*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

Multi-million-pound settlement in Canadian church abuse case

22 September 2023

Anglican Journal/General Synod archives

Ralph Rowe, pictured in 1981, was a fly-in Anglican priest to northern Ontario communities and a Scout leader

Ralph Rowe, pictured in 1981, was a fly-in Anglican priest to northern Ontario communities and a Scout leader

A SETTLEMENT worth millions of pounds in the case of one of Canada’s most prolific sexual abusers has been agreed with the Anglican Church of Canada and Scouts Canada.

A former priest and volunteer with the Scouts, Ralph Rowe, is believed to have abused hundreds of boys in Indigenous communities in Ontario and Manitoba in the 1970s and ’80s.

Rowe has a total of nearly 60 convictions for sexual abuse, but he served less than five years in prison, owing to a plea bargain. Now in his eighties, he lives on Vancouver Island.

The class action against his employers, the Anglican diocese of Keewatin and Scouts Canada, was begun in 2017. The diocese and the Scouts had previously accepted shared liability for their failure to stop his abuse. A proposed settlement was agreed last month, and posted on the website of the law firm representing the survivors, but still needs to be formally agreed by a judge next month.

The settlement document suggests that the payout could reach $13.25 million Canadian dollars (£7.7 million). Each individual survivor could be eligible for up to $350,000, depending on the circumstances of the abuse, the document says.

The agreement also stipulates that the General Synod of the Anglican Church “shall engage in a consultation process with the impacted Indigenous communities and arrive at a mutually acceptable apology process”.

Scouts Canada is also to provide a written apology.

Jonathan Ptak, a partner of Koskie Minsky LLP, which brought the class action, described Rowe as “one of the worst and most prolific abusers in the history of this country.

“His abuse was devastating to Indigenous communities in northern Ontario and eastern Manitoba. If approved, the settlement will provide real compensation to survivors of abuse committed by Rowe through a trauma-informed and sensitive claims process.”

The Toronto Star reported that Rowe was ordained in 1975, and charged with ministering to the remote First Nations communities of northern Ontario. He flew regularly to the area in a private plane, learned the local language, and took groups of boys away camping.

A TV documentary in 2015 suggested that Rowe could have abused as many as 500 boys.

The diocese of Keewatin comprised more than 900,000 square kilometres, and consisted of mostly First Nations communities. It was formally closed in 2015, and its parishes were merged into two other dioceses, but a corporation of four people has been retained to deal with the lawsuit.

A spokesman for the Anglican Church of Canada said that it could not comment, as it was awaiting the final hearing on the settlement on 27 October.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Forthcoming Events

English Mystics Series course

26 January - 25 May 2026

A short course at Sarum College.

tickets available now

 

Springtime for the Church of England: where are we seeing growth?

31 January 2026

Join us at St John's Church, Waterloo to hear a group of experts speak about the Quiet Revival.

tickets available now

 

With All Your Heart: a retreat in preparation for Lent

14 February 2026

Church Times/Canterbury Press online retreat.

tickets available now

 

Merlin’s Isle: A Journey in Words and Music with Malcolm Guite and the St Martin's Voices

17 February 2026

Canterbury Press event at Temple Church, London. The Poet and Priest draws out the Christian bedrock at the heart of the Arthurian stories, revealing their spiritual depth and enduring resonance.

tickets available now

 

Visit our Events page for upcoming and past events

Welcome to the Church Times

To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

Non-subscribers can read up to four free articles a month. (You will need to register.)