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Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell by Louise Milligan
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Cardinal Quotes Showing 1-15 of 15
“I’m traumatised. I know I seem like I’m a happy-go-lucky guy, but it is a facade. This is the mask I wear every day and I’m really good at wearing it.”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“He has PTSD eyes, although he does his level best to hide them with humour. I’ve seen them before and I’ll see them again and again before this thing ends—brown, green, blue, big, small, smiling, bloodshot. PTSD eyes somehow have the look of a dog that’s been left alone outside for weeks in a yard that’s been concreted over. PTSD are quick to tears.”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“But my mental health is hanging on by an absolute thread.’ He pinches his finger and thumb together”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“Animal Farm, in which the dominant pigs haughtily announced, ‘All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.’ Pell”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“I’m traumatised. I know I seem like I’m a happy-go-lucky guy, but it is a facade. This is the mask I wear every day and I’m really good at wearing it. But”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“Pell, a leader of a faith-based organisation, acquiesced in a process where his rolled-gold lawyers, whom he instructed to go hard, spent an inordinate amount of money defending Church coffers against a man who had been abused by a dodgy priest with other victims. (p.114)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“The exercise of power became a constant feature of those years. And those who disagreed with Pell on matters theological or spiritual felt thoroughly marginalised. As the 2000s wore on, it was not just a case of Pell necessarily exercising the power himself, but that he had remade the Australian Church in his image. Dissent was actively discouraged, discussion about subjects he had declared off limits was avoided. (p.115)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“I can testify from my own experience the Church covers up, silences victims, hinders police investigations, alerts offenders, destroys evidence and moves priests to protect the good name of the Church. (Newcastle Heraldjournalist Joanne McCarthy, quoted on p.124)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“Pell is unable to project a convincing sense of compassion, reform and healing.... Pell looms as a huge liability in the institutional crisis ow facing the Catholic Church in Australia. (The Australianjournalist Paul Kelly, quoted on p.125)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“Some of those watching believed answers like this(eg. "I don't recall", "I don't think so." )- which dominated Pell's evidence as well as [former Auxiliary Bishop of Brisbane Brian] Finnigan's and many of the other priests - to be a form of 'mental reservation' ormentalis restrictioin the Latin. It's a theological strategy dating back centuries, which involves the idea of truths 'expressed partly in speech and partly in the mind'. As the theory goes, lying is considered a sin. But a Christian's ethical duty is to tell truth to God - reserving or restricting part of that truth from human ears is ethically sound if it serves the greater good. (p.185)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“[Former Bishop of Ballarat Ronald] Mulkearns appealed to Pope John Paul II about what to do about child sexual abuse - he wanted, says [Former Corpus Christi seminarian Michael] Costigan, 'some direction or counselling'. 'He said the Pope would not talk to him about it', Costigan says. 'He said the Pope turned his back and walked out of the room.'... 'It wasn't long after he came back that he stood down as Bishop.' (p.189)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“The Chair [Justice Peter McClellan, former Chair of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse] seemed to see where he was going with this. 'Cardinal, you keep referencing back to authority and structural responsibility, but it is the case, isn't it, that within the Church you would expect and indeed might I suggest the community would expect - that each priest would act responsibly, regardless of their position?"
He was met again with some vintage obfuscation, capped off with a familiar Pell trope: you people just don't understand my Church. 'To understand the Catholic Church's structure and who has authority, you go to Church law, and according to the canon law of the Church, you can there identify the different levels of responsibility - it might be a jurisdictional responsibility; it might be a moral responsibility at different levels. But it's from the canon law that you decide what the situation is within the Church.'
And here the Chair got to the nub of Pell's true thinking on this, the bubble he finds himself in, where the ordinary rules of morality, decency and even criminal responsibility are leavened to varying degrees by byzantine Church structures. (p.203)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“Ballarat survivor Andrew Collins, watching in the room in Rome, said the first word that came into his mind was 'empathy'. 'To me it showed that he [Cardinal George Pell, giving evidence before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse] struggled to show any,' Collins says. 'We didn't see it as a blunder, as he thinks carefully before he speaks and is very intelligent and articulate. This is just how his mind works. If it's not about him, involving him or of benefit to him, then it hardly registers.”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“When the issue came to light, I naively expected that the Church would care about the discontentment of many of the school parents,' [St. Patrick's Mentone school parent Andrea] Wilkins said. 'That they would listen and help us. It didn't take long to realise that they'd rather all of the" disruptive "parents and their children just left the schools rather than doing the right thing. How dare we challenge them? The whole experience made it loud and clear that their priority is with themselves and not the children we entrust to them.' (p.269)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
“People would think that clergy would plead guilty and would do all they could to minimise the stress and pain for the victim. But the Church will hire the best lawyers, barristers and even QCs to defend the abusers... The victims are cross-examined as if they are on trial. The victims have to recount every detail of the abuse, and then are called liars.' (Sexual Abuse survivor Andrew Collins quoted on p.364)”
Louise Milligan, Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell