5/23/09

Australian Church apologizes for abuse of migrant children


Migrant children were on average just nine years old

(For other posts on this topic, click here.)

H/T to Clerical Whispers for this deeply disturbing report from the BBC:
Australia's Roman Catholic Church publicly apologised on Thursday to British and Maltese child migrants who suffered abuse including rape, whippings and slave labour in religious institutions.

The apology was delivered at a parliamentary inquiry into child migration.

Two church bodies said the programme, in which more than 1,000 British and 310 Maltese children were sent to Australian Catholic schools between the late 1930s and 1960s, resulted in "suffering and dislocation".

Many children were raped, whipped, stripped of their names and forced to scramble for food thrown on the floor. Some children were also made to do hard labour, including construction work, at some schools.

The Church said it has allocated about $1m to help former child immigrants go back to their countries of origin, especially to meet relatives, as well as for counselling.

The child migration scheme, partly organised by the Church, was aimed at bringing "pure white stock" from Britain to former colonies. It ran from about 1850 right up to 1967.

Spokesman Tony Shanahan said the Church was "painfully aware" that some children suffered physical, sexual and emotional abuse.

"We are sorry that some of those vulnerable children who should have found care and protection in our Catholic institutions suffered abuse."

Mr Shanahan added that the UK and Australian government should also take responsibility for the issue.

The International Association of Former Child Migrants Vice- President, Don Coleshill, who was shipped to Australia from Britain as a five-year-old in 1937, accepted the apology with "a very large grain of salt".

"They are only hollow words unless you say you want to do something to substantiate or support the apology," he said.

Although numbers are unclear, it is believed that a total of 130,000 were "exported" from Britain over a period of 100 years.

Children left in homes, due to broken marriages or family pressures, were sent from Britain, which in turn was relieved of caring from them.

Although classified as orphans, most children did in fact have parents, who were often unaware their children were sent away.

The full details of the scheme emerged as late as 1998 during a parliamentary inquiry in Britain.

The inquiry found that migrant children were subjected to systematic abuse in religious schools in Australia, New Zealand and other countries.
Here's a government report which includes response from several religious orders going back to 1993. Here's a report from Catholic Social Services in Australia with quotes from the apology statement (which I've been unable to locate online).

-ConcordPastor

5 comments:

  1. What does this story and that of the abuse in Ireland that took place over decades say about our Church? What does it say about the societies that turned a blind eye to such horrific suffering of children? What does it say about the legal systems that allowed this to continue and even today side with the Christian Brothers in their lawsuit to shield the perpetrators? What are we to do in order that this can never happen again....anywhere?

    Tom Doyle has an article in NCR which, in my opinion, should be read by anyone who has empathy for the victims and survivors of such systemic abuse.

    Several years ago I read Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes and saw the movie "The Magdalene Sisters." Both made a deep impression on me. How could members of the clergy and religious be so cruel to vulnerable children?

    Where are the voices of the 70 "Notre Dame issue" bishops on this issue? Where have they been for decades? What will it take for them to speak out with the same passion? Why the deafening silence from Rome?

    Rosemary

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  2. I have read the article by Tom Doyle that Rosemary has mentioned in her post. It is available on National Catholic Reporter online and I recommend it to all who share a sense of heartache, frustration, and anger about these continuing revelations with little real action to alter the causes.

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  3. Here's a link to the NCR piece by Tom Doyle which several have referred to above.

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  4. I read the Doyle piece as well and it is important reading to include.

    Thank you for publishing this. The only path to healing from these horrific events - and the word horrific hardly covers it - is openness, acknowledgment and honest discussion.

    Peace and healing to all, for all - those who have been harmed and those who have perpetrated these shameful acts.

    God have mercy on us all.

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