LISBON, Portugal — Pope Francis met Wednesday with survivors of clergy sexual abuse in Portugal and blasted members of the country’s Catholic hierarchy for their response to the long-ignored scandal, which he said had marred the Catholic Church and helped drive the faithful away.
Francis dove head-on into the crisis roiling the Portuguese church on the first day of a five-day visit to Lisbon for the Catholic Church's World Youth Day festival. His trip comes at a delicate moment for the Portuguese church; a panel of experts hired by Portugal's bishops reported in February that priests and other church personnel may have abuse at least 4,815 boys and girls since 1950.
A nun kisses the hand of Pope Francis on Wednesday as he leaves the Jeronimos Monastery after Vespers in Lisbon. Pope Francis will take part in the 37th World Youth Day during his five-day visit to Portugal.
The Vatican said Francis met with 13 abuse victims for more than an hour at the Vatican Embassy and characterized the pope's role in the meeting as one of “intense listening.” The victims were accompanied by church personnel in charge of child protection programs.
People are also reading…
The encounter, which had been expected since Francis met with survivors on previous trips abroad, was aimed at trying to help the Portuguese hierarchy and faithful come to terms with the church's own legacy of abuse and cover-up after many other European countries have gone through similar reckonings.
The response by Portugal’s bishops to the expert report’s findings, however, in some ways added to the problem. Prior to the report, Portuguese church officials had insisted there were only a handful of child sex abuse cases. After the document's release, the bishops initially refused to remove named abusers from ministry and said they would only compensate victims if courts ordered them to.
Pope Francis waves to the crowd as he arrives for a meeting Wednesday with Portugal Prime Minister Antonio Costa in Lisbon.
The meeting with victims took place after Francis presided over a vigil service for Portuguese clergy and nuns at the capital’s iconic Jeronimos Monastery, where in February hundreds of people gathered to brave for victims of sex abuse after the experts' report was released.
Speaking in his native Spanish, Francis acknowledged many clergy and nuns in countries with once-thriving Catholic parishes feel weary about their vocations because the faithful are increasingly detached from their faith.
“It is often accentuated by the disappointment and anger with which some people view the church, at times due to our poor witness and the scandals that have marred her face and call us to a humble and ongoing purification, starting with the anguished cry of the victims, who must always be accepted and listened to,” he said.
Bishop Jose Ornelas, the head of the Portuguese Bishops' Conference, promised in a speech to Francis to devote “our special attention to the protection of the welfare of children and the undertaking to protect them from all kinds of abuse.”
Although critics have chided church officials for their sluggish response, the bishops' conference later said the pope's meeting with abuse survivors was evidence of “the path of reconciliation that the Portuguese church has been following in this area.”
Portugal's bishops are committed to “putting the victims first," and “working together” with victims on reparations and their recovery, a conference statement asserted.
The Portuguese Catholic Church also promised in March to build a memorial to victims that would be unveiled during World Youth Day, but organizers scrapped the plan a few weeks ago.
In its place, victims’ advocates launched a campaign called “This is our memorial.” Hours before the pope arrived, they put up a billboard in central Lisbon reading “4,800+ Children Abused by the Catholic Church in Portugal.” They said it was paid for through a crowdfunding campaign that was so successful the organizers can put up more billboards around the city, though none was located along planned routes for his visit.
People wait Wednesday outside the Palacio Nacional de Belem presidential palace in Lisbon, where Pope Francis is attending a welcome ceremony.
Reaction to Francis' comments on abuse were mixed: Some pilgrims outside the Jeronimos Monastery said the World Youth Day gathering wasn't the time or place to raise the issue.
Giovanni, a 47-year-old pilgrim from Italy who declined to give his last name, said it was clear that people who come from around the world to attend the event “don't like bad things. We definitely hope whatever is clear that is wrong will be stopped and canceled.”
But he noted that the pope had requested forgiveness for the church's legacy of child sex abuse “and it also shows his commitment to solve this issue as well."
Francis came to Lisbon to participate in his fourth World Youth Day, the raucous Catholic jamboree launched by St. John Paul II in the 1980s to invigorate the next generation of Catholics in their faith. More than 1 million young people from around the world were expected to attend the events in Lisbon, which run through Sunday.
As he was traveling to Portugal, the pope said he would continue urging young people to “make a mess” — a reference to his now-famous exhortation during his first World Youth Day as pontiff, in Rio de Janeiro in 2013. It was a call for young people to shake things up in their parishes and has come to symbolize Francis’ own revolutionary reforms that have shaken up the Catholic Church at large.
Pope Francis boards his flight Wednesday at Rome's Leonardo da Vinci International airport in Fiumicino to start his five-day pastoral visit to Portugal, which includes the participation into the 37th World Youth Day, and a pilgrimage to the holy shrine of Fatima.
Hot weather could be an issue during his five-day visit, given temperatures in Lisbon are expected to hit 95 degrees Sunday, raising concern for Francis, given his weakened condition: The 86-year-old Argentine pope was hospitalized for nine days in June to repair a hernia and remove scar tissue from previous intestinal surgeries.
Photos: Pope Francis arrives in Portugal for World Youth Day
Pope Francis is welcomed by the honor guard Wednesday as he arrives at the Figo Maduro airbase in Lisbon. Pope Francis will attend the international World Youth Day on Sunday that is expected to bring hundreds of thousands of young Catholic faithful to Portugal.
From left, Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Cardinal Kevin Joseph Farrell, Vatican prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, Cardinal Jose Tolentino Mendonca, and Lisbon's Patriarch Cardinal Manuel Clemente wait for Pope Francis before a meeting with Authorities, Civil Society and the Diplomatic Corps at the Belem Cultural Centre in Lisbon. Pope Francis has started his five-day pastoral visit to Portugal which includes his participation at the 37th World Youth Day, and a pilgrimage to the holy shrine of Fatima.
Pope Francis boards his flight Wednesday at Rome's Leonardo da Vinci International airport in Fiumicino to start his five-day pastoral visit to Portugal, which includes the participation into the 37th World Youth Day, and a pilgrimage to the holy shrine of Fatima.
Pope Francis speaks to journalists Wednesday on the papal flight to Lisbon. Pope Francis is in Lisbon to attend the international World Youth Day on Sunday that is expected to bring hundreds of thousands of young Catholic faithful to Portugal.
A Brazilian and Vatican flag is waved Wednesday as people wait for Pope Francis to arrive for the Welcome Ceremony at the Belem presidential palace in Lisbon.
Lisbon Cardinal Manuel Clemente, center, waits Wednesday with bishops and other cardinals for Pope Francis to arrive for the Welcome Ceremony at the Belem presidential palace in Lisbon.
Pope Francis and Portugal's President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, right, converse Wednesday at the Welcome Ceremony at the Belem presidential palace in Lisbon. Pope Francis starts his five-day pastoral visit to Portugal Wednesday that includes his participation at the 37th World Youth Day, and a pilgrimage to the holy shrine of Fatima.
People wait Wednesday outside the Palacio Nacional de Belem presidential palace in Lisbon, where Pope Francis is attending a welcome ceremony.
People wait Wednesday outside the Palacio Nacional de Belem presidential palace in Lisbon, where Pope Francis is attending a welcome ceremony. Pope Francis arrived Wednesday in Lisbon to attend the international World Youth Day on Sunday that is expected to bring hundreds of thousands of young Catholic faithful to Portugal.
Pope Francis cheers at a child Wednesday on his way to the Belem Cultural Center in Lisbon. Pope Francis arrived Wednesday in Lisbon to attend the international World Youth Day on Sunday that is expected to bring hundreds of thousands of young Catholic faithful to Portugal.
Pope Francis waves to the crowd Wednesday as he arrives for a meeting with the Portugal's Prime Minister Antonio Costa in Lisbon.
Youths walk by a protest billboard against alleged child abuse Wednesday by the Catholic Church in Alges, just outside Lisbon.
Two priests chat Wednesday in a fountain in front of the Jeronimos Monastery, where Pope Francis will visit in Lisbon.
Pope Francis, with Lisbon's Patriarch, Cardinal Manuel Clemente, right, Archbishop Diego Ravelli, second from right, President of the Portuguese Conference of Bishops José Ornelas Carvalho, left, starts the vespers Wednesday inside the 16th-century Jeronimos Monastery and church in Lisbon. Francis, who will open the World Youth Day on Sunday is meeting with Portugal's Catholic hierarchy, who recently began the process of reckoning with their legacy of clergy sexual abuse.
A nun kisses the hand of Pope Francis on Wednesday as he leaves the Jeronimos Monastery after Vespers in Lisbon.
A nun kisses the hand of Pope Francis as he leaves the Jeronimos Monastery after Vespers on Wednesday in Lisbon.
Pope Francis leaves the Jeronimos Monastery on Wednesday after Vespers in Lisbon.

