"A compelling gothic tale in which evil triumphs over virtue." - Catholic Herald
"Fallen Order is meticulously researched and beautifully written" - The Guardian
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Kirkus Reviews
June 2004
A sordid tale of pederast priests and blind-eye bishops; a headline fit for
today, that is 350-odd years old.
BBC/History Channel researcher and producer Liebriech caught her first
glimpse of the Counterreformation-era Order of the Clerics Regular of the
Pious Schools, or Piarists, while conducting research in dusty archives in
Rome and Florence. Founded by a Spanish priest, Jose de Calasanz, at the
turn of the 17th century, the order was devoted to feeding, housing, and
educating poor boys who might otherwise be tempted into Prostantism. Over
the centuries, its beneficiaries included Victor Hugo and Mozart, and the
order enjoyed influence in distant places such as Moravia and Poland. Notes
Liebreich, though, the Catholic Encyclopedia "skips blithely from 1612, when
the Roman school moved to larger premises, to 1748 when the founder was
beautified." What happened in those intervening years? Plenty: while
Calasanz, who would come to be regarded as the patron saint of public
education, worked diligently to keep his schools running against all manner
of intramural politicking in Rome, priests under his charge all over Europe
used their proximity to and power over young boys to commit what was then
called "the worst vice." As news of the scandals reached Rome, it was
ignored, dismissed, and hushed up, while "the concern," writes Liebreich,
"was always for the sinner, the priest, never for the victim, however
young." Indeed, one of the worst offenders was eventually booted upstairs,
protected by the pope himself. Finally, however, the scandal could be
hidden no longer, and the order was suppressed. Some of the priests entered
other orders, but one took the initiative of murdering a little old lady
whose confession he had been hearing, loading up her riches, and sailing
away: "The crime was not discovered for a few weeks, and the ex-Piarist was
never heard from again."
Liebreich's account shows not only that priestly abuse is an old problem,
but also that cover-ups never work--a pointed moral with obvious, and
timely, implications.
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