"These four men seemed to agree with what I had to say about transparency about releasing the records," he said to journalists. Saviano also said Scicluna approached him privately after the meeting to say he "agrees with me completely on what I was asking him to do."
The caveat, however, was what several victims described as an expression of powerlessness on the part of the cardinals and archbishop present, who said, according to the victims, that they agreed with their suggestions, but that they themselves do not have the power to put these ideas into action.
The encounter with victims took place in the Maria Santissima Bambina Institute, a guest house situated on Vatican property just outside St. Peter's Square.
Other victim survivors present included Italian Francesco Zanardi, the founder of Italy's only network of clerical abuse survivors, Spaniard Miguel Angel Hurtado, leader of the organization Infancia Robada ["Stolen Childhood"], and members of the French association, La Parole Libérée, François Devaux and Olivier Savignac.
Also present was Chilean Juan Carlos Cruz, a victim of the notorious abuser Fr. Karadima. He told journalists he is calling on bishops "to do what they have to do for this [meeting] to be successful."
"The bishops cannot continue getting it wrong because as it is, the Church is on borrowed time."
A woman from Jamaica who is a victim of clerical abuse was also present.
The one non-victim to join the meeting with summit organizers was Pedro Salinas. A Peruvian, he is a former member of the lay Catholic organization Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (SCV) and co-author of the book "Half Monks, Half Soldiers."
Saviano noted that the intended purpose of the meeting on the protection of minors is very clear -- educating bishops -- so he hopes action will take place in the follow-up.
The meeting itself is "for those that understand what's going on, to make sure they're all on the same page. And for those that don't understand, to bring them up to speed and let them know that there's going to be expectations that they'll be expected to live up to," he said.
Dispenza, a former religious sister, emphasized that in her opinion, "this is the moment for the Catholic Church; that it's either going to survive or not. And a lot is going to depend on how Pope Francis handles these days and the actions he takes," adding: "So we'll have to see."
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Saviano, who said he's been public with his story of abuse since December 1992, said he thinks there's been progress in the last decades: "I do think [the abuse summit] is a milestone and I hope that I'm not going to be really disappointed six months from now."
"If there was ever a time for transparency, now is it. And maybe, if you do it properly, some of the Catholics who are at this point bailing out of the sinking ship, might reconsider and come back," he stated. "But you have to give concrete signs that you're really coming up with a good plan to address this. And it can't be just talk."
Hannah Brockhaus is Catholic News Agency's senior Rome correspondent. She grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, and has a degree in English from Truman State University in Missouri.