resignation was not intended to personally attack anyone or impede the work of the commission, which he called “a success in itself and a great idea by Pope Francis.”

Father Zollner is not the first member of the papal commission to resign. In 2017, two prominent members who were also abuse survivors also left the commission: Marie Collins who cited “resistance,” “reluctance” and a “lack of cooperation” from the then-doctrinal congregation; and Peter Saunders, who said he was frustrated with the pace of change and “disappointed” the commission was not doing what he thought it was intended to achieve.

Father Zollner’s resignation was made public in a statement by the commission’s president, Boston Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley, who Father Zollner said “put roses and flowers” on his departure but did not address the problems he claimed to have repeatedly raised to the commission’s leadership.

At the news conference, he referenced the “rather intense” changes in recent months that led to a lack of transparency in the selection of the commission’s members and made their role in the commission unclear.

The commission’s members, Father Zollner said, no longer proposed projects but were merely assigned tasks, blurring the lines of responsibility of the commission’s members, staff and academic experts.

“If one doesn’t know what they are responsible for” or “who they report to and on what criteria, it leaves people confused,” he said. “This created difficulty not only in terms of compliance — how we can follow clear rules — but also transparency.”

When those principles are threatened, “the door to abuse and coverup opens,” he said.

Hans Zollner: “I’ve seen with my own eyes how Pope Francis takes his time and listens to victims, and he is an example of the attitude that the church must have.”

Father Zollner said there were already problems before Pope Francis put the commission within the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith in June 2022, but nearly a year after the new organization went into force he said he still does not understand how the two bodies are meant work together.

He also clarified that his resignation was not intended to personally attack anyone or impede the work of the commission, which he called “a success in itself and a great idea by Pope Francis” and one that has an “intrinsic value.”

“I’ve seen with my own eyes how Pope Francis takes his time and listens to victims, and he is an example of the attitude that the church must have,” including its bishops, clergy and laypeople who “don’t always want to listen.”

As director of the Institute of Anthropology: Interdisciplinary Studies on Human Dignity and Care at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University, Father Zollner said he remained optimistic about efforts to fight abuse in the church and “always had the impression that the commitment to true justice and prevention is increasing.”

 

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