Key points in report on L’Arche International sex abuse scandal involving Jean Vanier
L’Arche International, a non-profit charity that helps people with intellectual disabilities, released a report Monday that identified 25 women who experienced a sexual act or an intimate gesture between 1952 and 2019 involving the group’s founder, Jean Vanier. The report, written by commission of independent French scholars, said the relationships between Vanier, who died in 2019, and the women are “part of a continuum of confusion, control and abuse.”
A previous report made public in February 2020 concluded Vanier had manipulative sexual relationships with at least six women in France between 1975 and 1990 and used his power to take advantage of them. Here are some key findings from Monday’s 868-page report, which was commissioned by L’Arche to better understand the actions of Vanier and Rev. Thomas Philippe, a Catholic priest whom Vanier had called his “spiritual father.”
— From the end of the 1960s to the 2010s, the posture regularly described by the women is that of Vanier on his knees, his head resting on the bare chest of the “accompanied” person.
— Vanier is accused of several touching gestures, “kisses on the mouth each time more intense, more passionate,” and caresses on the erogenous zones of both partners, particularly the female’s breast.