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Paedophile priest on show at top winery

A glowing biography of a sex offender was hurriedly removed after being spotted by an abuse survivor, writes Steve Kilgallon.

VISITORS to the award-winning Mission Estate in Hawke’s Bay are treated to a history lesson about the ‘‘pioneering’’ French missionary priests who set up the vineyard in 1851. The winery’s own website declares: ‘‘Their inspiration, a legacy we continue’’.

And among the exhibits for tourists at the vineyard to study was a booklet containing biographies of some of the most influential Marist priests from the order of the Society of Mary – which still owns the vineyard.

This month, one visitor was outraged to find among them a glowing eulogy of the late Frank Durning, who the Marists themselves have admitted was a paedophile.

The society has since issued hurried instructions to remove any reference to Durning after seeing a Facebook post by Steve Goodlass, himself a survivor of Catholic abuse, who visited the vineyard while on holiday earlier this month.

In 2019, after a campaign by abuse survivors, Durning’s photograph was removed from St Patrick’s College, Silverstream, where he was rector from 1950 to 1955, and committed abuse.

The society is resisting the removal of the portrait of another late former rector, Patrick Minto, who has also been accused of abuse.

In 2009, the Society of Mary admitted Durning was an offender, with the thenprovincial, David Kennerley, telling RNZ his behaviour was ‘‘criminal’’. They upheld one complaint against him in 2009 and are understood to have fielded at least two more.

Sunday News spoke to one survivor of Durning’s abuse,

who, as Mr F, gave evidence at the Royal Commission on Abuse.

Another former pupil said Durning had assaulted him and was well-known for doing so to pre-teen boys under the premise of individual sex education lessons. Another Silverstream alumni, the late Patrick Cleary, had his account of his abuse at the hands of Durning read to the royal commission by his daughter Tina.

Goodlass was exploring a room of Marist history, next to the main tasting room at the vineyard, when he saw a lectern with a folder full of biographies of deceased Marists. Among them was a biography of Durning, which called him ‘‘a teacher of such excellence that he transformed the lives of

many’’ but which omitted any mention of his paedophilia.

‘‘I wasn’t surprised, and the reason I say I wasn’t surprised is because they don’t give a s...,’’ Goodlass said, pointing to the years-long battle to remove Durning’s portrait at Silverstream.

He said it was interesting that the society had acted only after his social media post, ‘‘that that’s the thing that sparks their proactivity, is getting some survivors lash out’’.

‘‘I’ve changed my mind about removing stuff. I think if they are going to remove it, they should put it into an area that’s their penance area – to say ‘this is our history as well, this is how we have abused children’, because if they remove that stuff, they are erasing history. And if they sanitise history, they can continue to do what they do.’’

He posted the find on a social media page for survivors of Catholic abuse, and shortly afterwards, the Society of Mary apologised, assistant provincial Thige O’Leary writing to

Murray Heasley, spokesman for the Network of Survivors of Religious Abuse and their Supporters: ‘‘We sincerely apologise that there was a document with a page about Fr F Durning on public display. It was not supposed to be there. Management at the winery have been asked to remove it and have done so.’’

Heasley agreed with

Goodlass, and emailed the society to say the biography should remain on display, ‘‘annotated, explaining that he was a child sex abuser, and kept in that room. That is acknowledging the pain and taking responsibility . . . simply removing it is airbrushing history, sanitising it and avoiding responsibility.’’

O’Leary did not respond to that suggestion.

Heasley said the church had to confront the issue of continuing to venerate abusive priests, citing an honours board at St Patrick’s Silverstream which contained the names of several known abusers.

In a statement to Sunday News, O’Leary said: ‘‘A folder containing brief biographies of deceased Marists was removed on receiving information about a Facebook post objecting to its containing a bio of a known sex abuse offender. An apology was made to the survivors group.’’

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2021-11-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-11-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

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