Results of apostolic visitation of Germany’s Cologne archdiocese sent to Vatican

CNA Staff   By CNA Staff

Cologne Cathedral in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. / Rudolf Gehrig/CNA Deutsch.

Cologne, Germany, Aug 9, 2021 / 04:00 am (CNA).

The results of an apostolic visitation of Germany’s troubled Cologne archdiocese have been sent to the Vatican, local media reported on Monday.

Pope Francis ordered the apostolic visitation amid fierce criticism of the archdiocese’s handling of abuse cases.

The apostolic visitation was carried out by Cardinal Anders Arborelius of Stockholm and Bishop Johannes van den Hende of Rotterdam, the president of the Dutch Catholic bishops’ conference.

CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner, reported on Aug. 9 that the Swedish cardinal and Dutch bishop spoke with victims of sexual violence and abuse, as well as priests, lay officials, and bishops. They also expressed thanks for written submissions.

The pope is now expected to consider the report, whose conclusions are currently unknown.

The archdiocese said in May that the apostolic visitors would evaluate “possible mistakes” made by its leader, Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki.

“During the first half of June, the Holy See’s envoys will visit the archdiocese to get a comprehensive picture of the complex pastoral situation in the archdiocese,” it said.

It added that the visitors would also examine possible errors committed by Archbishop Stefan Heße of Hamburg, who was Cologne archdiocese’s vicar general from 2012 to 2015, and the Cologne auxiliaries Bishop Dominikus Schwaderlapp and Bishop Ansgar Puff.

Woelki said in May: “Already in February I informed the Holy Father in Rome comprehensively about the situation in our archdiocese.”

“I welcome the fact that with the apostolic visitation the pope wants to get his own picture of the independent investigation and the consequences of it.”

“I will support Cardinal Arborelius and Bishop van den Hende in their work with full conviction. I welcome every measure that will help to ensure accountability.”

The 64-year-old cardinal announced in December 2020 that he had asked Pope Francis to review the decisions he took regarding an accused priest — identified only as “Pastor O.” — in 2015.

Woeki, who was appointed archbishop of Cologne in 2014, has faced calls to resign since the archdiocese controversially declined to publish a report by the Munich law firm Westphal Spilker Wastl.

In January 2019, the archdiocese commissioned Westpfahl Spilker Wastl to examine relevant personnel files from 1975 onwards to determine “which personal, systemic or structural deficits were responsible in the past for incidents of sexual abuse being covered up or not being punished consistently.”

After lawyers advising the archdiocese raised concerns about “methodological deficiencies” in the law firm’s study, Woelki commissioned Cologne-based criminal law expert Professor Björn Gercke to write a new report.

The 800-page Gercke Report was published in March. It covers the period from 1975 to 2018 and examines 236 files in detail with the aim of identifying failures and violations of the law, as well as those responsible for them.

Responding to the report, Woelki announced that he would “temporarily release” two officials from their duties: Bishop Schwaderlapp and Günter Assenmacher, an archdiocesan official.

Woelki told CNA Deutsch that he understood the anger over the archdiocese’s response to abuse cases and its decision not to publish the first report.

“I am heartily sorry that we have caused further pain to those affected by the difficult path of coming to terms with sexualized violence in the Archdiocese of Cologne,” he said.

“Unfortunately, we had no alternative to the decision to commission a second expert opinion, because we need a methodologically clean and sustainable basis in order to clearly identify the responsibilities organizationally in our church and to be able to prevent the same mistakes being made in the future.”


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2 Comments

  1. Meanwhile the pertinacious agenda to mainstream an ecclesial homosexual-friendly environment–part of Germania’s unstructured and “binding” Synodal Way(ward)–continues unabated…

    Along with calls for female ordinations (invalid), short shelf-life ordinations (Pope Francis’ “disposable culture”?), and fluid intercommunion parodies (not parity) with ecclesial communities (not churches, because historically disconnected from the Apostolic Succession and valid sacraments).

  2. Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki one of the outstanding German prelates opposed to his Nation’s synodality process and the evils this process foments. He obviously had good legal cause on advice of a diocesan attorney to withhold the first report on clergy abuse. Why then aren’t there investigations of German bishops involved in promoting homoseuality, interreligious communion, placing women in positions reserved for clergy? There are a few cardinals and bishops placed in authoritative positions in Rome who have dubious combined with checkered credentials. Am I unfair in perceiving His Holiness’ and entourage in zealous pursuit of clergy infraction by Woelki ideological?

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