Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forum'Deliver Us From Evil': Rape, Reproductive Coercion and the Catholic Church (trigger warning)
(warning, this article is disturbing, angry-making, IMPORTANT)
Deliver Us From Evil: Rape, Reproductive Coercion and the Catholic Church (trigger warning)
1/30/2024 by Carrie N. Baker
For decades, the Catholic Church has shown a disregard for clergy sexual abuse and reproductive health. Why are priests and bishops considered to have any moral authority on issues of sexuality?
Anti-abortion marchers and parishioners walk from the Old St. Patricks Church to a Planned Parenthood clinic where they pray as a protest against abortions, on April 1, 2023 in New York City. (Andrew Lichtenstein / Corbis via Getty Images)
A version of this article was originally published by The Daily Hampshire Gazette.
Sexual assault and reproductive coercion share similar dynamics: Both are forms of violence that intimately violate another persons body. The Catholic Churchs clergy sexual abuse scandals, combined with its efforts to control womens reproductive choices by banning abortion and attacking contraception, expose a troubling pattern of sexual sociopathology. This conduct fundamentally undermines the Churchs claims to moral authority on issues of sexuality.
By now, the stories are familiar and well documented.
The 2006 documentary Deliver Us From Evil chillingly reveals how Catholic bishops repeatedly relocated a priest named Oliver OGrady from parish to parish in an attempt to cover up his rape of dozens of children.
The 2005 Academy Award-winning film, Spotlight, dramatizes the true story of the Boston Globe investigative reporting team that exposed widespread sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests in the 1970s and the cover up by the Boston archdiocese.
In 2018, a Pennsylvania grand jury published a 1,356-page report documenting decades of sexual abuse by more than 300 Catholic priests who victimized thousands of children in six dioceses. The report found a systemic coverup by senior church officials in Pennsylvania and at the Vatican.
But incidents of sexual abuse by priests are not confined to the past. On Dec. 14, a federal court sentenced 68-year-old Providence-based Catholic priest James W. Jackson to six years in a federal prison for downloading and storing thousands of files containing child pornography on his computer in the church rectory. Authorities found 12,000 images and 1,300 videos of child pornography, including videos of prepubescent females portrayed in acts of bestiality and sadomasochism.
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Members of Ending Clergy Abuse (ECA), a global organization of prominent survivors and activists, display photos of Barbara Blaine, the late founder and president of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), during a protest during the papal summit on Feb. 23, 2019, in Rome. (Vincenzo Pinto / AFP via Getty Images)
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In the many hospitals they control, the Catholic Church blocks access to reproductive healthcare, including emergency contraception for rape victims, medically necessary sterilization, and abortion care. Due in part to hospital consolidations, the Catholic Church now controls one in every six acute care hospital beds in the United States. The first woman to die because she was not offered a life-saving abortion due to a Catholic-backed abortion ban enacted in 2021 was Yeniifer Alvarez-Estrada Glick. She died in July 2022 in Luling, Texas. Catholic priests and bishops perpetrate and tolerate astounding levels of sexual violence, and then deny their victims the right to prevent or end life-threatening pregnancies. The all-male Catholic leaderships long history of perpetuating sexual assault and reproductive coercion grows out of a toxic masculinity that devalues womens lives, rights and dignity. Both are forms of intimate assault that deny the bodily autonomy of women in particular. Given the Catholic Churchs history of clergy sexual abuse, and their callous disregard for the reproductive health and safety of women, why are priests and bishops considered to have any moral authority on issues of sexuality?
How is it that supposedly-celibate men, who know nothing about womens bodies and who tolerate, cover up and excuse widespread sexual abuse in the church, have the right to speak about anything related to womens sexuality? Is the unnatural suppression of their own sexuality perhaps fueling their frantic attempts to suppress the sexuality of others? Are their actions, at some level, due to a jealous rage that others are experiencing the natural sexual pleasure they deny themselves? *******The essence of rape is taking control of another persons body against their will. In the same way, compelling another person to carry a pregnancy to term is taking control of another persons body against their will. Rape and reproductive coercion are two sides of one coin: misogynist violence. The emperor has no clothes. Why cant people recognize this?**********
https://msmagazine.com/2024/01/30/rape-abortion-catholic-church-sexual-child-abuse-priests/
ancianita
(38,702 posts)But fornication and sodomy -- which male christian leaders DO engage in -- IS in the Bible.
Read Chap. 3 "Inventing Abortion" in Katherine Stewart's well researched The Power Worshippers -- Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism.