Sunday, September 2, 2018

Nuns Killed Children

THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IS BEYOND DESPICABLE.

MURDER.  RAPE.   WHAT ELSE DO YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE BULLYING BY THE PRIESTS AND NUNS WHO PROMISE TO 'SERVE AND PROTECT'

THEY ARE EVERY BIT AS ABUSIVE AS CHIEF LEO A. SACCO, JR. AND THERE NEEDS TO BE ACCOUNTABILITY, WITH THE CHURCH, WITH THE MEDFORD POLICE DEPARTMENT.

For Decades, Nuns Brutally Abused and Killed Kids in ... - The Cut

https://www.thecut.com/.../nuns-allegedly-abused-murdered-countless-kids-in-orphan...

6 days ago - For Decades, Nuns Brutally Abused and Killed Kids in Vermont Orphanage: Report. ... Reporter Christine Kenneally cites numerous locations around the world where children were allegedly subjected to horrific abuse in orphanages and homes for minors, but her nearly 30,000-word report ...

Catholic orphanage's former residents say nuns killed children ...

uk.businessinsider.com/catholic-orphanages-former-residents-say-nuns-killed-children...

6 days ago - Former residents of a now-closed Catholic orphanage in Vermont say nuns killed and tortured foster children. ... At St Joseph's Catholic Orphanage in Burlington, Vermont, former residents say the abuse sometimes led to death. ... Former residents of a now-closed Catholic orphanage in ...

Videos

Sister took hold of Sally’s ear, turned her around, and walked her back to the other side of the yard. The nun told her she had a vivid imagination. We are going to have to do something about you, child.
The back of the now-closed St. Joseph’s Orphanage in Burlington, Vermont.
Sally figured the boy fell from the window in 1944 or so, because she was moving to the “big girls” dormitory that day. Girls usually moved when they were 6, though residents of St. Joseph’s Orphanage in Burlington, Vermont, did not always have a clear sense of their age — birthdays, like siblings and even names, being one of the many human attributes that were stripped from them when they passed through its doors. She recounted his fall in a deposition on Nov. 6, 1996, as part of a remarkable group of lawsuits that 28 former residents brought against the nuns, the diocese, and the social agency that oversaw the orphanage.
I watched the deposition — all 19 hours of grainy, scratchy videotape — more than two decades later. By that time sexual abuse scandals had ripped through the Catholic Church, shattering the silence that had for so long protected its secrets. It was easier for accusers in general to come forward, and easier for people to believe their stories, even if the stories sounded too awful to be true. Even if they had happened decades ago, when the accusers were only children. Even if the people they were accusing were pillars of the community.