The future is under the carpet
by Meadbh Gallagher
There is a sense of a clean sweep in the processing of child
sexual abuse by the Irish courts at present.
d there is a notion that when this sorry series of trials stop,
that will be it, the floor will be clean, and the government, the
judiciary, the churches, the professions and communities can wipe
the dust from their hands and walk away.
Not that there is a conspiracy to cover up, but, as yet more
priests, professionals and fathers arrive in the dock charged
with abusing children, the courts are merely assuming their
regular role as the clearing house for yet another ``unsolved
mystery'' in Irish society.
For, like other criminal trials, not much of the truth can really
be gleaned from these court appearances, and while we catch a
glimpse of yet another convicted abuser being led away every
week, we almost never get the help we need to explain why they
did it, how they got away with it for so long and how it can be
avoided in the future, never mind right now, today.
We watch these speed trials in slow motion, from the sidelines,
and there is no sense of urgency in our responses to them. There
are no tribunals, no millions spent, no legislation rushed
through in 24 hours, no government forums. There is no DPP
pushing the boundaries of the law, never mind a zealous Starr
prosecutor. There is no church restructuring, there is no bible
thumping or evangelical anger about these gross happenings. There
are no community meetings or marches.
As yesterday's abuse is cleared through the courts, today's is
swept under the carpet. And as our youngest children sing that
they ``want to have sex on the beach'', their parents and priests
baulk at the idea that they will be taught about penises and
vaginas at school, or much more, that they will learn the self
confidence to decide for themselves just what sex they want, who
they want it with and how wrong the world is that tries to turn
them into underage sex objects.