Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Former Arctic priest Eric Dejaeger sentenced to 19 years for sex offences

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2015 11:57 AM

    IQALUIT, Nunavut — A defrocked Arctic priest was sentenced to 19 years in prison for dozens of horrendous sex offences against Inuit children, while his victims received a plea from the sentencing judge.

    "Your anger must be put aside," Justice Robert Kilpatrick told the victims of Eric Dejaeger in his written decision released Wednesday. "Your trust in others must be restored. You must learn to rely on the good around you.

    "Despite what has happened to you, there is still much good in people."

    Dejaeger's acts took place 35 years ago in the remote Nunavut community of Igloolik where he was an Oblate missionary. The details of the 32 convictions are so appalling, Kilpatrick's sentencing judgment comes with a warning of graphic content.

    His crimes, committed between 1978 and 1982, included indecent assault, unlawful confinement, buggery, unlawful sexual intercourse and bestiality.

    The victims include 12 boys, 10 girls and one dog. Most were between the ages of eight and 12, although they could have been as young as four and as old as 18.

    Many testified at trial that Dejaeger, now 67, trapped them into sex by threatening them with hellfire or separation from their families if they told. Sometimes he dangled food in front of hungry children as a lure.

    During victims impact statements, witnesses described permanent mental and physical scars.

    One man said that the smell of moldy wood still takes him back to the mission's boiler room where Dejaeger raped him. A woman told court she blames Dejaeger for the scars that have been diagnosed on her womb. Many spoke of lingering anger and depression and of attempts to flee those feelings through booze and drugs.

    Kilpatrick wrote that such damage calls out for a harsh sentence — especially in a territory where high rates of sexual abuse blight many lives.

    "An exemplary sentence is needed to reflect not only the high moral blameworthiness associated with the crimes, but to denounce and deter sexual offences against children and adolescents in Nunavut," he wrote.

    "Your selfishness has devastated a generation of young Roman Catholic parishioners in Igloolik," he wrote. "For many victims, the commission of your offence has marked the end of living and the beginning of their survival."

    Dejaeger received eight years worth of credit for time served and will spend no more than 11 years in jail for these offences. Although his lawyer told the judge that his client feared dying in prison, Kilpatrick said Corrections Canada is capable of dealing with Dejaeger's health concerns.

    Dejaeger has already served one five-year sentence on 11 counts of assaulting children in Baker Lake, Nunavut.

    In 1995, after he had served that sentence, he learned RCMP were about to charge him with the Igloolik offences and fled to his native Belgium.

    Oblate officials have acknowledged that they knew Dejaeger was about to depart. Dejaeger testified Canadian justice officials told him the easiest thing would be for him to quietly leave.

    For 16 years, he lived in homes maintained by the Oblates despite an international warrant for his arrest. Eventually, journalists revealed he was living in Belgium. He was returned to Canada in 2011.

    He still faces four sex abuse counts in Edmonton.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Prime Minister Harper announces more money for small business

    Prime Minister Harper announces more money for small business
    ST. CATHARINES, Ont. — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the federal government plans to make it a little easier for small business to access certain financing.

    Prime Minister Harper announces more money for small business

    Winnipeg Mayor Breaks Down While Responding To Most Racist City Label

    Winnipeg Mayor Breaks Down While Responding To Most Racist City Label
    Winnipeg's mayor tearfully promised to fight racism after the city was branded Canada's most racist by a national magazine.

    Winnipeg Mayor Breaks Down While Responding To Most Racist City Label

    Vancouver Neighbourhood Shocked By 17 Maples Illegally Chopped In Midnight Hours

    Vancouver Neighbourhood Shocked By 17 Maples Illegally Chopped In Midnight Hours
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver park board official says the board will seek the maximum penalty if police manage to root out the person who chopping down 17 maple trees in a quiet residential neighbourhood.

    Vancouver Neighbourhood Shocked By 17 Maples Illegally Chopped In Midnight Hours

    One year later, Quebec town gathers to remember 32 lives lost and look to future

    One year later, Quebec town gathers to remember 32 lives lost and look to future
    MONTREAL — Asked to describe the last year of his life, Arnaud Cote pauses on the other end of the line, measuring his response.

    One year later, Quebec town gathers to remember 32 lives lost and look to future

    Gates sees Canada as partner in putting women at top of world aid agenda

    Gates sees Canada as partner in putting women at top of world aid agenda
    OTTAWA — Last year, the billionaire philanthropist Melinda Gates and her daughter spent two days living at a family farm in Tanzania with twin 13-year-old siblings, a brother and sister, and their parents.

    Gates sees Canada as partner in putting women at top of world aid agenda

    Baloney Meter: Is the U.S. going to need 'less and less' Canadian oil?

    Baloney Meter: Is the U.S. going to need 'less and less' Canadian oil?
    OTTAWA — "It is a matter of urgent national interest that we move our oil to tidewater because our only customer, the U.S., has found vast amounts of shale oil and gas and will need us less and less. If we do not access new markets, our resources will be stranded and a huge opportunity will be lost." — Finance Minister Joe Oliver.

    Baloney Meter: Is the U.S. going to need 'less and less' Canadian oil?