IS a
51. This lady is
heroes.
delivedrud TH
Begin like this: This gentleman is....
* Select the questions to get the underlined
answers. (03)
52. The minister met the reporter
(A)what did the minister meet? (B) Why did the minister meet the reporters?
who met the reporters? (D) whom did the minister meet?
53. Meena is singing with devotion.
(AJ Who is singing with devotion? (B) How is Meena singing?
(C) What Meena singing?
(D) When is Meena singing?
54. Jatin called his friend at the office?
(A) Who called his friend at the office? (B)Why did Jatin call his friend at the office?
(C) Where did Jatin call his friend? (D) When did Jatin call at the office?
denler
Answers
Answer:
Bbhi soo ja
Explanation:
Abhi soo jaa kal puchna bhai
Answer:
The Scandal of Secrecy
by Andrew Walsh
On January 6, a week before a defrocked Catholic priest was set to be tried for molesting a 10 year-old boy, the Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigative team rolled out a devastating series on clerical sexual abuse of children and the hierarchy’s chronic failure to treat priestly misconduct as criminal. "Since the mid-1990s," the main story’s lede began, "more than 130 people have come forward with horrific childhood tales about how former priest John J. Geoghan allegedly fondled or raped them during a three-decade spree through a half-dozen Greater Boston parishes.
"For decades, within the US Catholic Church, sexual misbehavior by priests was shrouded in secrecy—at every level," the Globe reported. "Abusive priests—Geoghan among them—often instructed traumatized youngsters to say nothing about what had been done to them. Parents who learned of the abuse, often wracked by shame, guilt, and denial, tried to forget what the church had done. The few who complained were invariably urged to keep silent. And pastors and bishops, meanwhile, viewed the abuse as a sin for which priests could repent rather than as a compulsion they might be unable to control."
Thus broke the latest phase of the most sweeping, costly, and damaging religious scandal in the history of the United States, the seemingly endless 15-year cycle of stories about the Catholic Church’s struggle to confront and deal with the sexual abuse of children by its clergy.
In Massachusetts, the public response was extraordinary. "The daily revelations about priests who sexually abuse children seems to be sucking the very air out of this community," the Boston Herald editorialized a few weeks into the scandal.
First Boston, then New England, and then, by late February, many parts of the nation were caught up in a continuing wave of breaking news. At Easter, the story was still unfolding and the newsweeklies were publishing covers with hyperbolic headlines like "Can the Church Save Itself?"
"‘