Southdown Institute: A 'shield' for the Church or a place to provide 'meaningful' help for pedophile priests? - Action News
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Southdown Institute: A 'shield' for the Church or a place to provide 'meaningful' help for pedophile priests?

The Toronto-area clergy rehab centre and facilities like it have come under renewed scrutiny following the recent grand jury report about widespread sexual abuse by priests in Pennsylvania.

Recent grand jury report says at least 7 Pennsylvania priests sent to Toronto-area facility for treatment

The Southdown Institute north of Toronto employs a team of psychologists and psychiatrists who mostly deal with clergy suffering from mental-health issues such as alcoholism and depression. But a small number of priests accused of molesting children are also sent there. (Southdown Institute website)

In 1993, Boston priest ChrisSchiavonewas sent to the Southdown Institute for some "therapeutic renewal" after admitting to church superiors that he'd beeninvolved in a gay relationship with a 26-year-old seminarian.

Among the patients at the clergy rehab centre north of Torontowere a few who had been accused of molesting children, he said, including the very priest who had baptized Schiavone years earlier.

"My response to that was very mixed. Part of that is, 'Wow, this is quite horrifying,'" Schiavone said in an interview with CBC News. "And then another part of it was so deeply sad. So deeply sad [that] this person who played some role in my own spiritual journey, in the spiritual lives of so many people, is now here."

While Schiavonesaid his experience there was a positive one, Southdown and treatment centres like ithavecome under renewed scrutiny following the recent grand jury report about clergy sexual abuse in Pennsylvania. The more than 1,300 pages includeallegations church officials wouldhide priests accused of molesting children at rehab centresbefore reassigning them.

But Dr. SamuelMikail,a psychologist who wasclinicaldirector at the Southdown Institute from 2002 until 2015, said in his experience,the large majority of church leadership that referred people to the rehab centre "were hoping that something meaningful can come out of theexperience."

"In terms of the person coming to clarity about the damage that they've done to others and then to begin toreally work on that internally, both from a psychological and spiritual point of view," he said.

Southdown employs a team of psychologists and psychiatristswho mostly deal with clergy suffering frommental-health issues such as alcoholism and depression. But a small number ofpriests accused ofmolestingchildren are also sent there.

It was one of the treatment facilities mentioned in thegrand jury report released last week that claimshundreds of Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvaniaengaged in sexual abuse sincethe1940s.

The report says at least seven Pennsylvania priests were sent to Southdown for treatment. But the institute's assessment of some of those priests that they should never be near children didn't seem to deter the church from allowing them to continue to play a role in church activities.

A grand jury report claims to document seven decades of child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania. It says church officials allowed priests to continue restricted or regular duties despite credible allegations of abuse. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

In at least one case, in 1984, Southdownofficials warnedthat a priest who hadadmittedto sexually molesting a 14-year-old child and had received treatment there for eight months should not be put in a position where he would have responsibility for adolescents, thereport says.

Yetthe church seemed to ignore the institute's advice, and later assigned the priest to a parish inConshohocken, Pa., with a grade school and encouraged him to "educate youth."

'They were tough'

Schiavonesaid his own eight-month stint at Southdown provided the help he needed to deal with his own emotional turmoil following the revelation of his affair,coming out as a gay man and decision to leavethe church.

He recalls that during group therapy sessions, those priests who werethere for molesting children weren't let off the hook by the therapists.

"They were tough. Ifsomeone was trying to sort of walk back their personal responsibility, or someone was trying to rationalize why it wasthey thought they could return safely to the ministry, none of the therapists I observedwould stand for it."

A spokesman for the Archdiocese of Toronto told The Canadian Pressit sends priests to Southdown periodically "to deal with a variety of issues, for example depression, alcohol or other similar situations, as well as psychological assessments if needed."

Dr. Samuel Mikail, a psychologist, was clinical director of the Southdown Institute from 2002 until 2015. (LinkedIn)

Dorothy Heiderscheit, the CEO of Southdown, would not comment on the recent grand jury report or talk about the role of the facility, instead referring CBC to the institute's website.

Yet the grand jury report paints a bleak picture about the use of some of these types of facilities. While not singling out Southdown, it said other centresinPennsylvania, Marylandand New Mexico "laundered accused priests, provided plausible deniability to the bishops, and permitted hundreds of known offenders to return to ministry."

Not sharing information

Dr. Mikailsaid incases of sexual molestation of children, Southdown's role was to either assess the credibility of the allegations or, when it was clear that abuse had occurred,mitigate anysexualbehaviourthat might put someone else at risk.

However, there were some cases, he said, whereit became evident that church officials were not sharing all the information they may have had on a particular priest.

'You're told that there was one or two instances of this kind ofbehaviour, where in fact there were many more instances that were known."

And making a diagnosis of pedophilia,Mikailsaid, is in partbased on thefrequencyof the behaviour.

Mikail said in his experience, hedidn't believe the churchignored their assessments outright. What was more likely to happen, he said, is that Southdown would makerecommendations that apriest have a "restrictedministry"orno ministry or be placed in a monastery where they would not have contact with the public.

Church officials would determine that the individual has been on very good behaviour for quite a period of time, thattreatment had been successfuland the restrictions might begin to be relaxed, Mikailsaid.

"I think it was alimited understanding of the fact that when someone has a pedophilic interest that's not something that changes."

Patrick Wall is a former priest turned activist for victims of clergy sexual abuse. He says abusive priests should be treated in secular facilities with no ties to the church. (Jeff Anderson & Associates website)

PatrickWall, a former priest turned activist for victims of clergy sexual abuse, said religious superiors would use Southdown to gather as much information as they could about those priests facing molestation allegations, such as how many felonies they may have committed.

"They also used itas a shield," he said,"in the sense that if they neededto get somebody out of a jurisdiction quickly because they thought that an arrest was imminent or civil lawsuits were going to be filed then they would ship them out of the United States into Southdown specifically for that purpose."

Wall, who has consulted on more than 200 cases of clergy abuse in the U.S.,said priests shouldn't be treated at these types of facilities because they are too closely linked to the church.

"There's no objectivity," he said."And I think in order to protect the common good and to protect children in the future,the priestsshould be sent to secular institutions in order to be treated properly."

With files from The Canadian Press