The Archdiocese
of New York is handing out coloring and comic books that
warn children about sex predators, the first such effort by
a Roman Catholic diocese in the United States.
In the coloring
book, a perky guardian angel tells children not to keep
secrets from their parents, not to meet anyone from an
Internet chat room, and to allow only ''certain
people'' like a doctor or parent to see ''where your
bathing suit would be.''
In a comic book
version for children over 10, a teenager turns to St.
Michael the Archangel for strength to report that two
schoolmates are being sexually abused.
Joseph Zwilling,
a spokesman for the archdiocese, said the books have
been distributed to about 300 schools and 400 religious
education programs to use as a resource. They are also
free online.
''It's to help
young people to know situations they should not get
into,'' he said. ''How to be safe -- but to try to do it in
an age-appropriate and sensitive way.''
Some critics,
while applauding the intent, say the books should say
explicitly that trusted adults -- including priests -- may
be the abusers.
Zwilling said
that as far as he knows, the coloring book is the first of
its kind to be produced by church officials. David Clohessy,
national director of the Survivors Network of Those
Abused by Priests, said he too was unaware of any such
effort.
Clohessy said
that while he welcomes any attempt to teach children how to
stay safe, he believes the coloring book should state more
clearly that the predator is more likely to be a
trusted adult than a stranger.
''There continues
to be a bit of an overemphasis on stranger danger,''
Clohessy said. ''I think it would be most effective if it
would say, 'Not only strangers molest kids. Even
adults you like and your parents respect -- teachers,
doctors, priests -- can hurt kids.' ''
But Zwilling said
the vast majority of priests are ''good and holy men,''
and he said it would have been inappropriate for the
coloring book to single out priests as potential
abusers. ''You don't want to frighten children,'' he
said. ''You also don't want to stigmatize any group.''
The closest the
coloring book comes to directly addressing the 2002
church abuse scandal is a picture of a second angel -- not
the guardian angel -- grinning at a priest and an
altar boy through a wide-open door.
''For safety's
sake, a child and an adult shouldn't be alone in a closed
room together,'' the text reads. ''If a child and an adult
happen to be alone, someone should know where they are
and the door should be open or have a big window in
it.'' (AP)