Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Belgian prime minister Alexander De Croo has castigated Pope Francis over the “painful wounds” left by past sex abuse cases in Belgium that were covered up by the Catholic church.
De Croo said on Friday as he received the Pope in Brussels that the church had “its place in our history and customs”, but added that “we cannot ignore the painful wounds that exist within the Catholic faith community and wider society”.
“The many cases of sexual abuse and forced adoptions have severely damaged trust. You are committed to justice. But there is still a long way to go.”
The speech was one of the most direct public condemnations of the Catholic Church’s evasion over sex abuse scandals during a papal visit.
Details of long-running abuse in the Belgian Catholic Church, including by the country’s longest-serving bishop Roger Vangheluwe, have slowly emerged over the past quarter century.
Vangheluwe, the bishop of Bruges between 1984 and 2010, resigned following sexual abuse allegations he partly admitted to. He said in a later interview that he did not believe it was abuse. He was stripped of his clerical status this year and now lives in seclusion in an abbey in the Loire.
The scandals were documented in a four-part series called Godvergeten, which translates as Godforsaken, on Belgian broadcaster VRT last year. They have caused a drop in church attendance among Belgian Catholics, with some renouncing their baptism and ties with the church.
De Croo’s remarks, made at a welcome reception for Pope Francis at the Belgian royal palace of Laeken, were echoed by Belgian King Philippe, who said: “It has taken far too long for [the victims’] cries to be heard and acknowledged. It has taken far too long to begin looking for ways to ‘repair’ the irreparable.”
Acknowledging the comments of the two Belgian leaders, the Pope said the church was acting “firmly and decisively”, introducing prevention programmes and counselling victims in the aftermath of the abuse.
He also departed from his written speech to add that the church “must be ashamed” and “ask for forgiveness”.
The pope, who also visited Luxembourg this week, was due to meet 15 victims of the Belgian sexual abuse scandals on Friday afternoon.
“We are co-operating fully. What the prime minister says is also of our concern,” said Geert De Kerpel, spokesperson for Belgian archbishop Luc Terlinden. “It’s never enough, but we do all we can.”
“The Belgian church is a church that fights strongly against this abuse,” he added. “There is not place for sexual abuse in the church.”