In 1989, a high-ranking Catholic church official approached J.S. Ayliffe with an unimaginable request: assist in concealing the systematic abuse of children by clergy. That secret lay dormant for a quarter-century, until the 2014 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse pulled back the curtain. Betrayal a Personal Story is an unflinching and deeply personal memoir-investigation of this institution’s failings: the callous denial, the betrayal of trust, the suffering of survivors and the wider cost to community and faith. Ayliffe chronicles his own role, wrestles with conscience, and interweaves the testimonies of survivors such as Chrissie Foster and Ian Lawther, whose lives were forever changed. Yet this is not simply a tale of wrongdoing. It also tracks the Church’s evolving response: amid outrage and crisis, efforts to rebuild integrity, promote transparency and pursue social justice have begun. The book invites readers to wrestle with complex questions of power, faith, redemption and the cost of silence. Ultimately, it offers hope that through honesty and reform, institutions a and individuals a can do better.
