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Revelation (TV series)

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Revelation
File:Revelation Official Poster.jpg
GenreDocumentary
Created byNial Fulton
Sarah Ferguson
Written byTony Jones
Directed byNial Fulton
Sarah Ferguson
Presented bySarah Ferguson
ComposerHelena Czajka
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes3
Production
Executive producersNial Fulton
Ivan O'Mahoney
ProducerNial Fulton
Production locationsAustralia, Ireland, United States, New Zealand, Italy
Cinematography
  • Aaron Smith
  • Richard Kendrick
  • Martin McGrath
Editors
  • Lile Judickas
  • Philippa Rowlands
Production companyIn Films
Original release
NetworkAustralian Broadcasting Corporation
ReleaseMarch 17, 2020 (2020-03-17) –
2 April 2020 (2020-04-02)

Revelation is a three-episode, Australian documentary series directed by Nial Fulton and Sarah Ferguson. The series was broadcast on ABC TV in March 2020. In a world television first, the producers took cameras into the criminal trials of Catholic priests accused of sex crimes against children and interviewed Father Vincent Ryan and Brother Bernard McGrath, two of the most prolific child sex abusers in Australia. The final episode features Cardinal George Pell.[1][2]

Synopsis

Series Synopsis

Revelation filmed inside the criminal trials of Father Vincent Ryan and Brother Bernard McGrath, Catholic priests accused of sex crimes against children. Through a series of interviews filmed during these trials, Revelation uncovers the secret lives and motivations of some of the most reviled men of modern times. How does a man of God become a predator of children? What dark psychology enables a priest to go from administrating the sacraments to sexually abusing an altar boy? [3]

Revelation culminates in the Vatican with the story of Cardinal George Pell, accused of abusing boys in an orphanage in Australia. Across three compelling episodes, Revelation presents the deepest portrayal of the culture and system that protected perpetrators of heinous crimes against children.[4]

Episode 1 - The Children Have Been Used By The Devil

One of the Catholic Church’s first paedophile priests to be convicted anywhere in the world, Father Vincent Ryan faces new criminal charges. Revelation follows Ryan to court and In a world television first, films the trial of a clerical child abuser as Ryan’s victims search desperately for justice. In a shocking interview on the eve of trial, Sarah Ferguson confronts Ryan about his double life and prolific offending. Ryan reveals how he used confession and the brotherhood of the clergy to conceal his crimes. Marked out by his superiors as a future prince of the church, Ryan was sent to study in Rome. Ordained by the Pope in St. Peter’s Basilica, Ryan describes how the Church instructed him to believe he was untouchable.

Police open their files of the original investigation of Ryan, revealing how Ryan was moved from parish to parish, sexually abusing children in every parish. Ryan’s defense is challenged by his victims, who describe the terror and shame he inflicted on them. The episode reveals that despite multiple convictions and decades as a known paedophile, Vincent Ryan is still a Catholic priest.[5]

Episode 2 - A Dangerous Place To Be A Child

A beachside city on the stunning New South Wales coast, Newcastle has one of the highest concentrations of child abusers of any Catholic diocese in the world. The trial of local priest Father Vincent Ryan continues, revealing the system responsible for the cover-up of his crimes. Ryan’s former house-keeper, 93-year-old Audrey Nash, describes the night her son Andrew hanged himself. His abuser, a Marist Brother, arrived at the house in a desperate bid to cover his tracks, looking for Andrew’s suicide note.

As the trial for Ryan reaches its verdict, another Catholic sex abuse case gets underway. Bernard McGrath, a religious brother from the Order of St John of God, terrified his victims in a residential boarding school where he was headmaster. During the trial, Sarah Ferguson goes into the maximum-security prison to interview McGrath. Bernard McGrath is one of the world’s most prolific paedophiles and the first member of his secretive global order to break ranks. In a tense exchange, McGrath names the individuals who enabled his abuse of children over decades, moving him from New Zealand to Australia and the United States.

McGrath’s prison confession leads Sarah to senior Church official Father Brian Lucas, one of the architects of the Church cover-up of child abuse. The episode ends with the shocking revelation that the Brothers responsible for moving McGrath are still under the protection of the Pope.[6]

Episode 3 - Goliath

The third and final episode goes to the heart of power in the global Catholic Church. Cardinal George Pell was one of the Pope’s closest advisors and a divisive figure in Australia. Bernie breaks decades of silence saying Pell groomed and abused him in the Ballarat orphanage where he grew up, in a swimming pool, and the presbytery of the Catholic cathedral in the 1970s. Bernie had kept his secret hidden for decades, intimidated by Pell’s growing power and authority in the church.

An investigation unfolds in the remote parishes of the vast outback of Victoria, searching for evidence of Bernie and Pell’s parallel histories. Former residents of the orphanage come forward, some with their own stories of abuse. Ballarat priests talk bluntly about the institutional cover-up of pedophilia in their church. Steve Blacker tells how his parish priest, a known and notorious child abuser, raped him in the confessional. Steve brings a civil case against the church which results in a landmark decision for victims of clerical abuse.

Bernie has the final word, asking for the shame he and other victims have carried for decades to be taken away.[7]

Production

The series was produced by In Films for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and was shot in the Vatican, Ireland, New Zealand and multiple locations around Australia, including the Catholic dioceses of Ballarat and Maitland-Newcastle.[8]

Following lengthy negotiations, the producers were granted permission to bring cameras into the New South Wales District Court to film the 2019 child sex abuse criminal trials of Father Vincent Ryan and Brother Bernard McGrath. Ryan's trial was filmed over six weeks and McGrath's over seven months. It was the first time anywhere in the world that cameras had been allowed into a clerical child abuse trial. Both Ryan and McGrath consented to their trials being recorded for the series.

In another television first, NSW Corrective Services granted permission for a four-person film crew to enter a maximum security prison to interview Bernard McGrath, a former member of the Hospitaller Order of St. John of God religious order. McGrath is serving a 39-year prison sentence for multiple sex offenses against young boys under his care in Kendall Grange, New South Wales.

Crown Prosecutor David Patch, New South Wales District Court, 2019
Bernard McGrath interviewed by Sarah Ferguson inside a maximum security prison, New South Wales, 2019

Broadcast

  • Episode 1 was broadcast on 17 March 2020 on ABC TV and achieved a combined (broadcast and online) audience of 885K and an iView audience of 979,000.
  • Episode 2 was postponed due to live coverage of the Prime Minister's televised address to the nation regarding the COVID-19 pandemic and went to air on 31 March. It achieved a combined audience of 904,000.[9]
  • Episode 3 was screened on 2 April and achieved a combined audience of 714,000.[10]

Key people

Episode 1: "The Children have been used by the Devil"

Episode 2: "A Dangerous Place to be a Child"

Episode 3: - "Goliath"

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateLength (minutes)
1"The Children Have Been Used by the Devil"Nial Fulton
Sarah Ferguson
Sarah Ferguson
Tony Jones
17 March 2020 (2020-03-17)87
2"A Dangerous Place To Be A Child"Nial Fulton
Sarah Ferguson
Tony Jones29 March 2020 (2020-03-29)90
3"Goliath"Nial Fulton
Sarah Ferguson
Tony Jones2 April 2020 (2020-04-02)102

Reception

Critical response

The series met with positive reviews. Holly Byrnes of The Daily Telegraph (Sydney) wrote that "Walkley award-winning journalist Sarah Ferguson has delivered some of the best TV journalism this country has ever witnessed, but Revelation might just be the pinnacle."[11] Bridget McManus from The Age (Melbourne) gave it a four out of five star rating, calling it a "searing documentary series".[12][13] Brigid Delaney, a senior writer for the Guardian Australia, wrote "You'll need a strong stomach to digest Revelation's insights into child sexual abuse in the Catholic church."[14]

In The Australian, Graeme Blundell wrote that "although it is often difficult to watch, Ferguson and her exemplary production team, including executive producer Nial Fulton, principal cinematographer Aaron Smith and researchers Sophie Randerson, Kate Wild, and Alison McClymont, have been able to shed light not only on their heinous atrocities but how the Catholic Church repeatedly chose secrecy over transparency and accountability. It is a confronting, awful study of a church that not only fell to decay but seems beyond renewal, achingly absent of integrity and grace." Blundell also praises Ferguson for her restraint, saying that "the interviews she conducts, initially with Ryan and later with Bernard McGrath, a former St John of God brother, teacher and headmaster in residential schools in Australia and New Zealand, serving 39 years for crimes against children, are harrowing and disturbing as she provokes and exposes a web of conspiracy and perversion. She tries to display no explicit emotion as she questions Ryan but can only just conceal her ethical disgust behind that journalistic veneer of taut self-control."[15]

The series won the Walkley Documentary Award[16] on 20 November 2020. The judges' citation read: "This haunting documentary broke new ground on an issue already well covered by the media and investigated by police and the Royal Commission alike. The extraordinary access to some of the Catholic Church’s most notorious perpetrators of sexual abuse against children, as well as the insight it gave viewers into court proceedings, showed just how powerful journalistic documentary-making can be."[17]

In December 2020, Revelation won Best Documentary Series at the Asian Academy Creative Awards.[18][19]

Controversy

Although his newspaper, the Herald Sun (Melbourne), broke the story about George Pell's alleged sexual abuse of children in 2016, Andrew Bolt, a News Corp columnist and outspoken supporter of Pell, attacked the ABC and the filmmakers, saying that the series was part of a "witch-hunt" against Pell. Following his acquittal, other vocal supporters of Pell, including Miranda Devine and Gerard Henderson, condemned those who had reported on the story.[20] Numerous Newscorp journalists claimed that the ABC's reporting on the Pell case was one-sided and biased.[21]

Greg Craven, the then vice-chancellor of the Australian Catholic University and a long-time friend of Pell, accused the ABC and police of "polluting" the legal atmosphere around the cardinal's Victorian trial.[22] The ABC denied Craven's allegations that the broadcaster had intentionally brought forward Episode 3 of Revelation in an attempt to influence the High Court.[23]

The ABC responded to the News Corp claims, stating that "The ABC has always acted in the public interest in reporting on the police investigation into Cardinal George Pell and in investigating other allegations made against him. The ABC firmly rejects claims that it pursued a 'witch hunt' against Cardinal Pell, that it engaged in 'vigilante' journalism or that its coverage was one-sided or unfair."[24]

The Guardian Australia journalist Margaret Simmons also formed the view that the ABC's reporting on Pell did not "step over the line".[25]

Awards and nominations

Awards and nominations
Award Date of Ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result
Screen Producers Australia Awards March 2022 Best Documentary Series Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton, Tony Jones Nominated
Australian Directors Guild Awards December 2021 Best Direction in a Documentary Series Nial Fulton, Sarah Ferguson Nominated
Walkley Awards 2020 Walkley Documentary Award Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton, Tony Jones Won
2020 Television Camerawork (Episode 3) Aaron Smith Nominated
Asian Academy Creative Awards December 2020 Best Documentary Series Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton, Tony Jones Won
November 2020 Best Documentary Series (National Winner) Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton, Tony Jones Won
Australian Cinematographers Society Awards November 2020 Gold Award (Episode 3) Aaron Smith Won
Australian Screen Editors November 2020 Best Editing in a Documentary (Episode 3) Philippa Rowlands Won
Florence Film Awards November 2020 Best Editing Philippa Rowlands Won
November 2020 Best Original Score Helena Czajka Won
Spotlight Documentary Film Awards January 2021 Gold Award Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton, Tony Jones Won
Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts Awards November 2020 Best Editing in a Documentary (Episode 3) Philippa Rowlands Nominated
November 2020 Best Cinematography in a Documentary (Episode 1) Aaron Smith, Andy Taylor, Martin McGrath Nominated
Banff World Media Festival June 2021 Social Issues and Current Affairs Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton, Tony Jones Nominated
Australian International Documentary Conference Awards March 2021 Best Documentary Series Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton, Tony Jones Nominated

Response from the Catholic Church

Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle

The Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle responded to the imminent release of the series by issuing an open letter to their parishioners attempting to justify their failure to have convicted priest Father Vincent Ryan laicized. This was subsequently followed by a more detailed press release, including a timeline of Ryan's offending, Bishop Leo Clarke's failure to respond to Ryan's abuse, the treatment of the Nash family and Father William Burston.[26] The report concluded that Ryan was "properly convicted" and that Andrew Nash "tragically committed suicide" after he was "abused by the criminal William Cable 'Br Romuald'".[26] It was also claimed that the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith would recommend to Pope Francis that Ryan be laicised.[26]

Following the broadcast, a plaque celebrating the life of Bishop Clarke was removed from the Maitland cathedral and an internal Catholic investigation was launched by Bishop Bill Wright regarding Father Burston's interview, who told Sarah Ferguson that he thought the suicide of 13-year-old Andrew Nash in 1974 was a "prank gone wrong".[27][28]

Wright confirmed the internal investigation had concluded "some time ago" and that Burston had voluntarily agreed to no longer celebrate Mass or other church rituals. Audrey Nash had not been notified about the outcome of the investigation.

The Royal Commission Case Study 43 was released in October 2020 and found that Burston knew in 1976 that there had been a complaint of "sexually inappropriate behaviour" against Ryan.[29]

Diocese of Ballarat

The Bishop of Ballarat, Paul Bird, issued a press release on 17 March 2020 warning parishioners that they might find some of the material in the show confronting and painful.[30]

Brothers of St John of God

On 7 April 2020, the hospitaller order of the Brothers of St John of God posted a statement about the series on their website.[31] The order did not deny the allegations that they had prior knowledge of Bernard McGrath's sexual offending against children under his care and moved him from Australia to New Zealand and later to the Jemez Springs treatment facility run by the Congregation of the Servants of the Paraclete in New Mexico, United States.[32]

Archdiocese of Sydney

On 2 April 2020, the Archdiocese of Sydney responded to the allegations raised against Cardinal George Pell in episode 3 of the series by issuing a short press release.[33]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Amazing Stories and news-making exposés: March TV and streaming". 1 March 2020. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  2. ^ S, John; March 18th, eman; Comments, 2020 07:51 am. "'Learn. Protect your children from clergy.' The ABC's Revelation reveals a tragic story - Eternity News". Retrieved 20 July 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "Home". revelationdocumentary.com.
  4. ^ "Revelation".
  5. ^ "Revelation".
  6. ^ "Revelation: Episode 2 a Dangerous Place to be a Child".
  7. ^ "Revelation: Episode 3 Goliath".
  8. ^ Meade, Amanda (8 April 2020). "ABC to re-edit and restore George Pell episode of Revelation as News Corp goes on attack". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  9. ^ "Schedule Update - REVELATION to air over two nights next week on ABC". 25 March 2020.
  10. ^ Knox, David. ""Beyond the pale...." | TV Tonight".
  11. ^ "REVELATION". www.revelationdocumentary.com.
  12. ^ McManus, Bridget (28 March 2020). "TV for Tuesday, March 29". Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  13. ^ McManus, Bridget (14 March 2020). "Critic's Choice for March 15". Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  14. ^ Delaney, Brigid (16 March 2020). "You'll need a strong stomach to digest Revelation's insights into child sexual abuse in the Catholic church". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  15. ^ "The Australian".
  16. ^ "Walkley Award winners 2020 - AdNews". www.adnews.com.au.
  17. ^ "Sarah Ferguson, Nial Fulton and Tony Jones".
  18. ^ Frater, Patrick (4 December 2020). "'Crash Landing' and 'Garden of Evening Mists' Win Asian Academy Creative Awards Gold".
  19. ^ "Bluey wins again – this time Asian Academy Creative Award". Mediaweek. 4 December 2020.
  20. ^ "Ep 11 - Pell – The final verdict". 20 April 2020 – via www.abc.net.au.
  21. ^ "Andrew Bolt and the ABC: Did the reporting on George Pell step over a line? | Margaret Simons". TheGuardian.com. 14 April 2020.
  22. ^ "Pell supporter takes aim at police, ABC after Cardinal acquitted". ABC Radio. 8 April 2020.
  23. ^ "Correction to Greg Craven's column in The Australian". About the ABC.
  24. ^ "ABC to re-edit and restore George Pell episode of Revelation as News Corp goes on attack". TheGuardian.com. 8 April 2020.
  25. ^ "Andrew Bolt and the ABC: did the reporting on George Pell step over a line? | Margaret Simons". the Guardian. 14 April 2020.
  26. ^ a b c Maitland-Newcastle, Catholic Diocese of. "Detailed communication in support of Bishop Bill Wright's open letter to the People of the Diocese". www.mn.catholic.org.au. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  27. ^ Kirkwood, Ian (24 October 2020). "Bishop Wright disciplines Catholic Father Bill Burston but Nash family say it's 'not enough'". Newcastle Herald.
  28. ^ McCarthy, Joanne (24 March 2020). "'Apology isn't enough' says family after priest's shock view of boy's death". Newcastle Herald.
  29. ^ Kelly, Matthew (20 October 2020). "'Most of our friends are dead': Case Study 43 reveals a network of lies and cover-ups inside the church". Newcastle Herald.
  30. ^ "Catholic Diocese of Ballarat". www.ballarat.catholic.org.au. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  31. ^ "Statement by the St John of God Brothers Regarding the ABC Documentary Revelation. The Hospitaller Order of St John of God Oceania Province". Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  32. ^ "St John of God Letter" (PDF). abc.net.au. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  33. ^ "Revelation Statement Cardinal Pell" (PDF). abc.net.au. Retrieved 20 July 2020.