At age five, 1954, "the Bishop" (Chicago's Cardinal Stritch) stood over me and said, I had to "stop babbling" about what the priest did to me. It took me 40 years to talk about it again. Today, I babble.

Moving to City of Angels 8

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Thursday, October 08, 2009

LITTLE NOTICED IN THE NEWS:

Posted by artemurphy
March 15, 2009, 2:14PM
What a surprise that St. Rose of Lima Parish on the Cleveland West Side was closed by Bishop Lennon.
How vibrant was that parish? First, its former pastor, James Viall, was removed for sexual molestation of children. Second, the Parish rallied behind this perp, James Viall (aka "Father God" as it was reported in local newspaper and TV news coverage) and yet sadly, elements of the Parish excoriated the victims, essentially revictimizing the innocents who came forward with allegations which were later proven to be credible. The Parish defended Viall "fiercely," as newspaper accounts further read. Some victims’ houses were vandalized on Lake Road by irate parishioners. Third, as more victims came forward regarding Viall, representing nearly 50 years of child sexual abuse going back into the late 1950s when Viall was newly ordained and moved around the Diocese of Cleveland from parish to parish, a common practice by the Diocese, St. Rose seemed further emboldened to defend this perp, handing out supportive leaflets after Mass, suggesting a fund raiser for his defense, promoting a 50-Year Jubilee Celebration for him and continuing to list him in the Parish bulletin as Pastor. Fourth, eventually the "incensed" parishioners joined other parishes in the community, including opening a “protest school,” thereby removing large support dollars for St. Rose of Lima Parish and seeing its own school close. Tragically to this day, James Viall continues to protest his innocence and manipulatively work the Vatican, Canon Law appeals systems without regard to his victims and in spite of his fellow priests’ sensitivities (particularly those who long had suspicions, but who were themselves afraid to speak out the to the bishop). Affirmative acknowledgement and confirmation from professionals such as law enforcement and private investigators, social workers, psychologists, medical and diocesan clergy to the victims has not interrupted or short-circuited Viall’s denial. St. Rose of Lima must have been the easiest place for Lennon to close....

(Comment on:
Cleveland parishes may close but Catholic church will be resurrected within all of us: Regina Brett


This one I don't have the link but here is story:
PHOENIX RISING August 18, 2009. APwire - 1:30pmcentral: PHOENIX RISING IN CLEVELAND by, Joelyn Scott and Timothy Nolan, staff writers

Well the long awaited word is in: Former Cleveland priest and pastor of once renowned St. Rose Parish in Cleveland's inner city, James A. Viall has been found GUILTY by a three judge panel - made up of canonists and peer priests - of sexually molesting an untold number of pre-pubesecent boys during the course of his 50 - count 'em - 50 years' history as a catholic priest in Cleveland. Despite seven long years of arduous investigation, untold threats toward victims by the "good catholics" of Viall's bastion of arch orthodoxy, St. Rose of Lima Parish on Cleveland's West Side, and - at times - humiliating and degrading depositions conducted by Cleveland and Chicago attorneys and canonists, and coordinated by the Cleveland Diocesan Lay Review Board, the Office of Bishop Lennon, and Cleveland Attorney, Patricia Ritzert, Esq., four brave victims of Viall's predatory activities have won a hollow victory in their battle for Justice. (Viall plans on appealing his judgment to the Office of The Promulgation of The Faith - the Vatican's highest judicial body - through the auspices of Kay Bailey Hutchison and Women For Faith & Family). Offered hush money to fade away into the dust, these four brave men refused any remuneration from the Cleveland Diocese in their pursuit of JUSTICE. With their professional careers in tatters and their reputations ruined along the way (including those of James McCarty and David Briggs, religion writers for The Cleveland Plain Dealer - Ohio's Largest Newspaper), these men continue to suffer bouts of mental depression, physical torment and spiritual darkness. But their collective beliefs in Truth, Justice, and Fair Play gave them the strength to carry on in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds. One now suffers from advanced paralysis of the left side of his face; another from wastage; and a third from obsessive scruples and feelings of guilt. On a more positive note, the four are planning a reunion/fund-raiser and reverse raffle in Cleveland at Guarino's on Murray Hill on the third Sunday in September and invite all their friends and supporters to enjoy dinner and drinks (open bar underwritten by Anthony Pilla Enterprises, pasta by Cavollis, spumoni and pastries by Corbos on The Hill). Fr. Viall was contacted as part of this story but refused comment saying instead that he still suffers mental torment, bouts of self-doubt about his vocation, and the lingering effects of a lifelong malady known as Addison's Disease. (It is reported by third parties that Viall seldom ventures outside his Brecksville home except for Oil of Ipacac, has all of his meals catered in by John Q's Steak House, is reduced to washing his own bed sheets and underwear, and has given away all of his Ivy League sports shirts to the children at Parmadale Village.) Viall, ordained in Cleveland in December 1954 by His Excellency Bishop Edward F. Hoban, is 80 and lives with his brother John Viall in Brecksville, Ohio. Declan O'Toole and Emmett Murphy also contributed to this story.

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Accused priest's parish defends him fiercely

09/03/02

David Briggs
Plain Dealer Reporter

He is a man so revered for his devotion to a traditional church that some of his followers compare him to Mother Teresa and Pope John Paul II. The nickname "Father God" is sometimes whispered in the halls of St. Rose of Lima Church in Cleveland.

Yet the Rev. James Viall is one of 15 active priests suspended by the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland after they were accused of sexual misconduct.

Viall, 73, was placed on leave July 3 after two families told the diocese and the Cuyahoga County Department of Children and Family Services that they had discovered inappropriate photos of minors and that Viall had been providing alcohol to children.

Two successful professional men later told prosecutors Viall abused them in the 1950s and '70s. One of them has sued Viall.

The case is a striking example of the two faces of the priesthood confronting Catholics across the nation.

The apparent contradiction troubles Viall's supporters at St. Rose, and they're angry with Bishop Anthony Pilla and anyone who questions their former pastor.

In fact, a priest during a July Mass asked parishioners to pray for Viall's speedy vindication, and a flier inserted into bulletins at Sunday Masses July 14 urged church members to fight for his reinstatement.

During a July 31 parish meeting, some parishioners laughed at and jeered diocesan officials when they urged compassion for abuse victims. Families suspected of helping prosecutors have been attacked in online forums and parish meet ings.

"He is just such a great example of what we believe in, in our faith," church member Marilyn Kenner said after the meet ing. "As far as we're concerned, this is spiritual warfare."

Viall's lawyer said the priest is unable to comment on the allegations because they are being investigated by church and civil authorities.

For those individuals who say they experienced his advances, Viall's suspension is long-delayed justice.

One 60-year-old man who said he was abused by Viall said the priest's actions have bothered him for 47 years. The man, who spoke on the condition that he not be identified, said he awaits the day Viall and other abusive priests are sent to prison along with Martin Louis, a former diocesan priest convicted of sexual crimes.

"I'm more than happy to forgive all these guys their sins as long as they're sitting next to Martin," he said.


Slow seduction

The seduction started slowly, the older man recalls.

Viall told him that he was a special altar boy, and pulled him out of class to serve funerals and other functions at St. Jerome in Cleveland. Viall became friends with his family, and won their confidence to take the youth to Cedar Point and on trips to CYO camps, the former altar boy said.

Later, the man said, came dirty jokes, sexual discussions and offers of alcohol. There were gifts and late-night swimming trips at the seminary, where the former altar boy said he was encouraged to swim naked.

On a trip to Washington, D.C., when he was 13, the man said he and Viall stayed in the same room and that the priest told him to take off his pajamas and come into his twin bed wearing only one of the priest's T-shirts. When he complied, the priest threw his arms and legs over the young boy and began to breathe heavily as they lay in bed together, the man recalls.

In the flier circulated at St. Rose Church, supporters of Viall said the recent allegations represent the first time in a 49-year career the priest has even been accused of improper conduct with children.

But it was as early as 1955, the year after the priest's ordination, that the man said Viall began to abuse him.

A second man also has come forward to prosecutors, saying he was abused by Viall as an altar boy in the early 1970s at St. Phillip and James. Many of the details in the allegations are similar, including Viall urging the boy to wear his T-shirt to bed.

In retrospect, some former parishioners said Viall has often shown an inordinate interest in boys. For nearly all of his priesthood, Viall went on unchaperoned trips with them. He gave some youths the honorary title "boy bishop."

Former parishioners said Viall always seemed to have young teens around him, even when visiting church members' homes for social functions.

But for decades, as is the case with many priests suspected of abusing children, no one said anything.


Supporters fight back

This image of Viall is unrecognizable to many current members of St. Rose, some of whom see the priest as the victim of a witch hunt. Critics say the church bypassed due process in suspending the priest publicly and damaging his reputation.

"A wonderful man, Father Viall. . . . He's an eloquent preacher. He's a very orthodox and holy man," said George Donnelly, a St. Rose parishioner and father of 13. "I think that we have the cart before the horse. You're guilty before you're proven innocent."

James Schneider said that when he was an altar boy, Viall was a model priest. When he got out of the Marine Corps at age 21, Viall gave him a job doing custodial work at St. Rose to help him pay for his education at Cleveland State University.

Now three of Schneider's sons are altar servers at St. Rose. He allowed one of his sons to travel alone with Viall and stay in the same room with the priest on a two-week trip to Europe. The priest told the young teen he wanted to take him to Europe because his health did not permit him to travel alone and the boy was his friend.

James Schneider, 46, trusts Viall completely. He calls him "without a doubt" one of the holiest men in his life.

For those on the other side, the parish opposition can be frightening.

"We are new arrivals to this cesspool," said one of the parents who complained.

The parents declined to speak publicly. Already, they say, they have been forced to seek new churches, and they and their children have been vilified in late-night phone calls and Internet chat rooms for speaking out. An unsigned newsletter inserted in bulletins indicated the parents who complained about Viall actually approved of alcohol being served to their children.

At the July church meeting, some hollered, "She's crazy. She's nuts" in reference to one of the parents who complained.

Most of the 200 parishioners attending supported Viall. "This is an attack on Father Viall, and it's an attack on this community of faithful believers. He is devout. He is religious. He is a man of God," parishioner Lloyd Hemphill said after the meeting.


Tradition survives

At St. Rose, the hierarchical church survives, from the cleric saying the Latin Mass facing away from the congregation down to the black biretta, the traditional square hat with silk trim, worn by the priest. It is an environment that does not brook dissent.

Supporters see Viall as a charismatic, inspiring preacher who would visit them in the hospital and be by their side through illnesses of loved ones.

For those who believe in him, it is inconceivable Viall would abuse children, several said. Some say they're frustrated that authorities haven't released details of the complaints against Viall.

But the Catholic Church, reeling from the clergy sex abuse scandal, has committed itself to investigating allegations and caring for those who say they were abused.

In the uproar at St. Rose, concern for victims has not always been a priority.

At a weekday Mass in July, the Rev. Sean Donnelly added his own prayer of the faithful that made no mention of abuse victims: "We pray for the speedy return and vindication of Father Viall."

At the parish meeting, Sister Rita Mary Harwood, diocesan secretary for parish life and development, and the Rev. Lawrence Jurcak, director of the clergy personnel board, were jeered when they spoke of extending pastoral care to people who have been sexually molested.

But Harwood and Jurcak, in the face of angry parishioners, urged church members not to ignore the suffering of those who claim to be victims of Viall.

"My heart grieves terribly for these individuals," Jurcak said.

Several times, the slightly built nun urged sympathy for abuse victims in quiet and prayerful tones. "No child should suffer harm at the hands of clergy. That should be our primary concern," Harwood said.

And when they learned parents who raised concerns this year were being harassed, the two professional men who said they had been abused said they decided to come forward. One of them said it was painful to risk emotional trauma as well as the wrath of Viall's supporters.

In the end, it was a simple moment that gave him the will to speak out. It was seeing the sheer innocent joy of childhood on the face of his preteen son when the boy brought home a frog from a pond.

"When I saw him with the frog, this is what I must have been, what I was like at 11 and 12 years old, before Viall had his way with me."

Plain Dealer reporter Margaret Bernstein contributed to this story.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

dbriggs@plaind.com, 216-999-4812


© 2002 The Plain Dealer. Used with permission.


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