| APOPA, El Salvador, July 31 --
When Pope John Paul II spoke out on the church's pedophile priest
scandals for the first time this week, he did it on the eve of a
trip through a region that has scarcely been touched by them:
Latin America.
Even as hundreds of priests and bishops from the U.S. to Poland
have been implicated in the abuse of children, only a handful of
cases have come to light in a population that accounts for about
30% of the world's Roman Catholics. The church's power, the
region's bankrupt judicial systems and a culture that abhors
homosexuality have combined to create enormous barriers to
claims of priestly abuse, experts say.
Few doubt that such abuses occur in Latin America with the same
rare frequency as in other parts of the world. But here, they
appear to be easier to conceal. "Here, priests are sacred,
almost godlike. They have total power. No common person is going
to take them to court," said Sergio Bran, a sociologist at
the University of Central America in El Salvador who has long
studied the Roman Catholic Church.
Individual cases have been reported in Bolivia, Colombia and
Venezuela. Three priests in Chile have been sued in connection
with alleged pedophilia incidents. And former students have long
accused a papal ally in Mexico of repeated abuses. The Rev.
Marcial Maciel, founder of a conservative order known as the
Legion of Christ, has vehemently denied the accusations.
William
Hernandez, 31, the leader of a local gay rights group, is a rarity
in El Salvador: an openly bisexual man. His advocacy has come at a
cost to his safety-he is always accompanied in public by police
protection.
Earlier this year, Hernandez formally accused a Catholic priest
of having abused him nearly 15 years ago. The Salvadoran church
opened an ecclesiastical trial against the priest, Luis Recinos,
who has reportedly moved to Rome. He has denied the charge.
Hernandez's story helps explain why so few pedophilia cases have
been made public in Latin America.
Charismatic Priest
Recinos took over the squat white church that overlooks the
central square in Apopa in 1988. He made it his mission to
energize the region, which had long been overlooked in the shadow
of the nearby capital, San Salvador. He built new churches in
rural areas, constructed a community hall and created teams of lay
clergy to visit the poor. Parishioners loved his forceful,
charismatic style.
"I have lived a long time in Apopa, and nobody has ever
done what he did. He wanted to make the church into a utopia for
the people," said Luz Estrella Rodriguez, a city councilor
who worked with Recinos. Recinos made Hernandez, then 16, his
personal assistant. And he began to make sexual advances,
Hernandez said.
At first, there were just hugs and tender kisses, but then,
Hernandez said, Recinos demanded oral sex. The priest would beat
him when he refused. Although Hernandez was a young man, he said
he didn't fight back. Like many Catholic faithful in Latin
America, the idea of challenging a priest was unthinkable.
"My religious background limited my ability to respond,"
he said. "I was raised in a strictly Catholic home. I would
never think of raising my hand against a priest." It was also
difficult to tell anyone about the alleged abuse.
In Latin America's macho culture, the myth persists-especially
in the case of males who have been raped-that the victim of a
sexual attack is somehow to blame for the crime. "People
don't see the boy as a victim, but as a coward, an effeminate
person," sociologist Bran said. "The macho culture is
very cruel. It doesn't recognize victim hood."
Hernandez ran away in 1989, after a year of abuse, he said. But
it wasn't until two years ago that he decided to report Recinos,
after a friend told him that Recinos as a teenager, too, had
abused him. Hernandez wasn't the only one complaining about
Recinos. Before coming to Apopa, Recinos had been accused of
molesting boys at a previous parish. He was sent to Rome to study
theology for a year, then returned to El Salvador, where he began
abusing Hernandez, according to a church official investigating
the case. Rumors of abuse surfaced again in 1998, and Recinos was
sent to Rome for a second time. He returned to yet another parish.
"I talked with the bishop. His only response was, 'When you
leave, shut the door.' I got up, I left, and I didn't shut the
door," Hernandez said. This May, when the U.S. scandal was at
its height, Hernandez decided to complain again. This time, the
church opened the formal ecclesiastical tribunal against Recinos.
Top church officials say the evidence they have collected points
to his guilt. "We believe this case has merit," said one
top church official, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
Recinos couldn't be reached for comment. But the bishop who is
defending him in the tribunal said the priest has denied the
charges against him. "He asked me to pray for him and said,
'I hope you can help me,' " Bishop Rafael Urrutia said.
FUENTE: MANO A MANO
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