Father Brown's Home for Boys
(2019)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : William J. O'Shea, 2019
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9780578461823 (electronic bk.) MWT14402610, 057846182X (electronic bk.) 14402610
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

The 1960's were a turbulent time in our history. Our leaders were, assassinated, America was, bogged down in Vietnam, casualty numbers fought for space with Anti-War and Civil Rights movements on the front pages of every newspaper and for the lead story on the nightly news programs. Concurrently, while the world was, distracted by these problems, the monsters who preyed on children thrived. Even if they were, caught, there was practically no prosecution of these predators. Their crimes against innocent children were, called "Fondling" or at worst "Molestation", those who were, charged were, given probation. In the Catholic Church, across the globe, pedophile priests also thrived. They operated with impunity. If they were, caught their evil deeds were, covered up by a Church that was afraid of public scrutiny and the predators would be transferred to another parish, where nobody knew of their crimes and there was also a new flock of children for them to prey upon. Even when a priest behaved so outrageously that it became common knowledge that he was a child predator the police were never involved, rather he would be sent to a retreat in the South West where he would be treated and released back into the world like a vampire risen. These monsters weren't hiding under the bed, they were bold in their behaviors, and since everything was covered up they were above the law. This predatory behavior by clergy didn't start in the 1960's, but it reached new heights then with all the other evils that plagued the world. Like other evil men throughout history, these predator priests must have thought that God was on their side. He was not. In fact, God had champions who conquered evil every day. These men would be, held accountable for their sins, regardless of whom they were

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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