Sinead O'Connor's career never fully recovered after ripping up a photo of the pope on 'SNL' to protest child abuse. But abuse survivors within the church tell us O’Connor's act was a revelation
revealed that church officials protected abusers during John Paul II’s papacy, which ended with his death in 2005.
“[O’Connor] spoke out at a time when public opinion wasn’t squarely in the camp of survivors,” Sarah Pearson, an Ending Clergy Abuse member, says. “Today, it’s much easier to acknowledge [the abuse] and say something … but for her to do that at a time when there would be real consequences for what she had done, it was really brave.”
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For clergy abuse survivors, Sinead O'Connor's controversial Pope protest was brave and propheticIn 1992, Sinéad O’Connor destroyed a photo of Pope John Paul II on U.S. national television. While the pushback was swift, for survivors of clergy sex abuse O’Connor’s protest was prophetic, forecasting the global denomination’s public reckoning that was still to come.
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