https://www.latimes.com/world/la-fg-pope-ireland-20180825-story.html

Pope Francis and Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar arrive at St.Patrick’s Hall, Dublin Castle, on Saturday Aug. 25 (Simon Roughneen)
DUBLIN — Pope Francis on Saturday vowed to adopt “stringent” measures to rid a crisis-convulsed Catholic Church of the “pain and shame” caused by decades of sexual abuse and its tolerance by clerical authorities.
Francis traveled to Ireland, once a bastion of Catholic belief, but where religious practice that has been eroded by years of church scandal that has fed a process of secularization similar to preceding variants elsewhere in Europe.
He met privately for an hour and a half with eight survivors, the Vatican said, without providing details. Two of the participants in the meeting later said the pontiff equated the scandal and cover-up with excrement.
In his public appearances, Francis labeled the abuses as “repugnant crimes” but also was greeted with tough language from Irish authorities and others who decried the role of church leadership in permitting the rapes, molestation and other attacks by clergy.
“The failure of ecclesiastical authorities — bishops, religious superiors, priests and others — to adequately address these repugnant crimes has rightly given rise to outrage, and remains a source of pain and shame for the Catholic community,” the pope said.
Francis’ pledge came after a meeting with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, who told the leader of the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics that for many in Ireland, “wounds are still open” for survivors of the stream of sex abuse scandals that began to emerge during the 1990s.
With Francis seated to his left, Varadkar raised the latest sex abuse crisis to hit the U.S. church, saying it echoed previous investigations in Ireland.
“We have all listened to heart-breaking stories from Pennsylvania of brutal crimes perpetrated by people within the Catholic Church, and then obscured to protect the institution at the expense of innocent victims,” Varadkar told an audience of politicians as well as religious and civil society leaders.
Marie Collins, an Irish abuse survivor who attended the event, said “I want to see the pope tell us what he is going to do. He’s given us promises, but we do need action.”

Marie Collins speaking at a press conference at the World Meeting of Families in Dublin on Aug. 24 2018 (Simon Roughneen)
Francis’ visit is the second-ever papal visit to Ireland, once one of the world’s most devoutly Catholic countries. The church’s once-dominant influence on public policy has been obliterated in recent years — a sea change made plain by Ireland voting over the last three years to allow same-sex marriage and locally provided abortions.
“I think we are in a new space in Ireland,” said Archbishop Éamon Martin, the leader of Ireland’s Catholic bishops. He added that the church realizes that it’s now perhaps a minority but “we want to speak into our public square, with conviction, the wonderful truth of our faith.”

Pope Francis and Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar arrive at St.Patrick’s Hall, Dublin Castle, on Saturday Aug. 25 (Simon Roughneen)