Papal Investigators Meet With Laity, Priests and Religious in Chile

Archbishop Charles Scicluna and Msgr. Jordi Bertomeu hold meetings as part of mission to help bring healing to the troubled Diocese of Osorno.

Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta is in Chile again this week.
Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta is in Chile again this week. (photo: Archdiocese of Malta via CNA)

OSORNO, Chile — As part of their special mission to help bring healing to the troubled Chilean Diocese of Osorno, Archbishop Charles Scicluna and Msgr. Jordi Bertomeu are holding several pastoral meetings this week that they say are aimed at listening.

Speaking to Chilean media at the airport after landing in Osorno, Archbishop Scicluna said they came “to convey the special closeness of the Pope to the beloved people of Osorno. We are going to have a lot of discussion and will listen to our brothers, which is the most important [task] for us.”

Similarly, Msgr. Bertomeu said they are “happy to be here in Osorno” and voiced hope that they would be able “to communicate the Holy Father’s request for forgiveness in peace, in concord and in harmony.”

Archbishop Scicluna of Malta and the Vatican’s former top prosecutor on cases of clerical abuse is currently in Osorno with Msgr. Bertomeu, an official of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, for a June 12-19 pastoral mission to the Chilean Dioceses of Osorno and Santiago in order to advance “the process of healing and reparation for victims of abuse” in Chile.

After spending two days in Santiago, in which they led a day of formation on the guidelines to be followed in investigations into sexual abuse in the Church, the pair arrived in Osorno June 14, where they will stay until June 17 and will hold a number of meetings with different communities in the diocese.

Immediately after landing in Osorno Thursday, the duo held meetings with two groups of local Catholics, the “Catholic Faithful of Osorno” and a group of laymen and women from the diocese.

On Friday the pair met with clergy from Osorno, including priests and deacons, as well as the communities of Santa Rosa parish and the Parish of the Holy Spirit.

They will meet with another parish community Saturday and that afternoon will speak with religious men and women from Osorno. The day will close with a second event at a parish, after which there will be time for adoration.

On Sunday, the pair’s last day in Osorno before heading back to Santiago, they will celebrate Mass in the Cathedral of San Mateo, after which they will meet with all parish communities in the diocese to pray for peace and reconciliation.

They will then go back to Santiago for two days before returning to Rome June 19.

Osorno has been at the center of the Chilean clerical abuse crisis ever since Pope Francis’ 2015 appointment of Juan Barros Madrid as the diocese’s bishop — a move that was met with heavy opposition due to accusations he had covered up the crimes of notorious Chilean abuser Father Fernando Karadima.

Francis had initially defended Bishop Barros, saying he believed the accusations against him were “calumny” during a visit to Chile in January. However, after new evidence was presented and news of old evidence resurfaced following his trip, the Pope in February sent the Scicluna-Bertomeu duo to Chile to investigate, resulting in a 2,300-page report on the crisis, which prompted the Pope to pen a letter to Chilean bishops in April saying he had made “serious errors” in judging the case.

Since then, Pope Francis has met with all Chilean bishops and two groups of Chilean abuse survivors at the Vatican.

On Monday the Vatican announced that Pope Francis has accepted Bishop Barros’ resignation and that of two other Chilean bishops. Every active bishop in Chile had submitted his resignation at the close of a May 15-17 meeting between the pontiff and the country’s bishops, during which Francis chastised them for systematic cover-up.

Archbishop Scicluna and Msgr. Bertomeu, whose current visit to Santiago and Osorno coincided with the news of Bishop Barros’ resignation, have from the beginning stressed that they have come to ask for forgiveness on behalf of the Pope, to provide formation on how to respond to abuse and to listen.

In a June 13 news conference before heading to Osorno, Archbishop Scicluna said that “to recognize and admit the whole truth, with all of its painful repercussions and consequences, is the point of departure for an authentic healing, both for the victim and the abuser. These brothers and sisters deserve our special attention and assistance.”

He also defended the papal nuncio to Chile, Archbishop Ivo Scapolo, who has been accused of inaction when presented with abuse allegations, saying, “We have a wonderful collaboration with the nuncio.”

In comments to the Chilean media after landing in Osorno, Msgr. Bertomeu backed Archbishop Scicluna’s defense of Archbishop Scapolo, saying that “the nuncio has a very complicated role, because he has a role as a representative of the Holy Father before the Chilean state, and then there are also actions which can also be easily misinterpreted,” La Cooperativa reported.

“I myself am aware that in any moment of the day I can do something which can be misinterpreted, so I think that the procedures of justice must be respected before condemning someone, and one must be a little more sure,” he said, adding that, “until now, the nuncio has acted correctly.”