Rome, Italy, Feb 22, 2019 / 05:02 am
American women from the Catholic Worker Movement are in Rome this week to pray for the Vatican's sexual abuse summit in emulation of Dorothy Day's Roman pilgrimage to fast and pray for peace.
"We've all been very deeply grieved by the sex abuse crisis, and the crisis it has created for the entire Church," Catholic Worker Movement leader Johanna Berrigan told CNA Feb. 21.
"It just dawned on us that this would be an important time to be in Rome, to bear witness to the suffering Church that we care deeply about and … we wanted to address ways for reform," she said.
Through her involvement in the Catholic Worker Movement, a group dedicated to aiding and advocating for the poor, Berrigan co-founded the Catholic Worker Free Clinic for homeless and uninsured adults in Philadelphia in 1991 and opened another medical clinic in Haiti in 2005.
Berrigan, along with six other women, decided in November that they wanted to be in Rome as the summit was happening to pray and to give a voice to women, mothers, and lay people in the Vatican's discussion of the issue.
"When we first heard about it, it was strictly bishops that were invited, we have since learned that there has been some lay involvement," Berrigan explained.
Three of the nine official speakers at the Vatican sex abuse summit Feb. 21 - 24 are women, one of whom is a religious sister from Nigeria, Sister Veronica Openibo.
On the first day of the summit, the women were invited for a surprise visit to the US Embassy to the Holy See, where they met with Ambassador Callista Gingrich to discuss their perspective on the sex abuse crisis.
The seven Catholic Worker Movement women on pilgrimage meet each day to decide which historic churches they should visit to pray for the summit.
"We have an example in Dorothy Day, our foundress, who came to Rome in another significant point in the Church's history and she and a delegation of women came on pilgrimage to fast and pray for the Church to recognize 'conscientious objection,' and really calling for an end to nuclear weapons. So we have that in our history," Berrigan said.
Dorothy Day, whose cause for canonization has been opened, founded the Catholic Worker Movement with Peter Maurin in 1933, starting soup kitchens, farm communities, and a Catholic newspaper. She dedicated her life to aiding and advocating for the poor and leading a life characterized by voluntary poverty and works of mercy.
During their time in Rome, the Catholic Worker Movement women attended a sex abuse survivors' vigil sponsored by Ending Clergy Abuse Feb. 21 in solidarity with victims.
At the vigil, the women called for justice for survivors and an end to clericalism, as well as truth, reconciliation and healing for the entire Church.
"We care deeply about this Church, we are very, very grateful that Pope Francis has called this summit. It seems to be a step forward," Berrigan said.
"The world is watching ... people of all faiths are watching to see what the outcome of [this summit] is going to be," she said.
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