So get this. I'm in this orphanage in Dublin. It's 1969 and today is my 10th birthday. I'm not really an orphan but my mother gave birth to me out of wedlock so I was taken off her as a newborn and sent here. The priests who run the orphanage are friendly most of the time - "Make your 60 rosaries a day without messing and you won't get a beating". It's a fair deal and they keep their end most of the time.

So this morning, I'm finished serving mass. I'm in the Sacristy, taking off my cassock when the priest comes in. He tells me that because it's my birthday, I can have some altar wine. I take a big gulp and immediately feel a bit funny. Next thing I know, the priest is touching me in a strange way. I'm thinking: "What the fuck are you doing?" I try to leave but he grabs me. He fucks me in the ass. I start to cry. He fucks me in the mouth. I'm so upset after that I go back to my room and start punching myself in the face.

Luckily my face heals. Later that day, another priest comes into my bedroom. I tell him what happened and he tells me that I deserved whatever I got. He tells me that I am a bastard child and I should be grateful to have a home at all. I go outside and squish as many ants as I can find.

The next day, I tell my best friend about what happened. I ask him if I should write a letter to the police. He tells me that there's no point. He says that the last kid who did that was beaten so badly that he never came back from the hospital. "That's bullshit", I say. He looks at me: "I'm sorry dude", he says, "but it's just something you have to get used to. It happens to everyone here from time to time."  

"No fuck you!", I say, "This can't be something we have to just put up with. Where do these priests get off behaving this way". So I write my letter and a policeman comes. He brings me to the police station and asks me about what happened. I tell him and he tells me that I am lying. I swear to him that it is the truth and tell him that it has also happened to lots of my friends. He tells me that I am a trouble-maker. He says that if I don't stop making up these stories, he'll put me in prison.

That night, I am beaten and raped by two of the priests at the same time. When they are finished, they spit on me and tell me that I am going to Hell. They tell me that I better get used to it and do you know what the weird thing is? I did.

Forty years on and I am celebrating my fiftieth birthday. Opening the newspaper, I read how the members of the clergy involved in child sex abuse are being publicly commended by the Archbishop of Westminster, Rev Vincent Nichols. According to him, it takes great 'courage' for them to confront their actions. "I think of those in religious orders", he says, "who have to face these facts from their past which instinctively and quite naturally they'd rather not look at".

Quite right. I am thinking of them too. I am thinking how dreadful it must be for them. As I know only too well, nobody likes listening to a bad beat story and I can only imagine it garners even less sympathy coming from the perspective of the ones who inflicted the beats.

 


Comments

Sterling

Wed, 27 May 2009 17:20:55

That's some great prose there- very effective. I'm hoping it's not terribly close to home for you or a loved one. . . what a nightmare.

I'm not a fan of established religion at all- these and other situations demonstrate all too horribly how a powerful institution, governed internally, and founded on some truly magical and most probably ridiculous ideas can give birth to horrendous monstrosity- and perhaps most horribly, they attempt to exert a moral authority to passively or overtly condone those actions under some pretense of a "greater good," which of course they define for themselves.

 



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