It’s not news about numbers, but about injuries. In New York, over 1,300 people who have reported sexual abuse committed by priests and pastoral workers linked to the Church are now awaiting possible compensation through unprecedented mediation: the Archdiocese has announced the creation of a 300 million dollar fund to address – at least on a civil level – one of the most painful and unresolved chapters in its history. Behind the record figure, there remains the weight of stories that have been silenced for decades and of a question that runs through the entire Church: how to transform economic justice into a true possibility of reparation and reconciliation?
The Roman Catholic Church of New York and a group of more than 1,300 people – survivors who reported sexual abuse by priests and lay workers – announced that they have agreed to start a mediation process, with the aim of closing the disputes with a global agreement.
The contested acts date back to a long period of time, from 1952 to 2020. In a public letter, Cardinal Timothy Dolan acknowledged the “darkness” of a past marked by abuse, asking forgiveness for the failures of those who “betrayed the trust placed” in the Church.
A 300 million fund for repairs
To finance a possible global compensation, the archdiocese has stated that it intends to set up a fund of 300 million dollars. To reach this figure, a combination of measures is envisaged: reduction of staff and operating costs, sale of properties – including the former headquarters in Manhattan – and disposal of other non-essential assets.
The mediator in charge of the negotiation is Daniel J. Buckley, a retired judge who in 2024 conducted a similar agreement with the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, obtaining record compensation for the victims.
According to the lawyers representing around 300 of the complainants, mediation – if conducted with transparency and real commitment – will be able to offer “the financial compensation and a path to truth and recognition” that they have been asking for for years.
Not a simple transaction: transparency and prevention
The mediation process is not presented as a mere economic plea bargain. The lawyers, together with the archdiocese, underline that any agreement must provide full transparency on the truth of the facts, a public reporting mechanism and concrete prevention measures to prevent such tragedies from happening again.
For its part, the archdiocese states that this initiative represents not only a civil responsibility, but an act of conscience and penance: a recognition that the wounds of the past cannot be ignored, and that it is necessary to offer survivors not only compensation, but also listening, truth, and – as far as possible – reconciliation.
That the Archdiocese of New York moving toward a global agreement is significant not only for the city or the United States, but as a signal for the entire international Catholic Church. After years of scandals, complaints, trials, and too many unfulfilled promises, a concrete action like this – if truly transparent and oriented towards the good of the victims – can represent a symbolic turning point: not in the face of divine justice, but of human justice.
For a newspaper like Christian familyalways committed to offering an in-depth analysis that combines news, ecclesial awareness and pity For the victims, this case deserves to be followed carefully. Not to “cause a scandal”, but to contribute to a serious debate: the one above truth, responsibility, conversion – and how the Church can (and must) accompany victims on the path of reparation, healing and – where possible – reconciliation.









