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Paper reports hundreds of priests have died of AIDS
Copyright © 2000 Nando Media


KANSAS CITY, Mo. (January 30, 2000 1:39 a.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) -
AIDS has quietly caused the deaths of hundreds of Roman Catholic priests in
the United States although other causes may be listed on some of their death
certificates, The Kansas City Star reported in its Sunday editions.

In the first of a three-part series, the newspaper reported that its
examination of death certificates and interviews with experts indicated
several hundred priests had died of AIDS-related illnesses since the
mid-1980s and hundreds more are living with HIV, the virus that causes the
disease. The death rate of priests from AIDS is at least four times that of
the general population, the newspaper said.

Church leaders in the United States and at the Vatican declined requests to
discuss the findings, the Star said. The Vatican referred questions to local
bishops.

Bishop Raymond J. Boland of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, said the
AIDS deaths show that priests are human. "Much as we would regret it, it
shows that human nature is human nature," Boland said.

The Star sent confidential questionnaires to 3,000 of the 46,000 priests in
the United States last fall, asking about AIDS and other issues, and received
responses from 801 priests, a 27 percent return rate.

Six of 10 priests responding said they knew of at least one priest who had
died of an AIDS-related illness and one-third knew a priest living with AIDS.
Three-fourths said the church needed to provide more education to seminarians
on sexual issues. Asked about their sexual orientation, 75 percent said they
were heterosexual, 15 percent said they were homosexual and 5 percent said
they were bisexual.

The Star said exact numbers of priests who have died of AIDS or become
infected with HIV is unknown, partly because many suffer in solitude. When
priests tell their superiors, the cases generally are handled quietly.

The newspaper cited the case of Bishop Emerson J. Moore, who left the
Archdiocese of New York in 1995 and went to Minnesota, where he died in a
hospice of an AIDS-related illness. His death certificate attributed the
death to "unknown natural causes" and listed his occupation as "laborer" in
the manufacturing industry.

After an AIDS activist filed a complaint, officials changed the cause of
death to "HIV-related illness," the newspaper reported, but the occupation
was not corrected.

Farley Cleghorn, an epidemiologist with the Institute of Human Virology in
Baltimore, said he has treated about 20 priests and religious-order brothers
with AIDS, all of whom had kept it a secret.

"The church and religious orders need to acknowledge that there is a problem
- that priests have sex and they are susceptible to all sexually transmitted
diseases, including AIDS," he said.

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