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BY: Shawn Pogatchnik
``This was a landmark occasion, which ... has broken through the atmosphere of silence and denial hitherto marking the Vatican's approach to this issue,'' the Irish Times, the paper of record in this predominantly Catholic nation, declared Thursday.
``Dirty linen washed in public,'' read a headline in the La Stampa newspaper in Rome, after Pope John Paul II's two-day meeting with U.S. cardinals produced a proposal to expel serial abusers from the priesthood.
The rival Corriere della Sera newspaper credited the U.S. media's ``daily hammering'' with forcing the pope and his visitors to behave with uncharacteristic openness. ``Something new is happening at the Vatican: facing a scandalous reality head on ... and speaking publicly about it,'' it said.
From Poland to the Philippines, church officials and Roman Catholic faithful were weighing the U.S. cardinals' words versus the policies on sexual abuse being adopted by their own clergymen. Some suggested the church's response looked like too little, too late.
``The Catholic Church does not act unless the problem is already in great proportions,'' said the Rev. Robert Reyes, a parish priest in the Philippines, where another priest has been jailed on suspicion of raping a 14-year-old girl. ``We don't realize the defect until it is too big to solve.''
In Ireland, where more than two dozen priests have been convicted of molestation and a bishop resigned for failing to prevent abuse, a victims group said the Vatican's instructions to the U.S. hierarchy didn't go nearly far enough.
``At the end of the day, the pope is saying priests can stay priests until they're proved to have abused a string of innocent children. The safety of children is still taking a back seat to the good standing of a priest,'' said John Kelly, who leads the 800-member group called Irish Survivors of Child Abuse.
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