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Roman Polanski

These Stone Walls at Year’s End: My Hits and Misses for 2011

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on December 28, 2011 · 21 comments

Hits and Misses of 2011, Journal Editorial Report, These Stone Walls, New Year's Resolution, Catholic priests falsely accused, Fr. Gordon MacRae, Rev. Gordon MacRae, Paul Gigot, Boy Scouts of America, Pornchai Moontri, sacrifice of the Mass, New Roman Missal translation, Latin Mass, digital age, Catholic publications, David Pierre, Catholic blog, Father Marcial Maciel, Roman Polanski, Father Dominic Menna, Victor Hugo, Les Miserables, Alfie Boe, Robert Burns, Auld Lang Syne, Venerable Solanus Casey

. . . A “cup o’kindness” in the Scotish tradition is usually something with the words “single malt” imprinted on the label. That, too, is not possible in prison. But I have some Starbucks coffee I’ve been saving, and I plan to brew it on New Year’s Eve. I’ll have a cup o’that in honor of you, the friends I have met on this long and winding road. These Stone Walls is such a strange and unlikely place, yet it exists, and from it every week you let me reach into your hearts in friendship, and with a shared vision of grace at work in our world. . . .

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Dominique Strauss-Kahn, International Monetary Fund Chairman, when priests are accused, These Stone Walls, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Father Marcial Maciel, Roman Polanski, Zurich Film Festival Lifetime Achievement ~ward, the Catholic Church and priesthood, The Boston Globe, DSK, accused Catholic priest, Bret Stephens, Dorothy Rabinowitz, The Wall Street Journal Editorial Page, sexual abuse by Catholic priests, Catholic scandal and the news media, priesthood scandal, Bishop-Accountability, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, Duke University lacrosse case, prosecutor Mike Nifong, Ryan MacDonald, A Priest's Story, Truth in Justice, The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights,Father Richard John Neuhaus, Seven Deadly Sins

. . . Actually, what fell apart was the credibility of DSK’s accuser. Writing for The Wall Street Journal Editorial Pages (”The DSK Lesson,” July 5, 2011) columnist Bret Stephens chastised his own industry, the news media, for the sheer delight it took in the DSK charges. He wrote of how disappointed reporters were at news that the accuser had squandered her credibility on previous false claims and her recorded expectations of a financial windfall in the DSK case. Bret Stephens described the central problem with the news media’s build-up of the DSK case, and what he wrote is something Catholics should pay attention to: “The media has too often been guilty of looking only for the evidence that fits a pre-existing story line. It doesn’t help that in journalism you can usually find the story you’re looking for . . .” Such writing is exactly why I subscribe to The Wall Street Journal, and I believe it’s why the Journal is the sole American newspaper to actually expand its readership over the last few years while other papers are dying. It takes courage to take on big stories like the rape case of Dominique Strauss-Kahn or sexual abuse by Catholic priests. But it takes even greater courage to police your own industry, and to challenge your peers when the story they want takes precedence over the truth. . . .

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abuse in the Catholic Church, Administrative Leave, anti-Catholic prejudice, Beatification, Bill O'Reilly, Brian Fraga, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Catholic priest sexual abusers, Catholic scandal, child pornography Catholic priest, Civil Liberties for Priests, Dorothy Rabinowitz, Duke University sex scandal, Father Corapi scandal, Father James Porter, Father John Corapi, Father Maciel and Father Corapi, Father Marcial Maciel, Father Richard John Neuhaus, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, guilt by association, John Norton OSV, Joseph Bottum, Joyce Behar, Juan Williams, Muslims, NPR, Our Sunday Visitor, PBS Frontline, pope john paul ii, presumption of innocence, profiling, religious profiling, Roman Polanski, Scandal in the Catholic Church, September 11 2001, terrorists, These Stone Walls, Voice of the Faithful, war on terror, Whoopi Goldberg, zero tolerance

. . . I can only conclude that there were agendas at work that went far beyond simply telling the truth about Father Maciel. I hope I’m not the only person to notice that all the evidence against him seemed to surface just in time to attempt to derail the Beatification of Pope John Paul II who presumed – just as he should have done – Maciel’s innocence absent proof of his guilt or an admission of guilt. There was neither. But for my purposes, the cost of Father Maciel is clear. The Constitution and Church law notwithstanding, the true cost of Father Maciel is to rob any accused Catholic priest of a presumption of innocence. It is the worst possible example of the Catholic Church in America caving into the prejudices of pop culture. I witness the cost of Father Maciel every day. A number of prominent Catholics who once openly supported my defense have been silenced since post-mortem evidence surfaced of Fr. Maciel’s bizarre double life and lifestyle. Some Catholics who held out a presumption of his innocence, without solid evidence to the contrary, have been burned by the stinging rebukes they’ve received from all corners in the Catholic media once that evidence began to surface. . . .

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The Beatification of Pope John Paul II: When the Wall Fell

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on April 13, 2011 · 6 comments

blacklisted, CIA analyst Jack Ryan, Cold War, Communist agenda, Divine Mercy Sunday, Evil Empire, Father Marcial Maciel, Father Richard John Neuhaus, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, george weigel, History Channel, Holy Father, Iron Curtain, Ivan the Terrible, Joseph Stalin, Karol Wojtyla, Kenneth Woodward, KGB, Lynn Massachusetts, Mehmet Ali Agca, Michelangelo and the Hand of God, Mikhail Gorbachev, Newt Gingrich, Nikita Khrushchev, Papacy of Pope John Paul, Pope Benedict XVI, pope john paul ii, President Barack Obama, president John F. Kennedy, Roe v Wade, Roman Catholic Church, Roman Polanski, Ronald Reagan, Russia, Second Vatican Council, Secret Access:  The Vatican, Solidarity, Soviet Empire, Soviet Politburo, The Beatification of Pope John Paul II, The Gathering Storm, These Stone Walls, Tom Clancy, tomb of Saint Peter, United Nations, USSR, Walter Cronkite, When the Wall Fell, Why the Berlin Wall Fell, Winston Churchill

. . . In his 1948 book, The Gathering Storm, Winston Churchill wrote of a 1935 proposal to Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin suggesting that the Soviet Union should not suppress Catholicism, but should rather encourage it in order to gain favor with the Pope. Stalin famously responded, “The Pope? How many divisions has he got?” Ironically, that conversation took place on May 13, 1935, forty-six years to the day before the Soviet Union tried to kill Pope John Paul II because he was the most feared man in all of Europe. The Pope survived. Stalin’s successors in the Soviet Union learned the answer to his question far too late for their own survival. Karol Wojtyla has earned the place in history summarized by the title given to him by Father Richard John Neuhaus and other admirers. He helped rid the world of Satan’s most earthly Evil Empire. Without doubt, he was – and is – Pope John Paul the Great. . . .

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Falsely accused priests, the rights of accused priests, slayers of the soul, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Rev. Gordon MacRae, priests falsely accused, mirror of justice, sex abuse scandal, Greg Erlandson, OSV, clerical abuse stories, These Stone Walls, Best of the Catholic Web, Jay Leno, The New York Times, Ryan MacDonald, Homiletic & Pastoral Review, United States Constitution, ex post facto laws, time limits of prescription, accused priests, Father Dominic Menna, Boston priest, zero tolerance, Roman Polanski, the eye of the beholder, The Boston Globe, Archdiocese of Boston, child rape, Father Menna, Puritan founders of New England, The Boston Globe's Spotlight Team, Pulitzer, William McGurn, civil liberties for priests, treatment center for accused priests, denial, Saints Alive, Padre Pio and the Stigmata, Church leaders, The Wall Street Journal, accused priests, the most potent way to destroy a Catholic priest, priest offender, Servants of the Paraclete, presumption of innocence, the case against Father Gordon MacRae, voice of the faithful, Catholic therapist, Honorable Arthur Brennan, Opus Bono Sacerdotii, Priests in Crisis, Bill Donohue, Cardinal Avery Dulles, The Catholic League

. . . False accusations are rare? Tell that to Mike Gallagher and the falsely accused men I described in “The Eighth Commandment.” Tell that to the twelve falsely accused men who appeared on CNN’s “Larry King Live” with Innocence Project attorney Barry Scheck on October 6, after they each were exonerated following an average of 20 years in prison accused of sexual assaults they had nothing to do with. Their stories, and the hundreds like them, will be the subject of a landmark film, Conviction, opening this Friday. Justice has turned on its head when men who stand to gain hundreds of thousands of dollars for making a false claim are automatically called “victims” by Church leaders now, while priests accused without evidence from decades ago are just as quickly called “priests-offenders” and “slayers of souls.” . . .

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New on These Stone Walls: Loose Ends and Dangling Participles

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on September 1, 2010 · 8 comments

Donald Spinner, Pornchai Moontri, Rev Gordon MacRae, Fr Dominic Menna, Boston Globe, Edith Stein, Maximilian Kolbe, Consecration, History Channel, Militia of the Immaculata, Knights at the Foot of the Cross, Sophie MacRae, S&H Green Stamps, Whoopi Goldberg, Fr Maciel, Roman Polanski, The Screwtape Letters, CS Lewis, JRR Tolkein, William McGurn, Christopher Warwick,

. . . Another reader wrote that she liked “Saints and Sacrifices,” but pointed out that it was my third post in 12 weeks about Adolf Hitler, and I’m “beginning to sound a bit like the History Channel.” OUCH! There’s a strange irony in that. There’s no character in history that I loathe more than Hitler. The irony is that as my trial ended in 1994, the prosecutor compared me to Adolf Hitler in his closing remarks to the jury.

It was the sort of inflammatory statement that usually isn’t allowed in court, but it was allowed in that court. The jury looked visibly alarmed, and I can only imagine how I looked to them. As with the rest of that trial, the Hitler comparison like Hitler himself – had nothing to do with the truth or with justice. . . .

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Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Roman Polanski, Father Maciel, eye of the beholder, McCarthy Era, Catholic Church, Catholic priests, Whoopi Goldberg, American justice system, Mr. Polanski, Swiss government, Los Angeles prosecutors, The Washington Post, European press, The

. . . Since his 1977 conviction for child sexual assault, Roman Polanski has won three Academy Award nominations and a 2002 Oscar for Best Director. Meanwhile in our own backyard, Catholics are now pitted against Catholics. Bishops are bullied into shunning their priests. Cardinals are sniping at each other in public, and the mere taint of association may cost one of the highest ranking Catholic Church officials his reputation and career. There is something wrong with this picture. And there is one ominous figure who is taking it all in from his place in the shadows, having the laugh of his long, dark life. . .

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The Whoopi Cushion

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on October 14, 2009 · 11 comments

Roman Polanski, Whoopi Goldberg, Zurich Film Festival, SNAP, VOTF, Michael Jackson, Diocese of Manchester, Frederick Mitterrand, Gordon MacRae, Falsely Accused Priest,

. . . Whoopi Goldberg now ridicules the case against Roman Polanski, inferring that it is unjust to impose a penalty in a case from so long go. Moreover, and most shockingly, she minimized the child’s victimization with the astonishing statement, “It wasn’t really rape, rape!” The inference here is that the victim “consented,” despite being drugged, and despite being thirteen years old. If Roman Polanski was a Catholic priest, Whoopi Goldberg would want his head presented to Herod on a platter. . . . As the national priesthood scandal unfolded seven years ago – at which point I had already been wrongly imprisoned for eight years – my bishop wrote the following to a Vatican official: “Whatever the truth is about [Father MacRae’s] guilt or innocence, the Diocese of Manchester was in a difficult situation during his public trial. I do not feel that the Diocese can publicly advocate on his behalf without risking grave public misunderstanding.” . . .

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