Crest of the Congregation of Christian Brothers

Crest of the Congregation of Christian Brothers
Neither Christian nor brotherly is how their victims see them

Millstones

This site focuses on allegations of abuse, physical and sexual, by the Irish Christian Brothers at schools in the UK. The majority of the Brothers were no doubt good teachers and kindly men, but a number of them should not have been allowed to be near children. Generally it appears that there was a culture of violence ingrained in the Congregation of Christian Brothers; it is unfortunate that so many teachers stood by and did nothing. As an ex-pupil has commented: " They could hardly claim to not know what went on; the sound of whole classrooms of kids being strapped could be heard very clearly in corridors and adjacent classrooms." If you would like to contribute and/or join the Millstones Facebook group email me mr.downes@gmail.com



Monday, 7 June 2010

A "fraternal initiative", but will it whitewash the Christian Brothers?




















His Holiness Pope Benedict, presiding over a Church still in turmoil over the clerical child abuse crisis

Following his promise to Irish Catholics in March 2010 that an investigation would address chronic clerical child abuse in Ireland it's been reported that Pope Benedict XVI has appointed a panel of nine prelates to deal with the handling of abuse cases in Ireland. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/31/pope-irish-catholic-abuse-investigation_n_595541.html

The Pope invited "all the members of the Irish Catholic community to support this fraternal initiative." That's an appropriate way of describing it, since the Irish Christian Brothers were, more than any other Catholic organisation, responsible for the physical and sexual abuse of children.




















The statue of Blessed Edmund Rice, founder of the Christian Brothers, in Callan, Ireland

The Congregation of Christian Brothers, founded by Blessed Edmund Rice, opened its first school at Waterford, Ireland, in 1802. Only recently have its victims begun to speak out to reveal shocking facts indicating that sadistic and paedophile tendencies were endemic in many institutions run by the Brothers.




The strap, a traditional teaching aid for Christian Brothers and an emblem of their reputation as child abusers

The missionary zeal of the founder and his fellow-Brothers over the last two centuries may have established the Congregation's reputation for effective teaching in schools all over the world, but many of its pupils paid a high price. Beatings, humiliating punishments and sexual assaults should not play a part in any school curriculum. They were a common feature in Christian Brothers' schools not just in Ireland, but in every country where the Congregation had a presence, including Australia, Canada, the USA and the UK.

So while the Pope's panel of prelates and other good Catholics will focus on abuses in Ireland, many of the Christian Brothers' victims believe that it should investigate in depth the activities of this most Irish of religious orders. In how many cases, for example, were brotherly abusers who had been caught out at schools in the UK discreetly transferred to 'safe houses' back in Ireland, often with the connivance of bishops?




















The Most Reverend Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster, is the most senior Catholic cleric in England and Wales. He has no complaints about his own education by the Christian Brothers

How rigorous will this aspect of the panel's investigation be when one of its senior members is the Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols?

This is the prelate who was reported in October 2003, following a BBC programme about clerical child abuse, as saying that there is "no evidence" to support the view that the Catholic Church's files on child sexual abuse should be "opened to independent scrutiny." http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3196222.stm

This former Christian Brothers' pupil at St Mary's College, Crosby, has stated publicly that he has "no complaints about the education we received."

Either the Archbishop's memory is at fault or he was one of the lucky ones. In another UK Christian Brothers' school, not too far away from Crosby, I was told by a former pupil that as many as 50% of the children who had been taught by the Brothers at that institution said that their education had been a traumatic and damaging experience which had marked them for life.

2 comments:

  1. This bastard deserves the wrath of God.Oh,sorry about that, there obviously is no God.The Christian Brothers are about as credible as the IRA. They are liars,and worse, they are the purveyors of hate and sexual abuse. And furthermore I believe that many of these scumbags actually joined the sect so that they could continue the abuse. I have carried the weight for 50 years, but now I already feel somewhat relieved that I have finally contacted the authorities and their day of reckoning is about to happen. I cal on all other abused students to come forward ad expose these pigs for what they really are, Godless pond scum.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I couldn't agree more!!!! However - pond scum - really even worse. I suffered at the hands of the sadistic puffs for 5 years in the early '60's. When I told my mother, a lovely woman but a raving catholic, about what was happening to me she told me to go to confession and ask for god's foregiveness for my sins. We drifted apart.
      Later in my life I became a teacher. My aim was to become in charge of schools in the Lancashire/Blackpool area in order to close down St Joseph's College.
      Sadly someone beat me to it! But I still remember standing on the rubble of the f***ing school after it had been demolished (hopefully with Brother O'Brien still inside it) before it became a residential development. Sadly, the mental scars of what that school did to me still remain and now I'm 75 years old. But the sexual and physical abuse will never be far from my mind.

      Delete