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If we want our students to be prepared for a life involved with
artificial intelligence, global awareness, cultural understanding,
racial, religious and lifestyle diversity, and changing economic
and political realities, then we have to change what we are doing
in our schools from pre-school to graduate school. We can no longer
wait for large-scale reforms to develop, because those reforms will
only occur due to some kind of tragedy. If schools are going to
reform proactively, educators in each school and in each district
have to lead the way.
If we want our students to be prepared for a life involved with
artificial intelligence, global awareness, cultural understanding,
racial, religious and lifestyle diversity, and changing economic
and political realities, then we have to change what we are doing
in our schools from pre-school to graduate school. We can no longer
wait for large-scale reforms to develop, because those reforms will
only occur due to some kind of tragedy. If schools are going to
reform proactively, educators in each school and in each district
have to lead the way.
Christopher Geraghty was a Roman Catholic Priest, ordained in 1962
and attached to the Sydney Archdiocese for fifteen years. This is
the fascinating story of his struggle to live his life as a priest,
and his difficult journey out of the priesthood. Most revealingly,
it is an insider's account that describes with uncompromising
honesty the secret life of the clergy behind the altar curtain, the
tensions, the hypocrisy and contradictions, and the major conflicts
within the Catholic Church. Throughout his time as a member of the
clergy Christopher faced many challenges that made him constantly
question the life he had chosen. While a Professor at St. Colomba's
College, a student confessed to him that one of Christopher's
seminary colleagues had been preying on him since he was a child.
Christopher did not report it to the rector or the police as it
seemed dishonesty to avoid scandal was the unspoken reaction to
such matters. In another incident an Archbishop offered a promising
young priest who had a fallen in love the opportunity to live a
double life. With the partner looked after but kept secret and
hidden from view. Forced to confront these contradictions, the
paedophilia and other sexually deviant clergy ?misdemeanours?, all
the while battling with extreme loneliness, the temptations created
through the absence of human contact, the confusion and the price
extracted for celibacy, Christopher increasingly found this too
high a price to pay for membership into the clerical club Finally
he escaped to Paris and Germany to study where he met his future
wife. Making the decision to jump ship and leave the priesthood, he
then had to confront the question as to whether to seek a Vatican
dispensation, while searching for employment, and adjusting to an
entirely new life. Interspersed with tales both humorous and
shocking of cardinals, bishops and senior clergy, Dancing with the
Devil is the story of one man who passed through the Roman system
and came out the other side to become a husband, a father and a
Judge of the District Court of NSW. ABOUT CHRISTOPHER GERAGHTY:
Christopher Geraghty is married with two sons, and a retired judge
of the District Court of NSW. Prior to this he spent approximately
ten years as a judge of the Compensation Court of NSW. Before
commencing his career in law, Christopher was a Roman Catholic
priest, ordained in July 1962. He has a doctoral degree in theology
from Sydney and a master's degree from Paris where he lived for two
years. He spent some years in parishes in Sydney; however his
principal work as a priest was to lecture in theology to students
for the priesthood in the Theological Institute of Sydney.
Christopher began his legal studies in early 1977 at the age of
thirty-nine and at the same time, worked as a public relations
officer for the Health Commission of NSW (as it then was), and
later as the legal reporter on Channel 10 Newshour.
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