The Roman Catholic Diocese of Joliet in Michigan has come into conflict with a man who wants the words ‘She supported priest rapist victims’ on the grave marker of his mother, Marguerite Ridgeway, above.

Ridgeway was a fervent Catholic until her faith was shaken by revelations of sex abuse within the Catholic Church, and her son , Jack Ruhl, is insistent that the words should appear on the tombstone.

According to this report, Ruhl, of Kalamazoo, Michigan, said his mother closely followed the stories of many abuse victims across the country and in the area, some of whom committed suicide, and she was outraged at cover-ups by Church hierarchy.

Locally, the Diocese of Joliet in 2015 agreed to a settlement of roughly $4 million to 14 men who said priests molested them when they were children decades ago at various suburban churches.

Ruhl recently sent a rendering of the planned marker to the cemetery, along with a $350 cheque to cover the installation fee.

He said in an email to diocese officials:

I ask that you do not dishonor the memory of my mother by further delay in installation of her grave marker.

Maureen Harton, an attorney for the diocese in an October 6 letter proposed removing the word “rapist” and substituting softer language, such as “She supported clergy sex abuse victims,” or “She supported victims of clergy sex abuse.”

The letter described the word “rapist” as:

Graphic, offensive and shocking to the senses.

This is not a subject that we at the Diocese of Joliet shy away from; it is a sad chapter in our history that we think about daily. Our concern must be with the many people who visit Assumption Cemetery with the expectation that their quiet time with their loved ones will be peaceful, tranquil and free of stress and anxiety.

The letter added that Ridgeway signed a contract in 2001 agreeing that a diocese cemetery official must approve all memorials before they can be placed at the grave.

The letter added:

The inscription you have submitted has not been approved; rather, we ask you consider one of the above variations or a similar less graphic version.

But Ruhl is refusing to back down, saying that it’s important to keep the words “priest” and “rapist”.

Ruhl described his mother as an adult convert to Catholicism who used to call the Holy Communion her source of strength. But he said she grew disillusioned as more victims across the country shed light on sex abuse within the church.

Among them was her daughter-in-law Diane Ruhl, Jack Ruhl’s wife, one of several women who filed lawsuits in 2003 alleging sexual abuse by a Jesuit priest decades ago. The priest was a professor at Loyola University and Diane Ruhl was an 18-year-old freshman when, she said, she was abused in the 1970s. She said she ultimately received a settlement from the Jesuit religious order.

Ridgeway was so outraged that she stopped attending Mass and giving donations to the church, her son said.

Ridgeway died July 15, 2015. Despite her break with Catholicism, she did request a Catholic funeral Mass and wanted to be buried at Assumption Cemetery next to the grave of her daughter, her son said.

Cemeteries across the country have been sites of conflict stemming from the fallout of church sex abuse.

A woman from Grand Rapids, Michigan, last year began fighting for the removal of a headstone at the grave of a priest she believes sexually abused her brother, who is buried nearby at the same cemetery. Several years ago, the Catholic Diocese of Duluth in Minnesota included the priest’s name in a list of clergy credibly accused of abuse.

In 2007, the Catholic Diocese of Raleigh in North Carolina had the remains of a priest exhumed and moved to another cemetery a few miles away as part of an abuse settlement. The priest’s original grave was less than 20 feet from where the parents of two abuse victims were buried; the victims said they were too pained by the priest’s tombstone to visit the final resting place of their parents.

Victims elsewhere have also erected markers to promote healing.

In Iowa, a monument was installed at the headquarters of the Catholic Diocese of Davenport in 2005 as part of a $9 million settlement. The marker, shaped like an old-fashioned millstone, included the Biblical quote:

… if anyone causes one of these little ones who trust in me to lose faith, it would be better for that person to be thrown into the sea with a large millstone tied around the neck.

Ruhl said in an email to officials with the Diocese of Joliet: