Friday, March 13, 2009
Remembering Eric - 2nd Anniversary Of His Death
Dear Grandmère Mimi,
Thank you for this opportunity to tell our story. Perhaps it will serve as a cautionary tale, to warn other families who naively trust their own church to “do the right thing” regarding clergy sexual abuse.
Ours is still a very painful story, two years after Eric's untimely death. His is the story of a young gay man, who felt called to priesthood in the Orthodox Church in America (hereafter the OCA). We’re convinced that Eric is just one of many young LGBT’s who have been sexually abused by opportunistic clergy in the various churches over the years.
Eric, like his sisters was raised Roman Catholic. As a teenager he followed his dad into the Orthodox Church; his mom and sisters remained Catholic. Eric’s story is basically the tragic intersection of a devout, socially conscious and intelligent young man with a troubled married priest, Fr. Timothy Blumentritt and an equally troubled Orthodox Church jurisdiction “the OCA”. Fr. Blumentritt was responsible for Pastoral Care of all students at St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, NY. Eric went to Fr. Tim, his 'spiritual father', for counseling to deal with childhood issues. Like many of his fellow seminarians, Eric was an ACOA, an Adult Child of an Alcoholic.
Basically, as told to us by our son, this priest/counselor breached appropriate counselor-counselee boundaries, POKROV.ORG justifying this sexual abuse as a bizarre form of "reparative therapy". This "grooming" was all on the sly, and after nearly a year and a half of this treatment, Eric blew the whistle on this horrible exploitation of ‘spiritual fatherhood’. He also told us that "Fr. Tim" monitored his phone calls, web surfing and emails in his attempt to control Eric's life. Then Eric told us that the Church and seminary used this same information to pressure him into signing off on the legal release. The one (!) priest in the whole Orthodox Church in America (OCA) jurisdiction charged with investigating claims of sexual misconduct, was uncertified [the OCA's own governing body, the Metropolitan Council acknowledges this to be a fact], and has recently been dismissed from these duties. See here and here.
Many Orthodox jurisdictions have clergy sexual abuse policies which in practice appear to not be worth the paper on which they’re printed. Signing a legal release was the price our trusting son paid for getting this man defrocked (and which we consider a mere slap on the wrist). See POKROV.ORG
Only shortly before this, Eric formally came out to his family and told us of the abuse. If you go to OCANews, you’ll see this church’s administration and hierarchy have long been compromised by financial misappropriation and other improprieties.
Eric finished his MDiv degree, but by then was affected by PTSD and rapidly descending into depression. After graduation he moved home and was employed locally for a short time. But in spite of meds and intense counseling he could no longer work. He had no history of depression before the abuse. After it came out publicly that he was suing his Church and Seminary, the malicious speculation, gossip and re-victimization began in earnest. He was called all sorts of utter shit, a seducer of priests, etc. etc. See OCANews Archives.
A few clergy and laity publicly came to his defense, notably Cappy Larson and Melanie Sakoda from POKROV.ORG who are moms of sexual abuse survivors in the Orthodox Church in America (OCA).You can't imagine how completely devastated Eric was to realize that he was abandoned and a pariah in the church he loved!
Just weeks later, very early on Monday, March 12th, Eric quietly disappeared. We were absolutely frantic. He drove to Indiana, purchased a shotgun, and came back here to a local motel, and shot himself to death in the early morning hours of Tuesday, March 13th, 2007. Our coroner told us that his body was surrounded by his bible, prayer book, and pictures of himself and his family. She pointedly told us, 'There was no fetishism; Eric clearly had a prayer service before ending his pain'.
The funeral was closed casket. We were grateful for the many seminarians who drove out through a blizzard to come to his funeral.
Fortunately, our family went into grief counseling right away, with a counselor having much expertise working with victims of sexual abuse, and their families. We also became involved in SNAP SNAP (Survivors Network of Those Abused By Priests) and appreciate their on-going support. We've found the leadership of SNAP to be fully supportive, and not the least bit inhibited when we tell them Eric’s entire story. They know there is virtually no connection between the sexual abuse of vulnerable adults & sexual orientation. It's only about CONTROL, exploitation and the abuse of power, using "sex" as the convenient "humiliator".
An insightful saying in SNAP is:
“Clergy Sexual Abuse is no more about 'sex', than the Bataan Death March was about ‘marching’.“
What I haven't described is the emotional toll our son’s death has taken on Monica and me, and our daughters. Eric was as kind, honorable, and generous a young man as ever walked this earth. Anyone who actually knew him could verify that. It's true, even if we are his parents. As an undergraduate, he did mission work with abandoned street kids in Guatemala. Later he talked of opening a shelter for runaways, especially LGBT kids. That's the kind of person Eric was. At times we still can't believe he's gone, and miss him more than words can possibly say. We live every day with the rage and the pain, and the injustice. Our family’s story is living proof of just how toxic “the closet” can be for young gays and lesbians, and their loved ones especially in shame-based churches.
A dear friend of ours and a long time member of SNAP told us something quite profound after Eric's death. Janet Patterson was the mother of a young man who took his own life after having been sexually abused by a Catholic priest. Janet says that in situations involving clergy sexual abuse: 'All the wrong people feel guilty'. See Driven From the Flock.
We (victims, survivors, and their loved ones) invariably "beat ourselves up", for what we could or should have done differently to have a different outcome. Generally speaking, the victim’s abusers, enablers, and by-standers seemingly feel ... and certainly show little, if any, remorse. For that matter, apparently only Catholic victims and their families get any form of apology. The best we've ever got from a bishop were ‘prayers’ and second-hand verbal expressions of 'sympathy at our loss'. We hate that word, "loss". We didn't "lose" our son. He wasn't misplaced. His soul was murdered, and his body and spirit simply followed a short while later.
Throughout the 1930’s as the tide of hatred and cowardly indifference toward “the other” was rising in Germany, the "heterodox" Lutheran pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer taught at an underground seminary for pastors of the Confessing Church at Zingst-Finkenwalde.
It was there in 1935 that he told his students:
'The one who does not cry out for the Jews has no right to sing Gregorian chant'.
Today, we forthrightly submit that:
'The one who does not cry out for the victims of clergy sexual abuse has no right to say the Catholic mass nor sing the Orthodox Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom'.
Perhaps what we've said will be something to take to heart this Lenten season.
John & Monica Kokosinski Iliff
Bloomington, Illinois
I have corresponded with John over a period of some months. On this 2nd anniversary of Eric's death, I ask you to join with me to pray for John and Monica and their family and friends and with Eric's friends to ask God's blessing upon them. May God give them comfort and consolation and the peace that passes understanding to keep their hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.
UPDATE: Eric's grave marker.
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My heart goes out to all victims of clergy abuse. For Eric's family and friends all I can say is that my prayers go with you and God's blessing keep you.
ReplyDeleteA horrid story!
ReplyDeleteMay God's infinite love sustain Eric's family and friends, now and ever.
Prayers ascending!
Another story that cries out to heaven! When will these "institutions" get it?
ReplyDeletePrayers go out to this family.
praying today....
ReplyDeleteYet these churches are SO concerned with the healthy expression of same sex affection.... possibily because they have so much invested in the closet.
ReplyDeleteA horror.
It's utterly heart-breaking what Eric and his family have endured. And it deepens my resolve to keep pushing and prodding until institutions learn to put the safety of kids ahead of the reputations of a few powerful adults.
ReplyDeleteDavid Clohessy
National Director, SNAP
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests
SNAPclohessy@aol.com
SNAPnetwork.org
Grandmère, if you are in contact with Eric's family, please tell them I am lighting a candle for all of them right now and will put Eric's name in our book of prayers by our votives at church. He looked and sounded like a beautiiful person and my heart breaks that his church couldn't see that he was God's beloved.
ReplyDeleteDavid from SNAP, thanks for leaving a word. Y'all just keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteCaminante and all, I assure you that Monica and John are reading the comments.
ReplyDeleteDear Grandmère, and dear John and Monica, whom I have also come to know over the past year,
ReplyDeleteI am on writing retreat this week but wanted to say that I mourn and pray with you in memory of your dear and beautiful son Eric and that I celebrate his life. May we all work for justice and for truth-telling, without which there is no justice.
Peace be with you always.
Your sister,
Jane
God bless Monica, John & all who loved Eric. May Eric rest in peace and rise in glory.
ReplyDelete"We’re convinced that Eric is just one of many young LGBT’s who have been sexually abused by opportunistic clergy in the various churches over the years."
ReplyDeleteI don't doubt it for a moment.
What a tragic tale.
Will anything change?
I do not know what to write. Prayers and even more determination to convict those in power in many of the churches of their evil.
ReplyDeletePrayers for rest and peace for Eric, and strength and comfort for his family and friends.
ReplyDeleteThere is nothing worse than criminal clergy. Nothing.
O God of spirits and all flesh, may Eric's memory be eternal and may he dwell in the mansions of the righteous.
ReplyDeleteFr. Christopher Foley
May Eric's memory be eternal for he is worthy of everlasting memory.
ReplyDeleteEric is at peace in the Heavenly Kingdom. He is at rest in his Lord and is beyond any earthly pain..may we continue to witness for him and his abuse..the Church must make retribution and never let anyone be hurt as he was hurt,,
I pray that God will comfort his family as I cannot imagine their pain..
Stephen D. Montgomery
"One day we will learn to love one another in spite of our differences in race, sex, class and religion and on that day ,for the second time in history,mankind will have discovered fire"
My heart breaks for Eric's family. They are in my prayers.
ReplyDeleteWhen last I followed (6 months ago) this beyond-tragic, beyond-outrageous tale, Eric's handsome, smiling face was still illuminating the SVS Choir's webpage. Because why end the exploitation w/ his death? {sarcasm/Off}
ReplyDeleteMay he rest in peace, and rise in glory. Liberating Lord Christ, grant your abused children JUSTICE!
I am so so sorry Grandmere Mimi, for the death of your grandson Eric Iliff. I tried last year to awake people to the denial of sexual abuse in the Orthodox Church. See ChristmasMonastery.TV and Petition. I did this in response to Eric's story.
ReplyDeleteThe power of young gifted people wanting to do good is still being
suppressed in the Orthodox Church.
The cruel lid to squelch opportunities for young people to help other young people, to do the good God has made for them to do, gets stopped or sublimated in a system that thrives on the abuse of power.
It continues to be my hope young people of all orientations they percieve in themselves can be loved and not shamed to live out their dreams.
I try to pursue this support through Christmas Monastery. My work in inclusive music after surviving cancer wrapped around my vocal chords and the premeditated loss of my health insurance by the OCA to keep me a pauper through my medical needs, motivates my survival efforts.
Please know I respect and honor
Eric's sacrifice to tell the truth.
Carol Bacha
ChristmasMonastery.TV
Carol, I am not related to Eric, John, or Monica, although I would be proud to be. They addressed me by my nom de blog. I am everyone's grandmother.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your kind words. Tragic situations like Eric's hit me hard, too, and I like to do what I can to further the cause of justice and truth and a compassionate response to the victims.
Yours is another tragic health care story! Another area surely where we need great change. I'm a survivor of breast cancer, but I had good health insurance coverage. I can't even imagine what it would have been like to battle cancer and worry about health insurance.
My prayers for you for healing of body, mind, and spirit and for strength to continue your fight for survival.
God bless this family. I had read about it on other blogs when it happened - a tragedy beyond imagining.
ReplyDeleteGod have mercy.
Dear Grandmère Mimi,
ReplyDeleteMonica and I would like to thank you for your kindness and hospitality in allowing us to post our story on your blog. We hope more people will take it to heart, and will share/forward this story (not because of us, but because this issue is so important) beyond this blog. Please help others wake up to the devastation and heartache clergy sexual abuse causes in real people's lives.
If people would like to add their name to Eric's SNAP memorial tribute, contact me at:
bn dot anglo8 at gmail dot com
and I'll take care of it.
Once again, thank you all for your support and prayers.
Looking for Peace and Justice,
John and Monica Kokosinski Iliff
John and Monica, I was honored that you permitted me to host your beautiful tribute to your son. Eric was a wonderful young man, and through my great hope in the Resurrection, I believe that you'll all be together again.
ReplyDeleteHe has told you, O mortal, what is good;
and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice, and to love kindness,
and to walk humbly with your God?
Micah 6:8
Oh, wow! This is heartbreaking and horrible. Peace be with Eric, his family and his friends.
ReplyDeleteGrandmère Mimi: This is a belated thank you for this post. John directed us to you (you really do know everyone in the universe). None can imagine the pain of heart John and Monica endure. Though we've posted on Eric in the past and recently, this post of yours is the most poignant: To hear from John and Monica directly. This is indeed what we mean when we proclaim: Eric, Memory Eternal. Mimi, your heart is truly spacious, and your life blessed.
ReplyDeleteJN1034, I really don't know everyone in the universe, but I do, as they say, have connections.
ReplyDeleteI was humbled that Monica and John chose to allow me to post their tribute to Eric here on my blog.
Thanks for leaving your good words. I am blessed in my friends.
As a lifelong American Orthodox Christian and a member of the OCA, Eric's story makes me so embarrassed by my church and the expression of Christianity by some in our church. What happened to Eric is appalling, and how the OCA dealt with it is unconscionable. I know that nothing I can say will make things better, but Memory Eternal to Eric and eternal prayers to his family.
ReplyDeleteThis is so sad, yet I can't help think that the real problem is with the human heart, and not with any institution. These utterly deplorable acts happen in every country in the world, and in every sphere of life. If people truly followed Christ as their Master these things would not happen.
ReplyDeleteI also am stunned by this tragic story. I was in the Orthodox Church for many years, including a 7 year spell in monastic life. Homosexuality was never addressed in the necessary way as far as I knew. In fact, when I was converted to Orthodoxy, I was told to not talk about my own struggle, except within the context of confession. I am sorry that Eric was not able to find a way to come to peace with his faithful commitment and his sexuality. It isn't an easy path, and most of us who are true believers will never find peace here in this life. That is my conclusion. My heart does break for the parents of Eric.
ReplyDeletethis world is so very cruel...my child was 19 when she died...god gave and took back...
ReplyDeleteTim, I pray for you a measure of peace on this good earth. God loves you just as you are.
ReplyDeleteAnne, how very sad. My sympathy to you. I pray for comfort, consolation, and peace for you and for all who love your daughter.
ReplyDelete