Smoky Mountains Sunrise
Showing posts with label Reverend Thomas Iwanowski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reverend Thomas Iwanowski. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Archbishop John J. Myers, For God's Sake, GO!

"If Myers is incapable of guaranteeing the safety of children in Catholic-run facilities, he should no longer be the head of the Newark archdiocese."
For God's Sake, GO! 
The images from Rio de Janeiro of wholesome, zealous youths in love with Jesus Christ, His Vicar and His Church give great hope for a renewal of faith and a Church worthy of its founder, but what responsible parent of New Jersey teens would let their children go off to Rio in the company of any priest under the authority of John J. Myers?  He has never shown any regard for them or the safety of their children, only his priests.  It is time to demand his removal so that the Church in New Jersey can join the rest of the universal Church in a New Springtime of growth and holiness.  

If concerned parents and Catholic laymen stop feeding the corruption, withhold contributions and demand new leadership, the Holy See will remove this bad shepherd as they did in Boston and elsewhere. We have every right to demand and expect Church leadership that is better than a crime syndicate. 

Here's an editorial from today's Herald News with which we heartily agree. 

 
Fr. Thomas Iwanowski thought inviting a child molester to live in the rectory next to a parochial school would be a good idea; his boss agreed

.A PASTOR in Oradell allowed a priest to stay in his rectory who had been accused of sexually molesting a teenage boy. The Rev. Thomas Iwanowski and a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Newark said allowing Monsignor Robert Chabak to stay at St. Joseph's rectory was "an act of compassion." We ask: "To whom?"
Certainly not to the boy who was allegedly molested in the 1970s. The archdiocese removed Chabak from ministry in 2004 after it determined there was credible evidence to support the allegations. The statute of limitations had passed and no criminal charges were filed. This May, the archdiocese was made aware of a second allegation regarding Chabak.
Iwanowski has known Chabak for more than 40 years; they met in seminary. When Chabak's home in Toms River was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, the archdiocese gave him permission to stay at the rectory in Oradell. St. Joseph School is a block away.
The church's pastor has resigned effective July 31, saying it was a mutual decision between him and the archdiocese and had nothing to do with the Chabak incident. Some disagree that the resignation had nothing to do with Chabak. It is a small point either way.
What is not so small is that the archdiocese thought it was appropriate to allow someone it had removed from active ministry because of a credible sexual-abuse allegation to live in a parish rectory near a school and not tell parishioners or be concerned that the priest could venture out. Chabak was not under house arrest; he was free to go wherever he chose and the archdiocese continues to minimize the potential risks this raised for children and, of lesser consequence, the damage these kinds of decisions have on the Catholic Church's reputation.
We can understand that Iwanowski felt compassion for someone he knew for more than 40 years, but the St. Joseph rectory was not Iwanowski's private home. A pastor is a temporary steward of a parish; his first responsibility is to his parishioners. There is no shortage of suitable housing for a temporarily displaced priest with Chabak's history. The archdiocese could have found appropriate lodging that was not in a parish setting.
This incident, coupled with recent revelations that the Rev. Michael Fugee allegedly violated a court agreement to not have unsupervised contact with children, paints a picture of either an archdiocese out of control, incapable of monitoring priests who may pose a danger to children, or an archdiocese that continues to put the welfare of its clergy before the welfare of everyone else. Either scenario is unacceptable.
The Vatican should investigate these repeated lapses of judgment. In the wake of the Fugee scandal, some top diocesan officials resigned; not Archbishop John J. Myers. We do not accept the excuse made by the archdiocese in the Fugee case that it is not capable of closely monitoring its own clergy. If Myers is incapable of guaranteeing the safety of children in Catholic-run facilities, he should no longer be the head of the Newark archdiocese. This is not a gray area, this is a black-and-white decision.
It is imperative that the Vatican investigate and decide what needs to be done in Newark. There is no more precious treasure in our society than our children. Apparently, officials in the Archdiocese of Newark still don't understand that.

Monday, July 22, 2013

Another Scandal Rocks Newark Archdiocese, Child Molester Invited to Live In Rectory Next to Parish School

Father Thomas Iwanowski Invites Child Molester Friend to Live in Rectory

Rev. Thomas Iwanowski
For over five years, I was involved in opposing Father Thomas Iwanowski's efforts to strip an historically Polish parish of its Polish identity.  For that matter, I was first motivated because of his efforts to strip Our Lady of Czestochowa Church in Jersey City of its Catholic identity.  

From his arrival in the mid nineties, until his blessed departure in 2010, Iwanowski bitterly divided the parish, stripped it of ornamental detail and beauty, eliminated Polish language ministry and liturgies, eliminated devotions and encouraged those who did not like his "my way or the highway" administrative style, to leave.  At the height of controversy over Iwanowski's wreckovation of the parish, no less than The New York Times characterized his liturgies as "Unitarian."

During his tenure at Our Lady of Czestochowa Church, Iwanowski spent 4 days of every week at the beach home of child molester Monsignor Robert Chabak.  Chabak was also a frequent "house guest" of his longtime friend and companion, Father Thomas Iwanowski.  Now, that long-time relationship has become only the latest scandal to rock the Archdiocese of Newark.

All of these many scandals have a common "ringleader" and source.  Archbishop John J. Myers has acted as would a Capo di tutti capi, who is only concerned with protecting the priests of his crime syndicate.  He has shown no concern, compassion or responsibility toward the families of the Newark Archdiocese and their children.  

It is long-past time for the corrupt and arrogant tenure of Archbishop John J. Myers to end.  We appeal, as so many leaders throughout the state of New Jersey already have, for the Papal Nuncio and the Holy See to intervene, remove the criminal head of this archdiocese, and send in his place a caring, holy and loving Archbishop.  The faithful have suffered far too long under a string of Archbishops only concerned with their careers, power and perquisites.  If the Church is to have any credibility in New Jersey, bold, swift and decisive action is needed to replace systemic corruption with true representatives of Jesus Christ.


Priest who allowed accused molester to live in parish says he may have made a mistake


From the The Star-Ledger

ORADELL — A Catholic priest conceded today that he may have made a mistake by arranging for a former priest once accused of molesting a teenage boy to stay in the rectory of his Bergen County parish.

"Hindsight is 20-20," the Rev. Thomas Iwanowski of St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Oradell said after services on his next-to-last Sunday there.

Iwanowski is being removed from St. Joseph by the Archdiocese of Newark as of July 31 in the wake of a scandal over the arrangement that allowed the accused priest to live at the rectory. The situation was the subject of a report in The Sunday Star-Ledger.

It was with the permission of the archdiocese that Iwanowski, 64, allowed the Rev. Robert Chabak to stay in the rectory after his mother’s home in Toms River, where he had been living, was damaged during Hurricane Sandy. The church’s elementary school is across the street from the rectory, while the middle school building is right next door.

Parishioners were not told that Chabak, 66, a friend of Iwanowski’s since the two attended seminary together four decades ago, would be staying at the rectory and only learned of his past after he was transferred to a retirement home in February. But even after that, parishioners said, Chabak would return to St. Joseph’s to spend the night. Some grew angry and demanded he be kept away.

"Obviously, looking back, Monsignor Chabak and I, if we knew this was going to be such a difficult decision, maybe we would have moved in a different direction," Iwanowski told reporters after the 12:30 mass. "But we tried to make a compassionate decision."

Iwanowski said he will be reassigned to another parish, though he did not know where.

Chabak was removed from the ministry in 2004 after church officials said there was credible evidence that he molested a teenage boy during a three-year period in the 1970s. The statute of limitation had expired on criminal prosecution of the crime, and he was never charged. Chabak, now back in the Toms River house, declined to comment last week.

Jim Goodness, a spokesman for Newark Archbishop John Myers, said the arrangement had been permitted, "out of a sense of compassion."
Criminal ringleader John J. Myers
 But some parishioners called it reckless. One of them, Daniel O’Toole, who led the effort to remove Chabak, said Iwanowski and Myers were "spectacularly tone deaf" considering other sexual abuse scandals. Most recently, Myers faced calls for his own resignation following revelations that the Rev. Michael Fugee had extensive interaction with teenagers despite being banned for life from ministering to children. Fugee has since been charged with violating a judicial order.

Iwanowski said O’Toole was using the Chabak matter to force him out after the two disagreed over measures the pastor had taken to balance the budget of the parish school. Iwanowski said he had decided to raise tuition 10 percent, lay off teachers who provided religious education only, and have homeroom teachers handle religion, which would also allow them to weave religious teachings into standard academic subjects.

He said O’Toole had publicly opposed the measures during a parish school meeting two or three months ago.
The Rev. Thomas Iwanowski resigned as pastor of St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church after the Rev. Robert Chabak continued to sleep at the parish. 

O’Toole, a 46-year-old attorney with three children at St. Joseph, dismissed the assertion as "subterfuge."

"I don’t at all dispute that I’ve had problems with Tom’s leadership over the past two or three years," O’Toole, who is boycotting St. Joseph until Iwanowski is gone, said in a telephone interview. But he added, "I’m not using people who are sexual victims as excuses. I’m bringing something to the attention to the archdiocese, and I was disappointed to learn that they knew about it, and they not only knew, they gave him permission."

Robert Hoatson, a former priest now with Road to Recovery, a group that supports victims of clergy sexual abuse, was outside the church on Sunday urging parishioners to withhold monetary contributions until reforms are in place to insure transparency. Hoatson said the responses by Iwanowski and the archdiocese to the Chabak affair exemplified the church’s arrogance.

"How do you explain after Fugee — during Fugee — that they do this with Chabak?" Hoatson said. "It’s arrogance to the hilt."

Several St. Joseph parishioners declined to comment after mass in the church’s airy, brightly lit sanctuary, where a live band of drums and, variously, guitar, piano and organ accompanied a female vocalist. Iwanowski did not discuss the Chabak matter during the service, whose themes included compassion and giving God one’s full attention.

One parishioner who did speak afterward, Phil Follety, 62 of New Milford, said it was too soon to judge Iwanowski or anyone else.

"It’s something that’s been tried in the press and we don’t have much information," said Follety, who was in church with his wife and teenaged son. "As religion is under fire in this country today, I think we have to unify."
Editor's Note:

You've wreaked ruin and destruction, Archbishop.  For God's sake, GO!
Call the Archdiocese of Newark and let Myers know what you think:  973-497-4000.

His spokesman, James Goodness, can be E-mailed at:

Write to the Pope's representative to the United States:
His Excellency Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò
Papal Nuncio to the United States
3339 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D. C. 20008

Phone: (202) 333-7121