Showing posts with label apostolic school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apostolic school. Show all posts

Monday, August 3, 2009

And on to Spain


Ontaneda is forever burned in our memories as Legionaries, since it was the first apostolic school and the first solid foundation in Spain. However, for some (too many), it was the scene of horrid sexual abuse by Marcial Maciel and others when they were mere boys.

Now the investigation reaches those haunted hallways, filled with boyhood delight as well as silent screams of virginity lost in childhood.

From Gerinda Bai
:
jueves 23 de julio de 2009
Los Legionarios de Onteneda (Cantabria) veneran al pederasta Maciel

El seminario menor que los Legionarios de Cristo tiene en Ontaneda es un antiguo balneario y gran hotel, levantado en 1833. Lo adquirieron en 1955, y fue la primera propiedad que la orden, fundada en México, tuvo en España. En la fachada principal, en la calle Generalísimo Franco, no hay carteles, inscripciones ni símbolos de ningún tipo. La discreción es la norma de la casa. No se puede ir más allá de la entrada, pero no hace falta ir más lejos para encontrar fotos enmarcadas del fundador de la congregación rodeado de jóvenes. Son recuerdos de las visitas del Padre Maciel, cuando de día impartía doctrina, dejándose adorar por sus incondicionales discípulos, y por la noche se hacía acompañar en la cama por alguno de ellos.

Las acusaciones de pederastia que pesaban sobre Maciel y otros miembros de la congregación fueron negadas durante años, hasta que las abrumadoras pruebas y testimonios convirtieron las sospechas en certeza.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Never Been to Walmart. Close the Apostolic Schools NOW!

From a comment on InsideCatholic.com

I Felt It in the Works
July 13th, 2009 | 6:39pm

While I was in the (diocesan, and healthy, sane, and orthodox) seminary I met a few ex-Legionaries. One of them, whom we will call F., mentioned to me that his 25th or 26th birthday was approaching. Several of his friends and I took him out to a local Appleby or Ruby Tuesday, or someplace of the like in town. We had dinner, drinks, and dessert. It was a nice evening. On the car ride home, he told me that he'd never gone out with friends for his birthday before. I was stunned, as if he'd said he'd never been to WalMart before (just kidding). But I was stunned. Here's what he explained.

He entered the Legion when he was 14. They discouraged the seminaries from having friends. "No friends?" I asked. Without any venom or malice, he said, "No. They were afraid of 'particular' friendships or affections. Our time - even our recreation time - was all planned for us. They were careful to make sure that we did things with different groups: volleyball with this group, then switch up for hiking with a new configuration of classmates, so we spent equal time with everyone, more or less. We were told to report to our spiritual director anyone that we saw spending noticeable amounts of time with any given classmate. If someone told us something that we were supposed to talk about only in spiritual direction - family stuff, sexual stuff, etc., we were supposed to report that to our spiritual director. So we couldn't make friends."

I was floored. He left voluntarily, and against a lot of recrimination by his superiors, after his first or second year in college seminary, after reading a Platonic dialogue that dealt with friendship. The priest-professor praised friendship as described in the text, and F. realized that while he was "friends" with "everyone," he had nothing like what the text described. He decided that he wanted it, and had to leave to get it. His family, he told me, was very supportive of him leaving even though they had thought it a good idea to go to the Legion in the first place.

It still just blows me away. And it says something significant about the structure of distrust and control. I think the Legion and RC have done a good amount of good work, and untold potential for more. They have a LOT of issues that need to be worked through, first though. And it's not just a crisis in leadership or curriculum - it can't be. Spiritual things don't work that way.

The Legion, it must be said, aren't [sic] being persecuted for being orthodox. It strikes me as significant here that even before their scandals, they had received flak not only from loosey-goosey bishops, but also from bishops noted for their public defense of the orthodox faith.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

12 year old seminarians

"I was invovled with RC many years and I have to say the Legion was inordinately aggressive. My son @ 12y.o was subject to intense pressure to join their apostolic school to the point he was in tears. I know of many other individuals who have experienced the same thing."

Posted by: John | Thursday, June 12, 2008 at 09:11 AM


"Many good faithful Catholics will have nothing to do with the Legion because of some cult like tactics. Trying to get a 12 year old to sign up for seminary in this day and age is shameful. I will keep my kids away from all of their groups."

Posted by: Annie Witz | Thursday, June 12, 2008 at 11:07 AM

Comments from The Roman Catholic Blog