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Serious
abuses went on unreported for years in Dutch Roman Catholic homes for the
mentally disabled. They included sex offences, castration, secret medical
experiments and possibly murder. One Catholic brother was banished to Africa
for doing unethical brain research. Radio Netherlands Worldwide tracked him
down.
Until
recent years, most abuses in Dutch institutional care were kept out of the
public eye. One exception was a scandal in 1978 involving medical experiments
at 'Huize Assisië’, a Roman Catholic boarding school for mentally handicapped
boys in the southern town of Udenhout.
Brain
x-rays
The home's
medical doctor and a Catholic nurse known as Brother Dionysius performed spinal
taps on approximately 180 patients, including minors. They injected fluid and
air into the patients' brains in order to take x-rays of the cerebral cortex.
These were used for brain research which was quietly being carried out. After
the injections, the patients suffered nausea and headaches for days. Their
parents were neither asked for permission nor notified of the procedures.
Sent to
Africa
When former
employees blew the whistle, the doctor was sacked and ordered to pay a fine.
Brother Dionysius was sent to Tanzania by his congregation. The case was
discussed in the Dutch parliament, where MPs complained that the health
inspector had given private institutions such as Huize Assisië a free hand.
"Nothing
untoward"
Radio
Netherlands Worldwide has discovered that Brother Dionysius is still working as
a hospital nurse in the Tanzanian village of Sengerema, near Lake Victoria.
Speaking to RNW by telephone, the 76-year-old brother said he had done
"nothing untoward".
"What
we did was happening at other institutions too," he said. "As the
x-ray technician, I was carrying out the doctor's orders. It was none of my
business whether the parents knew. I was fired after the story got out, but
that was just to put a stop to all the fuss."
Lurid
secrets
It was a
rare example of institutional abuse becoming public knowledge. More often than
not, such cases are swept under the rug where they remain for decades. But
lately, some lurid secrets have come out in the open.
In a Dutch
TV investigation, a former head nurse at 'Huize Sint Joseph’, a Catholic home
for mentally disabled boys, alleged that one of his predecessors had fatally
poisoned at least 20 patients in the early 1950s. The story caused ripples well
beyond Heel, the small southern Dutch village where the institution has stood
proud since the 19th century.
Indecent
assault
Aside from
alleged multiple murders, the media have revealed that there was both sexual
and physical abuse at Huize Sint Joseph. The latest news dug up by
investigative reporters: a rector at the home was convicted of indecent assault
of minors in 1967. Two nurses who reported him were sacked and ordered to
remain silent. Following his conviction, the rector requested a pardon so he
could remain employed at a vocational school where he held a job as a teacher
of Child Protection. The judge refused and gave him a short prison sentence.
Several
people who formerly lived in Huize Sint Joseph say the Catholic brothers often
beat the children in their care and locked them up in solitary confinement.
Historian Annemieke Klijn wrote about the violence in a book about the home.
She described the many forms of restraint and coercion the brothers used,
including "a perhaps somewhat unrestrained smack".
Grave
faults
Dr Klijn
describes Huize Sint Joseph as an institution where many religious men worked
with great dedication, but where the quality of care had grave faults. This was
partly due to overcrowding and a lack of well-trained personnel.
Like many
Roman Catholic care facilities in its day, it suffered from a lack of funds.
Catholic homes for the disabled also resisted outside attempts to impose
training to professionalize the quality of care. It is not known how widespread
similar abuses to those at Huize Sint Joseph were at other Catholic care
institutions.
Castration
A practice
which was fairly widespread but not widely publicized until recent years was
the chemical castration of patients. One of the institutions where this took
place was the Sint Willibrordus home, a Catholic facility for the mentally ill
in the Dutch town of Heiloo, north of Amsterdam. Among those castrated were
priests who had committed sexual offences and seminary students who were
thought unable to keep their libido in check.
Inquiry doubtful
So far,
there appears to be little interest in a wide-ranging inquiry into abuses in
Roman Catholic care for the mentally disabled. Member of the Upper House and
medical ethics expert Heleen Dupuis questions the need for an inquiry. Dr
Dupuis, who chairs the main Dutch trade organisation for providers of care to
the disabled, says anyone found guilty of abuse must be punished. But she
prefers to emphasize how much Dutch care has improved since decades past when
so many abuses took place. "Thank God we no longer live in those times,"
she says.
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