| At St Peter’s
 By Colm Tóibín
 London Review of Books
 December 1, 2005
 http://www.lrb.co.uk/v27/n23/colm-toibin/at-st-peters  
              The 
                Ferns Report by Francis Murphy, Helen Buckley and Laraine 
                JoyceGovernment Publications, 271 pp, €6.00, October 2005, ISBN 
                0 7557 7299 7
 Everybody was afraid of Dr Sherwood. My mother was afraid of him 
              at meetings of Pax Romana, the lay Catholic discussion group in 
              Enniscorthy, our town, because he had a way of glaring at women 
              members when they spoke. He didn’t, it seemed, like women 
              speaking. At St Peter’s College, the seminary and boarding-school 
              where I went at the age of 15 in 1970, he was dean of the seminary, 
              but he had once been dean of discipline of the boarding-school, 
              and had a fearsome reputation as a merciless wielder of the strap. 
              I studied him carefully when I first saw him; he was gaunt and unsmiling. 
              Soon, even though he had no business on the lay side, I saw him 
              at work. Four or five of us were hanging around the squash courts 
              after lights out. When he saw us, he stood quietly at first and 
              watched us; then he picked on the most innocent and vulnerable boy. 
              He called him over and began to interrogate him while pinching one 
              cheek hard and then the other cheek and then pulling his ears with 
              enormous slow ferocity and then moving to his slow-growing sideburns 
              until he had almost lifted our poor friend off the ground. Dr Sherwood 
              was evil. I made up a song about him with a vile chorus. Soon, he was replaced as dean of the seminary, although he still 
              hovered darkly in corridors. The new dean, Dr Ledwith, was young 
              and friendly and open and very good-looking. He was also reputed 
              to be really smart. One of my friends knew him from home so he often 
              stopped to talk to us. He was a new breed of priest; he had studied 
              in Europe and America. Many of the teaching priests spent their 
              summers in parishes in America so they were full of new ideas. Everything 
              was open for discussion, or almost everything. I went to a brilliant 
              lecture by Dr Ledwith on ideas of paradox within Catholic doctrine. 
              It was whispered that he would one day be a great prince of the 
              Church. I got to know some of the other priests and realised that for some 
              students – there were three hundred boarders – being 
              friends with a priest meant that you could go up to his room and 
              hang out, make phone calls, listen to music, watch TV. I became 
              friends with a few of the priests, but in my last year became especially 
              friendly with a physics teacher, Father Collins, because my best 
              mate was one of his brightest students. All of the teaching priests, except Father Collins, had rooms off 
              a corridor in a modern extension. Father Collins’s rooms were 
              in an older building. It was easy to go up and down to his room 
              without being noticed, as the two other priests in his part of the 
              building were often away. His stereo system was amazing. I listened 
              to Tommy there and Jesus Christ Superstar. He 
              always had a box of sweets. I could ring home on his telephone. 
              On Saturday nights after lights out, with his full connivance, we 
              could break all the rules and sneak up to his room and watch The 
              Late Late Show, a controversial chat show on Irish television. 
              We were often there until after midnight. After The Late Late Show, we would switch over to a British 
              channel to watch a programme about new films. One night, without 
              any warning, it showed the naked fight scene between Alan Bates 
              and Oliver Reed in Women in Love. I was pretty interested 
              in the clip, but I knew to keep quiet afterwards. Modesty was a 
              primary virtue at the school: there were doors on each shower and 
              we all slept in cubicles. In the debating society everything was 
              open to discussion except homosexuality, which no one would have 
              even thought of mentioning. I knew that Father Collins took a very dim view of homosexuality 
              because he had deeply disapproved when I told a joke about Oscar 
              Wilde at the debating society. And when a friend, who looked slightly 
              effeminate in any case, began to part his hair in the middle, he 
              was told by Father Collins that it was better to part it at the 
              side; a middle parting, he said, was a sign of homosexuality. Nonetheless, 
              there were often vague whisperings about Father Collins. I knew 
              that he liked my friend, but I never allowed myself to think too 
              much about the implications of that. Nothing ever happened. The dormitory was overseen by a seminarian whom I liked and respected. 
              He was fair-minded and decent. Through him, I got to know another 
              seminarian called James Doyle. He would stop and talk if we met 
              in the corridor, even though fraternisation between seminarians 
              and lay students was frowned on. He had many opinions and enjoyed 
              gossip and had a habit of winding me up so I could never quite tell 
              whether he was serious or not. I liked him. In the second half of the 1990s these three men – Michael 
              Ledwith, Donal Collins and James Doyle – became part of the 
              pantheon of Irish priests whose names were often mentioned on the 
              news. In 1990 James Doyle pleaded guilty to indecent assault and 
              common assault on a young man and was given a three-month suspended 
              sentence. Five years later, Dr Ledwith resigned suddenly as president 
              of Maynooth College, Ireland’s main seminary, and went to 
              America. He had been secretary to three synods of world bishops 
              in Rome and had served three full terms on the International Theological 
              Commission, the group of 30 theologians who advise the pope. He 
              had made a private settlement with a young man after allegations 
              of inappropriate sexual behaviour. He is no longer involved with 
              the Catholic Church. In 1998 Father Collins was sentenced to four 
              years’ imprisonment, after pleading guilty to four charges 
              of indecent assault and one charge of gross indecency at St Peter’s 
              College between 1972 and 1984. These men and others like them became public enemies; they were 
              often filmed leaving courthouses with anoraks over their heads (although 
              it should be emphasised that Dr Ledwith never faced any charges 
              in court). Part of the reason Doyle was given a suspended sentence 
              was that he promised to leave the Republic of Ireland. He went to 
              England. The country wanted rid of these priests. Everyone in the country had strong opinions about these men. And 
              so did I. Mine had their roots, I suppose, in the fact that I had 
              known these people and liked them and in the fact that I was gay. 
              The word being used to describe them was ‘paedophile’, 
              which struck me as wrong. They were simply gay; they had believed 
              that their homosexuality, in all its teenage confusion, was a vocation 
              to the priesthood. Whereas other boys, as religious as they were, 
              could not become priests because they were attracted to women, these 
              men had no such problem. No one ever asked them if they were homosexual. 
              Thus they moved blindly and blissfully towards ordination and, eventually, 
              towards causing immense damage to vulnerable young people. It was easy to ask the question: if heterosexuality were not only 
              forbidden but unmentionable, if blokes married other blokes, and 
              you, as a good closet heterosexual man, were put in charge of a 
              boarding-school of three hundred girls aged between 13 and 18, would 
              you not at one point over a long career make sexual demands on one 
              of the girls? Or hit on one girl in a seminary of girls aged between 
              18 and 25? It was a great argument and I enjoyed making it. I was 
              sure I was right. I am not so sure now. This is because of the publication of the Ferns Report, written 
              by a tribunal chaired by the former Irish Supreme Court judge Francis 
              Murphy. Ferns is a diocese made up of County Wexford in the south-east 
              of Ireland and parts of some of the bordering counties. The tribunal 
              was set up by the Irish government because there seemed to be more 
              clerical offenders in this diocese than in any other, and in reaction 
              to a BBC documentary about abuse there. The report explains why Father Collins’s rooms were not close 
              to those of the other teaching priests. In 1966 he had visited the 
              dormitory known as the Attic, which became my dormitory four years 
              later, and, according to the Ferns Report, had performed ‘examinations 
              of an intimate nature involving the measurement of the length of 
              the boys’ penises on the pretext of ascertaining whether or 
              not they were growing normally. The inquiry was told that approximately 
              twenty boys were involved. Father Collins has disputed the detail 
              of this account of the alleged abuse.’ Dr Sherwood and another priest, according to the report, soon afterwards 
              approached the bishop’s secretary with this news. The bishop 
              sent Collins ‘to a pastoral ministry’ in Kentish Town 
              in North London for two years. The bishop did not inform the Diocese 
              of Westminster why the priest was being sent there. The bishop was 
              called Donal Herlihy. I knew him a bit. He had spent many years 
              in Rome and was rather disappointed to be returned to an Irish backwater. 
              It was said of him that he would have made a very great bishop if 
              only he had believed in God. His sermons in Enniscorthy Cathedral 
              were lofty in tone and content. He loved Catullus and Ovid and Horace 
              and he could not refrain from quoting them to a bewildered congregation. 
              I once sat through a long sermon on the small matter of the ‘lacrimae 
              rerum’. While Bishop Herlihy was very worldly in an Italian 
              way about many issues, his worldliness did not, I think, stretch 
              to a priest under his control wishing to measure the length of twenty 
              boys’ penises. He simply would have had no idea what to do. According to the Ferns Report, the bishop ‘believed that 
              the problem had been solved’ by sending Father Collins to 
              England for two years and that it ‘would be unfair and vindictive 
              to pursue the matter further’. The bishop is reported to have 
              said to his secretary: ‘Hadn’t he done his penance?’ 
              In 1968, Herlihy ordered Collins back to teaching. This time, however, 
              the bishop instructed that the erring priest should have his lodgings 
              in the old building, at a distance from the dormitories, so that 
              he would not be so easily tempted when night fell. What is interesting about all of this is that no one at any point 
              considered calling the police. The Catholic Church in Ireland in 
              those years was above the law; it had its own laws. By the time 
              I arrived at St Peter’s in 1970, Father Collins had been fully 
              restored to the swing of college life. He prepared students for 
              the Young Scientists Exhibition in Dublin every January, spending 
              time alone with them, travelling to Dublin with them. He was in 
              charge of the darkroom, and taught me and many others how to develop 
              photographs. In 1972 he directed the school play. In 1974 he was 
              put in charge of swimming lessons. The other physics teacher, also 
              a priest, gave his classes and then disappeared each day. There 
              was no law in the school saying that a teaching priest had to have 
              any involvement with students outside the classroom. Dr Sherwood continued to haunt the corridors, making a constant 
              nuisance of himself. He must have noticed all of Father Collins’s 
              activities. Since the priests had three meals a day together, there 
              must have been a moment when Collins alluded in passing to the swimming 
              lessons or the sessions in the darkroom. Did Sherwood catch the 
              eye of one of the other priests and give him a knowing look? Or 
              did they all pretend it was nothing? According to the Ferns Report, 
              one priest who ‘lived downstairs from Father Collins … 
              from 1970 to 1971 and again from 1985 until 1988 … was aware 
              of the traffic on the stairs going to his, Father Collins’s 
              rooms, even after lights out, but stated there was “not the 
              slightest suspicion of anything untoward”’. The report 
              also states that it received ‘direct evidence from past pupils 
              and a lay teacher who were in St Peter’s during that time, 
              to the effect that Father Collins’s continuing inappropriate 
              behaviour with young boys was well known in the school during that 
              period and it is clear that sexual abuse was occurring during that 
              time’. Also, the report states that ‘at least six priests’ 
              working in the college at the time knew why Father Collins had been 
              sent to England in 1966. The bishop’s vicar-general said in 
              a statement to police in 1995 that ‘it was generally believed 
              that Father Collins had a problem with abusing young boys in 1966 
              and that Bishop Herlihy had sent him away because of it.’ 
              I presume that he meant the priests only when he said ‘it 
              was generally believed’, because it was not, in my opinion, 
              generally believed by the students, despite the evidence given to 
              the Ferns Report by past pupils; it lay instead in the realm of 
              innuendo, rumour and nudges. It was not generally believed, in my 
              opinion, by the young boys getting swimming lessons or being taught 
              to develop photographs, with the exception of the very few picked 
              on for abuse, most of whom told nobody what was happening until 
              many years later, or by parents, or by the police. Father Collins began to abuse at St Peter’s again in the 
              early 1970s, according to the report. Once more, he measured penises, 
              but this was only for starters. Over a four-year period one boy 
              was masturbated four to six times a year by Collins. In the 1990s, 
              ten boys made allegations against him, including that he ‘forced’ 
              one of them ‘to engage in mutual masturbation and oral sex’ 
              and that he on one occasion attempted anal sex. All of this occurred 
              between 1972 and 1984. In court in 1995, some of his victims spoke 
              about the detrimental effect the abuse has had on their lives. Collins knew no fear. In 1988 he took time off from his many extra-curricular 
              activities to apply to become principal of the school. By this time 
              Bishop Herlihy had gone to his reward, and there was a new bishop, 
              Brendan Comiskey, an outgoing, friendly man who paid serious attention 
              to the press and to public relations. He appointed Donal Collins 
              as principal, despite being warned against doing so, according to 
              the Ferns Report, by two priests. The first allegation of sexual abuse since 1966 came in 1989, within 
              seven months of Father Collins’s appointment as principal. 
              In 1991, as more allegations were made, Collins removed himself 
              to Florida, where he sought help and worked in a parish. Bishop 
              Comiskey did not tell the parish in Florida of his history. Although 
              Collins admitted ‘the broad truth’ of the allegations 
              against him to the bishop in 1993, the bishop told the police in 
              1995 that the priest was continuing to deny the charges. The first allegations against James Doyle were made to my old friend 
              Dr Sherwood in 1972. Sherwood’s response was, according to 
              the report, ‘questioning and dismissive’. When the president 
              of the college heard the allegations in 1972, however, he suggested 
              that Doyle should join a religious order and not become a diocesan 
              priest. This president was replaced the following year by a president 
              who allowed Doyle to be ordained. When Bishop Herlihy heard a complaint 
              against Father Doyle in 1982 he sent him to a psychologist who wrote 
              that it would ‘seem desirable that he should have a change 
              of role, away from working with young people’. When a new 
              priest, in whose parish James Doyle was a curate, was appointed 
              in 1985, no one informed him of this report. Five years later, Doyle 
              pleaded guilty to indecent assault and received a suspended sentence. His case is interesting because it was the first prosecution in 
              the courts of a Ferns priest. It is not hard to imagine how much 
              the people of the diocese could have hated James Doyle. Surely he 
              would have been pelted with turnips, which grow plentifully in the 
              area, as he left the court? Instead, people blamed the local newspapers 
              for printing the story, provoking, the Ferns Report says, ‘a 
              considerable backlash’ against one local paper in the Wexford 
              area ‘as it was felt that Father Doyle had been badly treated 
              by the publicity his case had attracted. As the media had already 
              given enough information to disclose the identity of the complainant, 
              this backlash was also directed towards him and his family.’ 
              Thus in 1990 it was made clear that complaining about these priests 
              to the civil authorities would take considerable courage. Bishop 
              Comiskey told the Ferns Inquiry that ‘prior to 1990, the question 
              of reporting child abuse complaints or allegations to the Garda 
              authorities never arose.’ The case of Dr Ledwith is stranger. In 1994, an allegation was 
              made that he had abused a 13-year-old boy in 1981, a matter which 
              Ledwith disputes, claiming that he did not meet the boy until after 
              his 15th birthday. In any case, Ledwith settled with the boy and 
              his family, paying a sum of money with no admission of liability 
              and with a confidentiality clause. After the boy had had a meeting 
              with Bishop Comiskey, the diocese of Ferns paid for ‘intensive 
              counselling’ for him and his family. In 1983 and 1984, when 
              Ledwith was vice-president of Maynooth, there were complaints to 
              bishops about him from the seminarians, relating to his ‘orientation 
              and propensity’ rather than any ‘specific sexual activity’. 
              When a senior dean at the seminary continued to make these complaints 
              to the bishops, he was asked to produce a victim. When he could 
              not, he was removed from the seminary. When the Ferns Report came out, I was eager to read it because 
              I had known these three men. I had believed that the problem lay 
              in their becoming priests. If they had gone to Holland or San Francisco, 
              I believed, they would now be happily married to their boyfriends. 
              But as I read the report, I began to think that this was hardly 
              the issue. Instead, the level of abuse in Ferns and the Church’s 
              way of handling it seemed an almost intrinsic part of the Church’s 
              search for power. It is as though when its real authority began 
              to wane in Ireland in the 1960s, the sexual abuse of those under 
              its control and the urge to keep that abuse secret and the efforts 
              to keep abusers safe from the civil law became some of its new tools. In 1988 in Monageer, just outside Enniscorthy, for example, Father 
              Grennan sexually molested ten girls, aged around 12 or 13, while 
              he heard their confessions. Their teacher sent for a social worker, 
              who interviewed seven of the girls; the parents of the other three 
              refused to allow their daughters to be interviewed. The girls, interviewed 
              separately, ‘described much the same activity in different 
              ways’, the social worker wrote.  
               At confession Father Grennan would grasp the child’s hands 
                in his hands and pull them towards his private parts. The zip 
                would be described as half down and there was never any allegation 
                of his putting their hands inside of the unzipped area. He would 
                pull the child close and rub his face and mouth around their jaw 
                while asking them questions about their families etc. He was also 
                described as putting his hands under their skirts and fondling 
                their legs to mid-thigh level only. While this was going on the rest of the children were told to keep 
              their eyes closed; they were told that if they opened them, they 
              would be chastised. When the bishop was told about this, he decided he did not believe 
              it. He did not speak to the social worker or the principal of the 
              school. He agreed that the priest should leave the parish for a 
              while, but then return for the confirmation of the very girls he 
              had been abusing. So Bishop Comiskey and Father Grennan stood proudly 
              on the altar waiting for the ten little liars to come up to be confirmed. 
              Two of the families walked out with their daughters. Grennan continued 
              in his role of manager of the school. Since the social worker was employed by the local health board, 
              the police had to be alerted. They took statements from the seven 
              girls. Before the statements could be typed or copied and a covering 
              report prepared, the policeman who took the statements ‘was 
              instructed to hand over the files notwithstanding’. One of 
              the senior policemen who saw the files judged, without consulting 
              anyone, that prosecution of Father Grennan ‘would only damage 
              the complainants further’ and did not send the statements 
              to the director of public prosecutions. The statements, still not 
              copied, disappeared. An old priest rubbing his face and mouth around your jaw is bad 
              enough, but many of the cases in the Ferns Report are much more 
              severe. The year after I left St Peter’s, Sean Fortune arrived 
              in the seminary. It was alleged to the Ferns Inquiry that he started 
              almost immediately to abuse. He began by fondling boys and masturbating. 
              On one car journey, for example, he asked a boy about a scar on 
              his face and then began masturbating. When he ejaculated, he smeared 
              his sperm on the boy’s face, telling him that it would heal 
              his scar. Within a few years the allegations included oral sex, 
              and then he began to rape his victims anally, leaving one 16-year-old 
              boy ‘in a mess on the floor, bleeding heavily’. He befriended 
              families so he could meet their sons, picking on students and altar 
              boys. One of his alleged victims committed suicide in the late 1980s. 
              Father Fortune himself committed suicide, while facing multiple 
              charges, in 1999, 26 years after he began his career as an abuser. Because the priest in each parish in the so-called Republic of 
              Ireland is automatically manager of the local primary school – 
              of the 3200 primary schools in the state, 3000 are still managed 
              by Catholic priests – this gave many of them golden opportunities 
              to take students out of school for special lessons. Canon Martin 
              Clancy liked them young, one as young as eight, another, Ciara, 
              11. When she became pregnant at 14, she went to England and had 
              the baby. She told no one who the father was. When she was 17, Canon 
              Clancy ‘threatened to have [the baby] taken from her if Ciara 
              told anybody that he was the father’. When he died in 1993, 
              Canon Clancy left Ciara three thousand pounds in his will ‘to 
              be used for your future musical education’. No one was safe from them. One woman who had had an operation on 
              her lower abdomen was visited by a Ferns priest. ‘He fondled 
              her’ and she ‘could feel his fingers moving around the 
              vaginal area. She said that she attempted to get up when Father 
              Gamma’ – he could not be named by the report – 
              ‘pushed the elbow of his arm into her stomach to restrain 
              any movement’. Another priest, whom the report calls Father 
              Delta, was visited by a young man about to get married seeking a 
              Letter of Freedom. The priest asked the young man to unbutton his 
              trousers to check that ‘everything down there was in working 
              order.’ The priest fondled his private parts for approximately 
              ten minutes. Another young man approached a priest to report that 
              Father Fortune had abused him. The priest asked the young man to 
              demonstrate what Fortune had done, which included touching his penis, 
              thus beginning to abuse him all over again. Some of the abuse was from a bad S&M porn movie. In the mid-1960s 
              at St Peter’s, a priest told a boy that there was a researcher 
              from America investigating the development of boys and that he ‘would 
              be an ideal candidate in terms of age and height’. He was 
              told to report to a room where, eventually, he was ‘blindfolded, 
              stripped and caned. His penis was measured and he thinks, but cannot 
              be certain, that he was masturbated.’ He is 99 per cent certain 
              that all this was carried out by the original priest. The Church, of course, is sorry. Bishop Comiskey has been removed 
              and replaced by Bishop Eamonn Walsh. Two years ago, at an event 
              in Wexford town, I was introduced to Bishop Walsh by a priest from 
              St Peter’s whom I had liked. The new bishop asked me if any 
              harm had come to me at St Peter’s. I said that despite my 
              best efforts no one, not even Dr Sherwood, had hit me. I was too 
              embarrassed to tell him that not one of the priests had ever as 
              much as fondled me either. And I told him that I got a good education 
              there. It was only afterwards that I learned what had been happening 
              all around me. The new bishop was very skilled at speaking softly. 
              It is his job to clean up the mess that is the diocese of Ferns. 
              He knows that the way to begin is to apologise and apologise and 
              apologise. If he does it enough, maybe someone will believe that 
              the years of abuse and cover-up were not an imperative but an accident, 
              an aberration. Bishop Comiskey is blamed for his inaction in many cases covered 
              by the Ferns Report. He has made little comment. A few years ago 
              he was treated for alcoholism and it is hard for him. Journalists 
              say he is in hiding, but he is not in hiding. He lives round the 
              corner from me in Dublin and I see him sometimes on the street. 
              We always stop and talk. He loves the poetry of Patrick Kavanagh 
              and we talk about that. He remembers some of my family. And he misses 
              it, he says, the diocese and the priests. He looks sad as he moves 
              slowly back towards his lodgings. It would be easy to think as I 
              watch him shuffle away from me that there goes the power of the 
              Irish Catholic Church. But that would be a mistake. Its power is 
              slowly and subtly eroding, but it is still strong. No one is afraid 
              of the priests anymore. They have learned a new language and imposed 
              some new rules, but they still appoint the teachers and run the 
              schools. On 11 November, in response to criticism of the Church’s 
              role in education, the taoiseach, Bertie Ahern, said: ‘The 
              state would not be able to manage the schools without the religious, 
              and the state owes a debt of gratitude to the religious communities.’ 
              The religious communities still also own many of the hospitals. 
              Their years of fucking and fondling the more vulnerable members 
              of the congregation have ended; their years of apologising sincerely 
              and unctuously have begun. We must thank the Creator for small mercies. |