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Pope Francis admitted that sex abuse scandals surrounding the Catholic Church have driven younger people away.
“We know – and you have told us – that many young people do not turn to us for anything because they don’t feel we have anything meaningful to say to them,” he told a group of Catholic, Lutheran and Orthodox young people in Estonia on September 25.
“They are upset by sexual and economic scandals that do not meet with clear condemnation, by our unpreparedness to really appreciate the lives and sensibilities of the young, and simply by the passive role we assign them.”
Surveys commissioned by the Vatican, of a bishops meeting to discuss how to better minister to young Catholics, have been filled with similar complaints.
Francis said that the church wanted to respond to the criticism in an honest and transparent way. “We ourselves need to be converted,” he said. “We have to realise that in order to stand by your side we need to change many situations that, in the end, put you off.” The Pope was speaking during the fourth and final day of his tour of the Baltics. The public admission coincided with a devastating new report into decades of sex abuse and cover- ups in Germany. The document, produced by the German bishops’ conference, found that around 3,677 people were abused by clergy between 1946 and 2014.
Over half of those abused were 13 or younger. Nearly a third were altar boys.
University researchers compiled the report and found evidence that some files on the abuse were destroyed, many cases were not brought to justice and some bishops were simply moved to other dioceses when complaints were made, without congre- gations being informed about the accusations. The sex abuse scandal began in Ireland in the 1990s but has returned to the headlines recently after a former Vatican ambassador accused the Pope of knowing about abuse allegations against Theodore McCarrick, an American cardinal.
Francis is accused of rehabilitating Mr McCarrick despite the allegations.
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