s Karen Liebreich


Fallen Order - US edition

"A compelling gothic tale in which evil triumphs over virtue."
    - Catholic Herald

Fallen Order - UK Edition

"Fallen Order is meticulously researched and beautifully written"
    - The Guardian

        

As racy and full of machinations as The Name of the Rose... meticulously researched and beautifully written

'Fallen Order focuses on sexual abuse within a religious order in 17th-century Italy, and the attempts to cover it up.

'The story that Liebreich can now unravel is as racy and full of machinations as The Name of the Rose.

'Fallen Order is meticulously researched and beautifully written, with some splendid vignettes of life in 17th-century Italy, at the time of the plague, and of Galileo's discoveries.'

Miranda France, Guardian
22 May 2004

Read more >>>



Saint who covered up for child abusers:

‘The Roman Catholic church's mishandling of paedophile scandals among its clergy is not a modern phenomenon but has been going on for hundreds of years, a new book, published today, reveals. It describes how the priest who is the patron saint of Catholic schools covered up sex abuse.’

Guardian, London
15 April 2004.

Read more >>>



A very Catholic cover-up:

‘Karen Liebreich has spent several years poring over documents in the archives of the Piarist Order and the Vatican, and has traced the shameful story of how an idealistic enterprise was torn apart by administrative incompetence and what she calls “a destablising secret at the heart of the order”…

‘One reads Liebreich’s vigorous account of the order’s downward spiral with mounting disbelief, though with immense admiration for her calm sense of perspective.’

Christopher Sylvester, Sunday Times
18 April 2004

Read more >>>



The 350-year cover-up:

‘This is the astonishing story of the suppression of a Catholic teaching order – the Piarists – in the 17th century. It has never been told properly before, because many of the documents containing the juiciest information were heavily classified by the Vatican until six years ago. In the process of extracting the juice, Karen Liebreich has resisted the temptation to sensationalise, though it would have been easy to do so… Liebreich’s sources are as rich in incriminating detail as the Watergate tapes…

‘Karen Liebreich has pulled off a difficult trick with this engrossing book… [her] conclusion is the more powerful for its restraint.’

Damian Thompson, Sunday Telegraph
18 April 2004

Read more >>>



Priest who developed the art of cover-up

‘Liebreich, in a compelling investigation, unearths letters and records that prove how a number of Piarists were accused by schoolboys' parents and even by local authorities of molesting their charges... Karen Liebreich believes that if the patron saint of free Christian education had been more honest, his successors would have been better equipped to deal with the cases of child abuse that emerged in the 1990s among Catholic orders in America, Ireland, Britain and elsewhere.’

Christina Odone
Evening Standard & Scotsman
19 & 20 April 2004

Read more >>>



‘This scholarly yet brilliantly accessible book could not be more timely…relentless in its search for the truth’

Karen Armstrong, author of Islam, A Short History, and many other books, including Through the Narrow Gate, on her life as a nun.

Saint in the dock

'The particular quality that makes it a compulsive page turner is its overwhelming reliance on primary sources in creating the narrative... These testimonies, written in literate and vivid language, build a wonderful patchwork picture of the order and its times.

'Dr Liebreich has organized this into a compelling gothic tale in which evil triumphs over virtue.

Septimus Waugh, Catholic Herald
28 May 2004

Read more >>>



This book is sexy

'Liebreich is a superb story-teller; yet the way in which her narrative expands to provide contextual details and historical analysis marks this as a serious work of scholarship.'

Church Times
October 2004

Read more >>>



Four-hundred-year-old travesty

'The work painfully establishes the inability of the Roman Catholic Church to put its children before itself; even today, the reforms of the Church are hardly impressive.'

The Brooklyn Rail
October 2004

Read more >>>



Child Abuse By Priests, 17th Century Style

'The patron saint of Catholic schools quite clearly performed the same sort of cover-up that has brought disgrace to his contemporary equivalents.'

Times of Acadiana in Lafayette, Louisiana
26 August 2004

Read more >>>



Misguided clerics and their cover ups

'Liebreich’s landmark study is very well-written... This is an important and cautionary account of the disasters that befell a well-meaning but misguided religious order'

Catholic Times
1 August 2004

Read more >>>



Lucid, even-handed prose

'Liebreich, a Cambridge-trained historian, recounts the riveting early decades of the Piarist Order. This book ... is certainly timely.'

Publishers Weekly
July 2004

Read more >>>



A headline fit for today

'A sordid tale of pederast priests and blind-eye bishops; a headline fit for today, that is 350-odd years old.'

'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.'

Kirkus Reviews
June 2004

Read more >>>



Saint hid sex abuse, says author

'A new book claims that the patron saint of Catholic schools covered up the first sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church.'

Christine Newman, Irish Times
19 May 2004

Read more >>>



Travails of the Scolopi

'Amid the murk, and to the delight of the media, [Liebreich] has uncovered sexual abuse of their pupils by a handful of the early Piarist fathers, and Joseph Calasanz's efforts to cover up the abuse and avoid scandal by moving offenders to other posts.'

The Tablet, 15 May 2004

Read more >>>



Scandal in the Piarist Order

'"Paedophile priest protected by Catholic hierarchy." It is the oldest story, and the newest. Why is this?

'Karen Liebreich has waded though boxes of previously unavailable archives to tell the story of the Piarist Order, founded in Rome in 1622 by a Spaniard, Father José de Calasanz, who had opened one school in a Roman slum and was eager to open more. By 1646, when the order was suppressed by Pope Innocent X, there were 40 Piarist schools all over Europe.'

Claudia FitzHerbert, Saturday Telegraph Arts Supplement
5 May 2004

Read more >>>



Church cover-up of sexual abuse

'What Liebreich has done is uncover the story - sedulously concealed by such ostensibly reliable sources as the Catholic Encylopaedia - of how priests preyed on their vulnerable young victims more than three centuries ago. Liebreich concludes with a demand for "the modern Catholic Church" to take "a closer look at the history of the Order of the Clerics Regular of the Pious Schools."

Good call. But is she going far enough?

'Is there not, on the evidence of the last few years, good reason for the Church to take a hard look at the whole self-satisfied, secretive structure? Let such an examination also consider the absurdity of selecting the most intelligent, motivated, vigorous youngsters of all classes (those whom Nature has programmed most strongly to procreate), removing them from their community's gene pool by condemning them to unnatural celibacy… and then wondering why "scandals of the flesh" happen. A policy change here may not stop abuse, but it might just curb it.'

The Star, South Africa
6 May 2004 (Book of the Week)

Read more >>>



Author claims to have uncovered first Church sex abuse scandal

‘A BOOK written by an English academic claims to have uncovered the first child sex abuse scandal to rock the Catholic Church.

‘Karen Liebreich says she has uncovered evidence of a cover up back in the 1640s where a man accused of abusing boys in his care was actually promoted.

Irish Examiner
8 May 2004

Read more >>>



A Catholic cover-up

‘After the initial success of the [Piarist] order... it was banned by order of Pope Innocent X in 1646. The given reason was internal dissent but, as Liebreich carefully unravels, underpinning the dissent was the activity of paedophile priests in its ranks. [Jose de Calasanz, the order's founder] summed up his method in a note sent to a lieutenant who feared one of the abused boy's fathers would cause a scandal: "One should first assure oneself of the truth with all secrecy, which in such cases should be dissimulated and covered up, so it does not appear true even if it is." These, remember, are the words of the saint to whom Catholicism has entrusted the care of schoolchildren.

‘Liebreich tells her story well and for the most part leaves readers to draw their own modern-day comparisons’

Independent
25 April 2004

Read more >>>



The strange case of the Catholic order that fell from grace:

‘The first widespread system of free schools in Europe was the creation of a Seventeenth-Century Spanish priest who later became the Patron Saint of Catholic schools. His Order, the Piarists, educated, among others, Goya, Mozart and Victor Hugo. But it was suddenly and secretively closed down by the Pope some twenty years after it started. Why?

‘The historian, Karen Liebreich, has uncovered a hidden story of sex abuse, church politics and cover-up.’

Start the Week, with Andrew Marr, BBC Radio 4
19 April 2004




A superb work of historical detection

‘Karen Liebreich brings alive one of the darkest episodes in Catholic history. The parallels between the story she has uncovered and modernchild-abuse scandals in the Church are powerful, but Liebreich does not descend to polemic.’

Glasgow Herald
17 April 2004

Read more >>>



Catholic child abuse scandals 360 years old:

‘A British academic has uncovered a secret, hidden for more than 300 years in the Vatican archives. Father Joseph, whose order was suddenly and mysteriously shut down for a period by Pope Innocent X in 1646, was guilty, like many since, of suppressing accusations of child abuse against his colleagues.’

Sydney Morning Herald
17 April 2004

Read more >>>



A Must for any Protestant bookeshelf

‘Her exposé Fallen Order is a must for any Protestant bookshelf.’

Ianpaisley.org




‘Liebreich has uncovered a harrowing tale of child abuse and heresy in the 17th Century Catholic church’

The Bookseller




‘Fallen Order is great history, as compelling as a detective story’

Anthony Pagden, Professor of History and Political Science, University of California, Los Angeles