Church
leaders admit to knowing about scheme in which single mothers were pressured to
give up their newborns for adoption
Matias Troncoso, a well-known Chilean photographer, was taken from his mother and given to another family. |
The
Catholic church in Chile is under investigation over allegations that priests
played a central part in a network which stole newborn babies from single
mothers.
Police
investigators are now probing dozens of cases in which unmarried women who
became pregnant were pressured by priests to give their child up for adoption.
Those who refused were anaesthetized during childbirth and, upon awakening,
told that the newborn had died. The healthy babies were hidden from their
biological mother and given away in order to be raised by married couples in
"traditional" Catholic families.
Church
leaders now admit they have known about the scheme for at least ten years.
Unlike Spain and Argentina where babies were stolen from leftwing political
activists, the motivation in Chile was to shield the reputations of well-off
families from the social stigma of an unmarried mother.
Most of the
cases now being investigated took place in the 1970's and 1980's but there are
reports of cases as late as 2005.
Chile's
child protection agency – Sername – has now opened an investigation and is
working with detectives to determine how many children are involved.
Documents
from the Sername investigation describe how parents were "tricked into
believing that there baby had died at birth" and allege that "various
newborn babies, from single women who were pregnant, were given away under
irregular circumstances during the 1970's and 1980's to other families."
Matias
Troncoso, 33, a well-known Chilean photographer, is one of these cases.
Troncoso always knew he was adopted but when he began asking questions about
his biological mother, the answers did not add up. His birth was not registered
until he was six years old, and the clinic where he was born refused to release
his records.
The doctor
who delivered him was elderly and his memory starting to fail, but enough
details leaked out that Troncoso began to suspect a plot.
Last month
Troncoso's suspicions were confirmed when Chilean investigative news site Ciper
reported the allegations. In a series of online articles, the collective's
reporters tracked down and documented an underground network of wealthy
families, gynaecologists, social workers, lawyers and at the heart of the
scheme Gerardo Joannon, a gregarious and popular Catholic priest.
Troncoso,
who ended up as the single son of a loving, upper-class family had nothing but
praise for his adoptive parents and said they never hid the fact that he was
adopted.
But he was
extremely critical of the role played by the church. "They had funerals
with empty caskets," he said.
Father
Joannon has admitted working with a group of ten doctors who helped coordinate
the underground – and likely illegal – adoptions. "In those moments, a
young single woman who had a baby was looked at very badly. I wouldn't say it
scrubbed out their life, but it was something close to that," said Joannon
when confronted with the facts by Ciper reporters in March. "Nobody wanted
to marry them."
Joannon
insists that his role in the scheme was limited. He told Ciper: "The only
thing I did was put [the pregnant young women] in contact with a doctor who
made the effort to find families that were desiring to have a child."
Interviewed
by a Chilean TV crew, Joannon declared, "I am not going to help [the
investigation] with anything, I have nothing left to say." Church
officials then announced that Joannon has been ordered to refrain from speaking
further about the cases, which investigators now believe involves six
Santiago-area hospitals.
Father
Joannon insists that he only participated in underground adoptions in which the
biological mother agreed to "donate" the baby to a second family. But
at least one mother has said Joannon pressured her to give up her child, and
alleges that when she refused, he participated in the disappearance of her
newborn daughter.
A second
mother described Joannon stalking the maternity ward, pressuring her to hand
over her newborn.
Several
other priests are alleged to have been involved in the scheme, but have not
been named.
Catholic
leaders in Chile have distanced themselves from Joannon. His weekly mass was
suspended in April and Alex Vigueras, a spokesman for the church said it was
clear that the babies were taken without consent. "What I find most
troubling is to have said that the children died, knowing that it was not the
case."
Vigueras
said that Joannon and the baby-snatching ring had "committed an injustice
… various rights have been violated." In a communiqué from the church,
Vigueras promised to collaborate with investigations by Chilean law enforcement
agencies.
A website set up by victims has logged dozens of alleged cases. Some of the inquiries
come from parents looking for their children and others from children looking
for their parents.
"Joannon
made the contacts but he is just one lead on this problem," said Arturo
Fellay, whose wife is searching for her biological parents. "There are
many other cases of boys and girls who were said to be dead and were taken away
or given or sold to families under a secret that was kept for years."
Asked about
the ethics and honesty of holding funeral services for newborn children who in
fact were alive, Joannon told reporters from Ciper, "I never held a
funeral mass … these were masses where thanks were given to God for that day in
which the young woman made such a tremendous sacrifice."
Pressed
with evidence by parents that funeral services were indeed held, Joannon then
said he was "sure that [the baby] was dead. The doctor told me [the baby]
was dead."
Troncoso,
the photographer who is now searching for his biological mother wants answers.
"I don't know my birthday. I don't know my [biological] mother" he
said. "These woman entered the clinic. They were put to sleep and when
they woke up were told 'Your baby has died.' Basically it was
kidnapping."
Troncoso is
not interested in filing criminal charges. "Justice is not just the whip
of vengeance," he said. "It's essentially about truth. How can you
take a baby from a mother and convince yourself that you are doing a good
deed?"
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