Author: Joelle Casteix

  • Cupich: Priest abused BEFORE ordination, so it’s okay

     

     

    Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich: Forgives molesters, keeps parents in the dark
    Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich: Forgives molesters, keeps parents in the dark

     

    Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich has a lot of explaining to do about why he has allowed a priest—who has admitted to sexually abusing a child—to remain a priest and work with kids.

    In fact, in light of a Chicago Tribune article today, I think Cupich should step down for his blatant disregard for zero tolerance when it comes to sexual abuse.

    Priests who have EVER sexually abused a child should NOT be in ministry. Especially if that ministry involves youth. Period.

    A scenario:

    You have teenager who has been kicked out of school, struggles at home, and is dabbling with drugs and violence. English is not your first language. Maybe your immigration status is less than ideal. You are working two jobs and have younger children. A local priest reaches out to you and asks if he can help your son. 

    You say yes. 

    Why? Because church officials have promised Zero Tolerance when it comes to sexual abuse. You trust them. You believe that Zero Tolerance means that this priest has NEVER abused a child.

    Soon your child joins the priest’s marimba band and travels with the priest. You invite the priest into your home. He babysits your younger children.

    But then you learn that this priest HAS sexually abused a child. But because he did it before he became a priest, Catholic Church officials kept it quiet.

    This priest committed a heinous crime against a child. But church officials didn’t tell you. They won’t tell you if he did it again. 

    You find out that he was sent to a church-run facility for sex-offending clerics.

    Church officials minimize the abuse, calling it a “sin” that can be “forgiven,” instead of a crime that should have been punished.

    And the church isn’t even the person who tells you about the priest’s crimes … you learn about the priest’s past when someone tells you about a Chicago Tribune story. You learn that the priest’s victim has been trying to get accountability for almost 20 years.

    You look at your son. When you ask him about the priest, he won’t tell you anything … because he’s a teenager.

    What do you do?

     

    This is not a hypothetical. This is happening all over Los Angeles and Chicago today, after this story about Claretian priest Bruce Wellems appeared on the Chicago Tribune website. If you can’t read it, go here.

    The church says that Wellems “good works” should erase his crimes. But that’s not ZERO TOLERANCE. That’s minimization and cover-up.

    Would you want your child to have a teacher who had sexually abused a child before she entered the profession? Would you want Josh Duggar to babysit your daughter?

    And, for anyone who says, “But Wellems is sorry.” This is not about “forgiveness.” I don’t care if people have forgiven Wellems. I don’t want people who have sexually abused children working with my child or ANY child.

    You can forgive the embezzler, but you don’t put him in charge of your finances. You can forgive the murderer, but you don’t give him your gun when he’s angry. You can forgive the bear who mauled your dog, but you don’t make the bear your indoor pet.

    Blase Cupich, what do you have to say?

     

     

     

     

  • Bill Cosby arrested and charged with sexual assault

     

     

    Not so funny anymore
    Not so funny anymore

     

    Note: it was the release of previously sealed depositions in the CIVIL case against Cosby that finally encouraged Montgomery County, PA prosecutors to file criminal charges.

    In 2004, when former Temple University employee Andrea Constand originally reported the sexual assault, prosecutors would not charge Cosby. But 49 women and a 2005 deposition later, the criminal justice system is listening.

    Cosby claims that the encounter was consensual. Constand, who was not only allegedly drugged by Cosby, is also a lesbian.

    He was released today on $1 million bail. His defamation lawsuits against other accusers are still pending. My guess is that those lawsuits are now “on hold.”

    Read the whole article here.

     

     

  • More moves to reform CA sex crime laws

     

     

    If a proposed bill becomes a law, victims of alleged sex crimes will be able to use the courts for justice
    If a proposed bill becomes a law, older victims of alleged sex crimes will be able to use the courts for justice. That’s bad news for men like Bill Cosby

     

    On the heels of proposed federal legislation and a CA ballot initiative to eliminate statutes of limitations for sex crimes, California State Sen. Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) is “seeking to introduce a bill in January that would eliminate the statute of limitations for rape and other related crimes.”

    According to the Vallejo Times-Herald:

    In an interview, Leyva cited U.S. Department of Justice numbers on rape convictions, calling the statistics “shocking.”

    “Only two in 100 rapists would actually be convicted and do any kind of time in prison,” Leyva said, when reached by phone. “That was shocking to me. I also don’t feel like the numbers are getting any better.”

    Co-sponsoring the bill is the California Women’s Law Center and San Bernardino County District Attorney Michael Ramos. Leyva also said that since she’s made her announcement, other senators have offered to co-sponsor or co-author the proposed legislation.

    While the language of the bill is not yet available, I am very pleased to see this big push for change come from all sides. When state, federal, and citizen initiatives all call for change, the cause is harder to ignore.

     

     

  • Finding grace in living and dying

     

    Felicia Friesema is teaching me to live.

     

    Steve Julian looking all serious
    Steve Julian looking all serious

     

    Felicia is the wife of my friend Steve Julian. Steve and I met a number of years ago—when his former high school principal was exposed as a predator priest. Although Steve was not a victim, the priest and Steve had tangled over an editorial then-student Steve had written for the Damien High School (LaVerne, CA) student paper. Finding out the priest was a predator only confirmed Steve’s less-than-amicable feelings for the guy.

    The story of the priest was the inspiration for Steve’s play ALTARCATIONS/What Kind of God?

     

    Steve and Robert Keasler in "What Kind of God"
    Steve with Robert Keasler in “What Kind of God?”

     

    I loved having lunch with Steve. We’d talk about the play (a little) and then we’d talk about life. Stuff. Each other. Because we weren’t in each other’s social circles, we had a bit of freedom to bounce problems off each other. We could talk about our fears (his was health, ironically) with candor—without causing the other to worry. He taught me to be patient. To embrace silence in a conversation. I love his friendship and I love him.

    And when Steve talked about Felicia, he glowed. This year was going to be their second Christmas as a married couple. Steve told me how he envisioned a long and happy life together (and his continual Facebook updates were testament to that).

    But things have changed.

    Very recently, Steve was diagnosed with a stage four Glioblastoma Multiforme. It’s a tumor in his brain that is robbing him of his memory, his motor skills, and his words. (For those of you who know Steve as the morning host of KPCC’s Morning Edition, you know how tragic this is).

    I haven’t seen Steve in a few months, so I did not see the rapid onset of the tumor and the even faster decline in Steve’s function.

    But then Felicia began to write.

    She posts updates on Caring Bridge, a site where family members of people who are ill can post updates and keep friends and family informed. I’ve followed other friends on the site, and usually the posts are simple—who, what, and where. How to help. Where to bring food.

    Felicia’s entries are anything but simple.

    Yes, she does post what she and Steve are enduring: cross-city trips for radiation, Steve’s frustration, Felicia’s exhaustion, surgeries, care, middle-of-the-night issues.

    And then she goes further. She talks about life. About fear. About dying and acceptance. About learning to ask for help and feeling comfortable in asking people to give them privacy.

    But mostly (and I don’t even think that she knows this), Felicia talks about love:

     

    Life and death are unfair.  It’s a constant of our existence.  Suffering is universal, no matter what we do to avoid it.  The only thing that makes any of it worthwhile is the love we share with one another.  We have been the recipients of so much astounding beauty, reconciliation, and devotion the past few weeks.  It’s a cooling salve on the heat of our emotions.

     

    Or their first Christmas together, as opposed to their second:

     

    We had little fantasies about buying some land in Waimea and raising some small livestock.  I said sheep or goats, he was more for chickens.  Sheep don’t lay eggs, he said.  True enough.  But I’m a big fan of sheep’s milk.  An argument for another time.

    Our second Christmas as a married couple was not as humid or warm or full of new things to see, but it was saturated with love from so many different places.

     

    She’s brutally honest … and funny:

     

    “Do you want to tell folks anything for the holiday?”
    “Sure.”

    “I’ll type it for you.”

    He paused thoughtfully.

    “Fuck it.”

     

    She talks about paperwork and encourages her friends to get an advanced care directive, durable power of attorney, and living trust done (I also do, by the way).

    She talks about the importance of trying:

     

    Except to ask the question, “what if the treatment doesn’t work?”  And even if it does, the prognosis is still a punch to the gut.  Steve asked me that question last night.  I told him that we would have to make another hard decision.

    He asked why we were even bothering to try.  He knew the size and aggressiveness of the tumor.  The oncology team was incredibly candid about outcomes, statistics, and likely scenarios.  I don’t know how his brain encodes memories anymore, but a lot of the important things seem to stick.  Those oncology frank talks seem to be one of the sticky memories.  And if he’s going to die anyway, why bother with putting him through treatment?

    How would you answer that?  It took my last bit of control to keep it together and tell him, “because we have to try, babe.  We have to at least try to kill this tumor.  And if it doesn’t work, or if it’s too much, you tell me.  You tell me and we’ll stop.”  He nodded.  I hoped that was one of the encoded memories.

     

    I believe Felicia is writing to heal. I think she’s writing to express what is going on and to make sense of the chaos that has become everyday life to her and Steve. She’s writing to find forgiveness for the hand they have been dealt.

    But she is accomplishing so much more than that. It’s the reason I re-read her entires. She’s teaching us all how to live. How to love. How to mourn for what is happening to Steve. How to show our sadness and love.

    I have never met Felicia. But I will forever consider myself in debt to her. Not just for taking care of Steve, but for showing me—all of us—how to live with grace.

    *******

     

    The Power of Responsibility ~ $1.99 for the Kindle

  • OC Register 100 Most Influential 2015

     

    This morning, I found out I was named one of Orange County’s “Most Influential” by the Orange County Register. I won’t lie: It’s pretty awesome.

    Read the whole thing here.

     

    cheat-sheet