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New film casts spotlight on Church abuse

Pope Francis still has to prove the Church is serious about addressing sex abuse by priests, according to the director of a major new film about how the damaging scandal was exposed in the United States.

New film casts spotlight on Church abuse
"Spotlight" had its premiere at Venice on Thursday. Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

Tom McCarthy's “Spotlight”, a newsroom drama that focuses on how the Boston Globe broke a local story that was to become a global crisis for the Church, had its premiere on Thursday at the Venice Film Festival.

Starring Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams as key members of the Globe's investigations team, the film recounts the paper's pursuit of evidence of how the local Catholic hierarchy, headed by Cardinal Bernard Law, systematically and, at times, cynically, covered up for abusive priests in their midst.

By the time the Globe's team had earned their Pulitzer Prize it had become clear that the Church in the Boston area had, for years, harboured more than 70 predatory paedophiles, shuffling them from parish to parish when the rumours got too loud and acting swiftly to ensure any legal suits were settled silently and secretly.

After the story went to press in early 2002, the number of victims willing to testify to having been abused rose to a total of nearly 1,500, lifting the lid on the scale of a scourge the Church had spent decades dismissing as limited to a few rotten apples.

The revelations of what had been happening in Boston were to be repeated across much of the industrialized world, dealing a blow to the standing of the Church in places like Ireland from which it may never recover.

More than a decade later, the line from the Vatican is that lessons have been learned and new systems put in place to ensure history does not repeat itself.

McCarthy believes Pope Francis, who is due to visit the United States later his month, is sincere in his efforts to promote reform but sees more that can be done.

“I think there is awareness,” the director said. “But do I think the problem is fixed? No. Do I think the church has properly addressed it? No, not yet.”

Speaking to AFP TV, McCarthy added: “I like what Pope Francis is starting to say and how he's talking, I think he is a fascinating, interesting man and I'm hopeful, but we'll see. Time will tell.”
 
An authentic hero

Since becoming Pope in 2013, Francis has initiated a series of reforms related to abusive priests, including making cover-ups punishable under Church law and the appointment of an expert panel of advisors that includes some victims.

But critics say the Church retains a tendency to want to deal with the issues in-house, rather than turning abusers over to civil authorities.

And in an issue which is aired in Spotlight's nuanced script, few in the Catholic hierarchy have shown any inclination to address whether the enforced celibacy of priests might be one of the root causes of the problem.

Ruffalo, who plays the role of Globe reporter Michael Rezendes, says the film also has an important point to make about the importance of properly resourced, digging journalism, describing his quirky, driven character as an authentic hero.

“I had never played anything quite like it and I also liked how quirky he was, he's not initially who you would imagine to be a hero, as we see them in movies you know, but a hero nonetheless.”

McCarthy agrees. “These guys were operating in some pretty dark waters,” he said. “Everything they were uncovering was dark and painful, but they had to wade through it and I think I wanted our audience to experience that a little bit, like that's their job to keep asking the hard questions.

“That's the great thing that the press can do that I, as a civilian, don't want to do. I don't want to walk around and ask people about their abuse and what happened and the specifics but its important we know so we can deal with the issues.”

Stanley Tucci, who is being tipped for a possible Oscar nod for his turn as an irritable but indefatigable lawyer for some of the victims, said he hoped the film would not be seen as anti-Church.

“Its not a condemnation of Catholicism it is a condemnation of the people who abused the basic tenets of Catholicism and Christianity … and those people, unfortunately, were very high up in the Catholic church.”

VENICE

Italy to pay €57m compensation over Venice cruise ship ban

The Italian government announced on Friday it would pay 57.5 million euros in compensation to cruise companies affected by the decision to ban large ships from Venice's fragile lagoon.

A cruise ship in St Mark's Basin, Venice.
The decision to limit cruise ship access to the Venice lagoon has come at a cost. Photo: Miguel Medina/AFP

The new rules, which took effect in August, followed years of warnings that the giant floating hotels risked causing irreparable damage to the lagoon city, a UNESCO world heritage site.

READ ALSO: Venice bans large cruise ships from centre after Unesco threat of ‘endangered’ status

Some 30 million euros has been allocated for 2021 for shipping companies who incurred costs in “rescheduling routes and refunding passengers who cancelled trips”, the infrastructure ministry said in a statement.

A further 27.5 million euros – five million this year and the rest in 2022 – was allocated for the terminal operator and related companies, it said.

The decision to ban large cruise ships from the centre of Venice in July came just days before a meeting of the UN’s cultural organisation Unesco, which had proposed adding Venice to a list of endangered heritage sites over inaction on cruise ships.

READ ALSO: Is Venice really banning cruise ships from its lagoon?

Under the government’s plan, cruise ships will not be banned from Venice altogether but the biggest vessels will no longer be able to pass through St Mark’s Basin, St Mark’s Canal or the Giudecca Canal. Instead, they’ll be diverted to the industrial port at Marghera.

But critics of the plan point out that Marghera – which is on the mainland, as opposed to the passenger terminal located in the islands – is still within the Venice lagoon.

Some aspects of the plan remain unclear, as infrastructure at Marghera is still being built. Meanwhile, smaller cruise liners are still allowed through St Mark’s and the Giudecca canals.

Cruise ships provide a huge economic boost to Venice, but activists and residents say the ships contribute to problems caused by ‘overtourism’ and cause large waves that undermine the city’s foundations and harm the fragile ecosystem of its lagoon.

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