Bishop ‘scapegoated’ by clerical abuse report, funeral told

Celebrant compares Dermot O’Mahony’s suffering in final years to that of some saints

Bishop Dermot O’Mahony had been “a man of great integrity”, Bishop Eamonn Walsh told the congregation in Shankill. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons
Bishop Dermot O’Mahony had been “a man of great integrity”, Bishop Eamonn Walsh told the congregation in Shankill. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons

A bishop who was sharply criticised by an inquiry into the handling of clerical abuse allegations in the Dublin archdiocese had been “scapegoated”, an auxiliary bishop of Dublin told his funeral Mass yesterday.

Defending the memory of Dermot O’Mahony, who was also an auxiliary bishop of Dublin, Bishop Eamonn Walsh told mourners he had suffered in “a society that at the time ignored the spirit of equity”.

Bishop O'Mahony had been "a man of great integrity", Bishop Walsh told the congregation in Shankill, which included the papal nuncio, Archbishop Charles Brown.

Murphy report

The Murphy report followed an investigation into how clerical child sex abuse allegations had been handled in the Dublin archdiocese between January 1st, 1975 and April 30th, 2004.

READ SOME MORE

Bishop O'Mahony's handling of complaints and suspicions of child sexual abuse was "particularly bad", the report said, adding that he had been aware of complaints involving 13 priests. He resigned as president of the Irish Pilgrimage Trust, which brought disabled children to Lourdes, and was stood down from attending Confirmations.

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin had received Bishop O'Mahony's remains on Monday evening but was in Rome yesterday. His predecessor Cardinal Desmond Connell attended prayers with the remains before the removal.

Accused

Funeral Mass celebrant Fr

Tim Murphy

compared Bishop O’Mahony’s suffering of recent years to that of some of the saints, asking how much of it was due to the bishop’s belief he had been “wronged” and “unjustly treated”.

“The personification of love and goodness and care was in the personality of this man and to be accused of no care for the most innocent and vulnerable of all was the deepest cut,” said Fr Murphy, a friend of five decades.

The dead bishop’s brother, Gerry, was sharply critical before the Mass, saying the archdiocese had not published a letter of apology his brother had written at the time.

On Christmas Eve 2009 Bishop Walsh and fellow auxiliary bishop of Dublin Ray Field offered letters of resignation following the report. Their resignations were not accepted by Pope Benedict.

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry is a contributor to The Irish Times