Times 2

Pope 'shaken' by talks with sex abuse victims

ERFURT, Germany, Sept 24 (AFP) - Pope Benedict XVI met victims of sexual abuse by clergy in his German homeland, an encounter that left him “deeply shaken” Vatican officials said. He also held joint prayers with members of the Protestant faith in Germany, in a bid to build bridges between the two churches.

During a 30-minute meeting with abuse victims in Erfurt, the pope said he was “moved and deeply shaken by the sufferings of the victims,” the Vatican said. Church officials described the meeting as “very, very emotional”.

Pope Benedict XVI prays as he celebrates a Marian vesper ceremony in Etzelsbach September 23, 2011. Pope Benedict XVI is on a four-day official visit to his homeland Germany. Reuters

“The Holy Father expressed his deep compassion and regret over all that was done to them and their families,” said a Vatican statement. The meeting had been keenly awaited during the 84-year-old pontiff's visit to his homeland, which was rocked by revelations of widespread abuse over the last several decades.

“He assured the people present that those in positions of responsibility in the Church are seriously concerned to deal with all crimes of abuse and are committed to the promotion of effective measures for the protection of children and young people,” the statement said.

“Pope Benedict XVI is close to the victims and he expresses the hope that the merciful God, Creator and Redeemer of all mankind, may heal the wounds of the victims and grant them inner peace.”Hans Langendoerfer, the coordinator of the visit, told AFP the pope met five victims of abuse, three men and two women.

It was very clear that the meeting had greatly touched the pope, added Langendoerfer. The leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics had told reporters Thursday on his flight to Germany that he sympathised with the thousands who had turned their backs on the Church over the paedophile scandals.

“I can understand that in the face of such reports, people, especially those close to victims, would say 'this isn't my Church anymore',” the pope said. About 9,000 papal opponents later demonstrated in Berlin while the pontiff addressed parliament in a rally that focused in large part on the molestation scandals.

The German Catholic Church was thrown into turmoil last year as hundreds came forward saying they were abused as minors between the 1950s and the 1980s amid allegations that the crimes were swept under the carpet.

Over the past year large-scale paedophilia scandals have rocked the Catholic church in a number of countries, including Ireland, Austria, Belgium and the United States. During a visit to Britain this time last year, the pope also met five victims and expressed his “deep sorrow to the innocent victims of these unspeakable crimes.”The pontiff has previously met with victims on visits to Malta, the United States and Australia. In Malta the victims said the pope wept as he met them.

Earlier Friday, on the second leg of the tour, the pope held prayers with Protestant leaders in a show of greater Christian unity. Benedict said the different wings of the Church should “keep in view just how much we have in common, not losing sight of it amid the pressure towards secularisation -- everything that makes us Christian in the first place and continues to be our gift and our task”.

The service was also attended by Chancellor Angela Merkel, a Lutheran. But it disappointed some observers, who said the pope had failed to match his conciliatory message with concrete action to heal the 500-year-old rift between the Churches.

The head of the Lutheran Church, Nikolaus Schneider, said he had conveyed the message to the pontiff that his flock was not satisfied with current relations with the Vatican. “Our hearts are burning for more and that could be sensed today,” he said.

Late Friday, the pope celebrated a sunset mass before 90,000 believers in a tiny village in former communist East Germany, which he praised for keeping the faith alive throughout the turmoil of the 20th century in Germany.

Christians in Germany are evenly divided between Catholics and Lutherans, with a growing trend toward secularisation sparking crises in both churches. On Saturday, the third day of a tour of his native Germany, Benedict is due to greet the faithful in the main cathedral square in the eastern city of Erfurt.
Later the day, he will hold a prayer vigil in staunchly Catholic Freiburg in the southwest.

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