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Pope opens youth meeting as sex-abuse survivors stage sit-in

Published:Wednesday | October 3, 2018 | 12:00 AM
Cardinals arrive to attend a Mass celebrated by Pope Francis for the opening of a synod, a meeting of bishops, in St Peter's Square, at the Vatican yesterday.

VATICAN CITY (AP) :

Pope Francis urged Catholic bishops to dream of a future free of the mistakes of the past as he opened a global church leadership meeting Wednesday amid renewed outrage over the priestly sex-abuse and cover-up scandal.

Yet down the block from the Vatican's synod hall, about two dozen abuse survivors staged a sit-in, demanding their cause be taken up at the meeting and voicing outrage that some of the delegates had covered up for abusive priests.

'Make 'Zero Tolerance' Real,' read one protest sign.

Francis welcomed more than 250 priests, bishops and cardinals - as well as 34 young Catholics - to a month-long meeting on ministering to future generations, urging young and old to listen to one another without prejudice.

He prayed for God's help to ensure the church "does not allow itself, from one generation to the next, to be extinguished or crushed by the prophets of doom and misfortune, by our own shortcomings, mistakes and sins".

The October 3 to 28 synod comes amid new revelations about decades of sexual misconduct by priests and cover-ups in the US, Chile, Germany and elsewhere. That has sent confidence in Francis' leadership to all-time lows among the American faithful.

A new survey by the Pew Research Center found that just 31 per cent of US Catholics felt the pope was doing an excellent or good job in addressing the abuse issue, down from 45 per cent in January and 55 per cent in 2015.

It has been a disastrous year for the pope on the abuse front, after he botched a prominent cover-up scandal in Chile before, changing course. More recently, he has been accused of rehabilitating an American ex-cardinal who pressured seminarians to sleep with him.

Those cases, coupled with the release of devastating studies about decades of abuses and cover-ups in Pennsylvania and Germany that predated his papacy, have fuelled doubts about his oft-stated pledge of having 'zero tolerance' for that, since implicated bishops remain in place.