S
St_Francis
Guest
I have had the Irish abuse scandals in the back of my mind, and suddenly I saw it from the other side so to speak.
I am here in the US and over the decades I have heard about many many scandals like this: seriously abusive institutions… several about institutions for wayward children (ranging from abandoned to criminal), boarding schools for Native American children, etc.
And this is not only the US but Canada and Australia as well.
But the difference is that these institutions were run by all sorts of different organizations: various Protestant groups and governments. In Ireland, *all *those institutions were (or seem to have been) run by Catholics.
So I propose that a lot of places had similar problems but that in Ireland, they were all associated with the Church and therefore the blame is 1st, concentrated, and 2nd, on the Church.
Whereas if this was a widespread phenomenon, it may be that it had nothing to do with the Church per se, but was simply something *else *that happened, and which also affected Church facilities.
Because the various situations in other nations came to light over the course of time, and because the adminstration of these places were in the hands of lots of different groups, we never viewed them as anything other than sad but isolated instances. We could not turn to one single entity and say: they did it.
I am here in the US and over the decades I have heard about many many scandals like this: seriously abusive institutions… several about institutions for wayward children (ranging from abandoned to criminal), boarding schools for Native American children, etc.
And this is not only the US but Canada and Australia as well.
But the difference is that these institutions were run by all sorts of different organizations: various Protestant groups and governments. In Ireland, *all *those institutions were (or seem to have been) run by Catholics.
So I propose that a lot of places had similar problems but that in Ireland, they were all associated with the Church and therefore the blame is 1st, concentrated, and 2nd, on the Church.
Whereas if this was a widespread phenomenon, it may be that it had nothing to do with the Church per se, but was simply something *else *that happened, and which also affected Church facilities.
Because the various situations in other nations came to light over the course of time, and because the adminstration of these places were in the hands of lots of different groups, we never viewed them as anything other than sad but isolated instances. We could not turn to one single entity and say: they did it.