Showing posts with label Brother Maurice Kirk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brother Maurice Kirk. Show all posts

Monday, July 3, 2023

Brother Maurice Kirk and I [Part 3] - The Novitiate Years

 


WORK IN PROGRESS - TO BE COMPLETED!


The following extracts are taken from the booklet 

Brother Maurice Kirk F.S.C. (1928-1974) 

written by 

Brother Lawrence O'Toole F.S.C., the then world-wide head of the De La Salle Brothers, shortly after the death of  Brother Maurice in 1974

 

 

 

FOREWORD

Among the many tributes which were paid to Brother Maurice after his death, one in particular, it seems to me, fitted him very aptly: "He was a man in a hurry. I do not know if he had any premonition that his allotted time was short, but he packed into a few years what many of us would regard as the work of a lifetime. He never seemed to cease and lived at a frenetic pace". The service which Brother Maurice rendered the Province will continue to bear fruit for years to come. One thing alone mattered for him - the promotion of God's kingdom. This was his driving force in his direction of the Province, in his work for education and in his dealings with others. Everything else took second place.  And how he worked for that end! Innumerable hours of discussion and consultation, long tiring journeys for meetings and late hours at his desk were all accepted with a cheerful smile. He was a most selfless man.  But while his great service to Christian education will long be remembered, those who knew him really well will remember him especially as a religious of deep Christian faith. Whether as confreres or friends we thank God for the example of his life. This booklet will serve to keep his memory fresh.

 

- Brother Columba, f.s.c., Provincial.



DIRECTOR OF NOVICES:

On his return from the Second Novitiate Br. Maurice found himself appointed sub-Director of the novitiate in Castletown. Two years later [in 1965] he assumed the succession on the retirement of Brother Oswin and was Director of Novices for three years. As was to be expected he took his onerous position very seriously. The old Rule of Government was still in force and its twenty-five pages of minute instructions on the role, the importance and the duties of the master of novices left nothing to caprice or whim. When St. de La Salle decided that, if the apostolate of the Christian education of the children of the poor and the working-class was to have any permanence, the schoolmasters should become a religious congregation, he would have no half-measures, but planked down his new foundation in the full mid--stream of monastic tradition, with all the customary trappings  of religious life. The Common Rules and the Meditations for Sundays and Festivals leave no doubt as to the seriousness with which the Founder treated the religious character of his Brothers. Thus, in his meditation for the feast of St.  Peter Celestine he says “Though you are required by Almighty God to devote your attention to exterior things, and you can find therein the means of sanctifying yourself, you must be careful not to lose the desire and love of retirement. So arrange things, therefore, that when you are no longer required outside, you may retire at once to your community, as to your chosen dwelling, and find your consolation in the assiduous performance of your spiritual exercises." And for the feast of St. Paulinus he tells the Brothers "You, too have renounced exteriorly the world and all that men most prize. Make sure that this renunciation is also interior and leads you to complete detachment." And for the Feast of St. Benedict "By the Holy Rule and his own well-regulated and saintly life he drew a great many souls to God by separating them from the world and from conversation with seculars in order that they might converse with God alone. This, indeed, is one of the greatest benefits we can enjoy in this world and the most effectual means by which we can give ourselves to God.  The  greater your  regularity, the closer you will approach the perfection of your state and the less you converse with men, the more will .  communicate Himself to you."

Some ten years ago it became the fashion to blame St. John Baptist de La Salle [1651 - 1719] for imposing the monastic pattern on his Institute of schoolteachers; good Catholic schoolmasters is what they were intended to be, not monks. It was even hinted that the imposition of the religious character on the first Brothers was little more than a trick on the part of the founder, to ensure that they would stay on the job and work without pay! But for three hundred years the Brothers have always thought of themselves as primarily religious, "monks" even. The whole framework of their life was monastic and the main purpose of the novitiate was to train the young aspirants in all the traditional disciplines of the religious life: prayer, asceticism, silence, recollection, the following of Christ. Into this pattern the apostolate of the schoolroom was incorporated and indeed so impregnated was the activity in the classroom with prayer, pauses to recall the presence of God, reflections and instructions on the Christian life, that it reinforced rather than hindered the distinctly religious life of the Brothers.

It was against this traditional background that Br. Maurice saw his function as Director of Novices. "The ideal he set before us" says one of his novices "was based very much on the old Rule. He expected us to live up to the spirit and letter of that Rule. In his conferences he outlined, explained and discussed the vocation of the De La Salle Brother. His own standards were high and he showed the way.  He was always available,  always  conscious of his responsibilities,  always  there to help. He treated us as individuals, knew each one of us, our weaknesses and our good points. He never demanded confessions or manifestations of conscience; one was always free to express or withhold one's private thoughts and feelings, but he always listened when one confided in him.

"He was hard to make out at times. There seemed to be two sides to him. To some he seemed severe, demanding, annoying. Yet he swam with us in the Nore, played soccer with us on the 'new pitch' and hurling and Gaelic football in the High Field. He could laugh, joke, enjoy music or a good book. He brought the novices to Dublin to see the film ‘The Sound of Music', something unheard of in those days! For my part I liked him and felt close to him".

Others of his novices concur with the views expressed above. He was, they say, very serious and gave the impression of an austere and perfect religious, a model in every way. His habitual attitude inspired respect but not everybody was attracted by it. He insisted on an exact observance of the Rule, even in minutiae, - not crossing one's feet, custody of the eyes, silence, proper decorum, and in his conferences he frequently castigated and carelessness or laissez-aller in these matters. It was while he was in charge of the novitiate that the momentous Chapter of 1966 scrapped the Holy Founder's Rule and substituted one that was considered more relevant to actual conditions today. Brother Maurice accepted loyally the decisions of the General Chapter, but pointed out that in the interpretation of the new Rule the centuries old traditions of the Institute had to be taken into account and that there had to be some continuity between the old and the new.

He was strong on 'professionalism', insisting that both as religious and Christian educators, the Brothers had to be at the top of their profession and that fourth of fifth-rate performance was not good enough. One felt this professional conscience in his own dedicated approach to his work. He was never slovenly, never gave the impression of making up as he went along or playing merely 'by ear; all instructions were carefully prepared. He insisted on clear elocution and intelligent reading. Manual labour had to be done thoroughly and intelligently. The novitiate grounds and flower-garden were 'kept in such a way that the novices could always be proud to show them off.

After Brother Oswin, phlegmatic in character, unflappable and unexcitable, Br. Maurice sometimes gave the impression of tenseness. He was definitely a perfectionist and suffered accordingly from any form of slipshodness or slovenliness. This did not make life easy for the easy-going and inevitably there was some grumbling.

In his conferences Br. Maurice was uncompromising but in reddition he was prepared to make the necessary allowances in the application of general principles to individual cases. He was very kind and understanding in these intimate talks with his novices.

When the Director perceived that a novice was not responding to the opportunities and graces of the novitiate, he prayed, considered and studied the situation and then came to  a  firm  decision.  He declared that he never regretted the dismissal of a novice since it was never something precipitate but the fruit of prayer and reflection.

Br. Maurice attached great importance to a thorough grounding in Christian Doctrine, not to say 'theology'. Every morning, both as Sub-Director and as Director, he gave a lesson on the subjects a lesson that was always thoroughly prepared. Then he would divide the novices into groups to discuss a particular aspect of the subject being treated and very now and again the fruits of these discussions were edited, polycopied and sent round to the communities. When the Council documents began to appear, each novice was given copies of them and was asked to make a particular study of one or other of them.

On free days and holidays no one could be more cheerful than the Director of Novices. At Christmas time the novices were given two weeks ‘vacation’, during which duties were reduced to a minimum and there was plenty of time for recreation and healthy relaxation. Picnic days were really enjoyable and on these occasions the novices were permitted to wander where they pleased. He particularly loved the traditional outing to Glandine, 'the mountains', and never failed to climb Arderin. On one such outing, when, like the novices he was in his shirt-sleeves, a novice, mistaking him for one of his chums, playfully tweaked his braces, only to find that it was no novice, but the Director himself, who turned round with a look that said very clearly "We are not amused!"

For the postulants Br. Maurice showed special consideration. He eased them gradually into the full novitiate programme. Every afternoon they were allowed to play a game and they were given extra time for recreation. A special series of instructions prepared them for the reception of the habit and novitiate proper.

The testimony of Br. Maurice's sub-Director during those years can fittingly close these considerations on him as Master of Novices. "When Br. Maurice became Director of the Novitiate in 1965”, he writes "I took his place as sub-Director. He took his work very seriously and tolerated no nonsense. Like so many people from North of the Boyne he was straight in his dealings with people and expected them to Act in like manner. His view was that a good, solid formation during the novitiate was essential for a novice's future life. He spent any free time he could dispose of preparing his conferences or reading up-to-date spiritual books and magazines.  He purchased for the novitiate libraries quite a number of modern spiritual books.

"He was very kind and considerate towards the Brothers of the novitiate staff as indeed also towards the novices. If a novice seemed to be off colour, he would be told to go to the refectory at eleven o'clock where he would find a jug of milk from which to drink. He believed a lot in games as a means of keeping young people fit."

PROVINCIAL VISITOR: [Head of Irish Province]

In 1968 Brother Maurice found himself suddenly lifted from the pleasant if arduous environment of the novitiate in Castletown and faced with a formidable responsibility through his election by the District Chapter as Provincial Visitor, to succeed Br.  Aloysius, the Brother who had brought him to Castletown in 1942. It was the first time the District was allowed, following the decisions of the General Chapter of 1966, to choose its Visitor. Br. Maurice's election was an extraordinary sign of confidence. At the age of forty he represented, it is true, the younger element of the Province, but considering how comparatively short a time he had spent in communities in Ireland, and the fact that he had never been a Director in an ordinary community, his election came as a surprise to many. His predecessor as Provincial had filled that office for a record twenty-one years and had built up a District that was amongst the most prosperous in the Institute, with over five hundred Brothers and forty-seven communities. The succession was made all the more difficult by reason of the particular circumstances of the moment of time in which Br. Maurice assumed office.

Br. Maurice took the government of the District in hand at a time of profound change and even disarray.  For multiple reasons the period since the end of the Second Vatican Council has been one of almost catastrophic decline in religious congregations all over the world. In the heady euphoria of liberation that followed the Council and the General Chapters of the various religious orders subsequent to it, there was a general tendency to throw out the baby with the bath-water and the ‘Fais-ce que veux’ of Rabelais’s abbey of Theleme became the general slogan. The results were disastrous: massive defections, the drying up of vocations and a loss of a sense of direction.

Ireland, it is true, reacted more slowly to the Conciliar emancipation than most other countries and the Irish District of the De La Salle Brothers escaped in the Main the polarisations that occurred in so many other provinces of the Institute. Nevertheless, the uncertainty of the whole situation, the universal questioning of so many traditionally accepted truths and practices, the disarray of the Church at large and   permissiveness and moral latitudinarianism characteristic of our time, led to numerous defections and to an alarming falling off in the numbers of vocations to the Brotherhood. The relevance of the Brother's vocation was increasingly called into question; even Brothers long in the Institute suffered an ‘identity crisis'.  All this presented the new Visitor with a formidable challenge. For the first year of his 'reign' he had at least the experience and wisdom of the Auxiliary Visitor, Br. Oliver, to fall back on, but with the sudden death of the latter on October 4, 1969, he was left entirely on his own, at least until a successor to Br. Oliver was eventually chosen. Moreover, in addition to the problems concerning religious life he had to cope with new trends in education and startling new initiatives on the part of the Department of Education, out to rationalise and modernise a rather chaotic school situation. Quite quickly he got caught up in a battle with the Department, not only in defence of his own De La Salle schools, but all the schools run by religious congregations. In 1971 he was chosen as spokesman on educational matters by the educational sub-committee of the Commission of Major Religious Superiors of Ireland. He spoke particularly for the many convent schools, not all well qualified to deal with new demands and novel situations. In his last couple of years as Provincial the constant vigilance called for by the situation and the frequent confrontations with the Department, took up so much of his time that his specific duties as Visitor of his own congregation, in the opinion of many Brothers, suffered somewhat.

BROTHER MAURICE IN HIS OWN WORDS

In the retreat of 1972 he begins by noting that our District, like all the other Provinces of the Institute and indeed all the Religious Orders in the church, is in the throes of an agonising reappraisal of what the religious life means to-day and in a crisis of faith in the Church in general and the Institute in particular.

"In a world of vast change and upheaval" he says "there must be in religious life also change, experimentation, mistakes, anxiety, fear and doubt, misunderstanding, speculation, as we strive to adapt our life and our apostolate to the times, we live in. "But", he adds "We must understand and accept the basic principles of our religious life.  Amidst all the flux and change are some unalterables which we disregard to our own cost and that of religion. We need to ask ourselves not so much 'What is the religious life?'  but  'Where  is  the  religious life?'. Religious life is a gift of God to His Church, calling individuals to a state of life which witnesses to the Church, and so to the world, the powers of the Kingdom of Christ that are already at work in the world and that challenge every Christian from the moment of baptism". For religious orders and the Church, he says "The great problem of the present time is perhaps less one of relevance as of a closely related problem:  identity.  To survive, the Church must make itself relevant to the world without losing its identity and without abandoning its stance of prophecy. Christians who begin by seeing secular involvement as the true meaning of their Christianity often end by finding their religion irrelevant.  If the Church does not represent something unique it has no justification for existing."

 He then goes on to consider what makes the religious life a special or particular way of living the Christian life and sees it as (1) The special public setting apart or consecration of the person with a view to seeking God (St. Benedict) (2) a special following of Christ and a special share in the sacrificial life of Christ; (3) the power, the freedom of action that results from celibacy; (4) a special insertion into the Christian community, into the Church, in and for the Church (here he stresses the importance of community, especially of the praying community). (5) A special kind of service to be a sign of the reality of God and the credibility of the Church (6) An eschatological sign: the future life projected into the present time.

From here he goes on to consider the basic constituents of the religious life as encapsulated in three vows; Celibacy (non-sensual, non-exclusive love) Poverty (non-possessive sharing of goods) Obedience (God's will all in all). It is faith that gives meaning to the religious life for it would be inexplicable if God did not exist. In this connection consecrated chastity is the most striking witness to God in a world of sensual permissiveness. Poverty is also a witness to the Kingdom of Christ but in order to be this there must be a reality about it. "Our District" he says "has yet to take this truth to heart. God does not abandon us; we desert Him, alienate ourselves, shut Him out. We profess poverty, then we must live poverty, live poor lives, consciously and deliberately, make personal and community decisions in favour of a poor life. This means sacrifice and death and our District has to die, now, by free choice, before it can take on new life (of parable of the grain of wheat). Such personal, community and District poverty will be the surest sign of faith and vitality. Decisions must therefore be generous, willing and radical and extended to every corner of our lives"

The Brothers' specialised apostolate, the Christian education of youth, naturally- comes up for consideration in the course of the retreat. In this connection he asks a series of questions 'What is it that made and makes our schools distinctive, unique? How does that fit in with present mood and educational planning? What are we fighting for? Are we still living in the past, with its security, its predictability and its assurance? What kind of service Midst we provide?' He then points out that as. a District we have to face the present actuality and think, plan and work together so as to make the necessary readjustments. He lays down the principles that must govern our thinking and planning in the field of education (a) the primacy of the spiritual over the secular. - First things first - the eternal truths which we live and which we preach for the sake of the Kingdom (b) The primacy of the sacrificial over the aggressive, the rebellious; (c) the primacy of the apostolate over social involvement or the promotion of humanitarian reform.

A subject that preoccupied Br. Maurice considerably was that of prayer. He read widely on this topic. He mentions a number of authors:  Father Basset, Archbishop Bloom, Fr. John Sheet, Fr. Six, Von Balthasar, J.B. Metz. Prayer, he says, must be based on and spring from faith. He castigates those who “measure their  service,  have  a parsimonious and niggardly approach, whose only ambition is to get by and never come to realise what life and prayer are all about". On the other hand, he praises those "who open themselves up to God, realise their true position, their need, and go to God for help, in season and out, at the times prescribed by the Rule and in between, when reading and walking and travelling". We speak" he says "of witness, of relevance, of service, but it is impossible for us religious to begin to realise the meaning of these words, to begin to plumb their depths, to come to understand the world and the needs and expectations and hopes of people, unless we steep ourselves daily in prayer."

Referring to the phenomenal success of Michel Quoist's "Prayer of Life" he insists that "real prayer arises and grows from real living; otherwise we merely go through the gestures. Prayer is for and about life and will involve us in events, in people and their emotions, doubts and anxieties. Prayer should become spontaneous, appropriate, sincere, humble, constructive, direct, simple." "The type of religious I want to become" he continues "is the one that is deeply religious, wise, experienced, prudent and patient, and this is impossible without prayer, regular, sincere and open-minded".

In this connection of prayer he laments also that "in our communities there is too much evidence that change and renewal have not resulted in greater intimacy and friendship with Christ, if we are to judge from appearances: Gone in many cases, are visits to the Blessed Sacrament, Stations of the Cross, Rosary, Monthly Retreats."






The Brothers have to live in community, and it is as a community, primarily, that they exercise an influence in a school. The importance of the "community" as a cell of the Mystical Body, as the Mystical Body in microcosm, as providing the individual with the opportunity of seeing Christ in others and being Christ to others, is a topic that is' greatly stressed in our time, and Br. Maurice deals at length with it. Community, he says, has always been important. So much depended for us as young Brothers on the particular community we were assigned to, on the people we met there, on the attitude that obtained in it, on how we were treated. He defines a community as "a group of people, living together in charity, in response to an inspiration of the Holy Spirit, in faith, for a specific goal." A community, he says, is not a static thing, formed once for all "it must be created and worked for, and for a multitude of reasons it is not easily achieved or easily maintained. A person becomes a real member of the Order through deep inter-personal relationships in community. Each member communicates the special sacrament of Christ's presence, which is in himself, and shares in the sacrament of the others".

He appeals then for maturity, corporate responsibility, mutual support and understanding, self-sacrificing decisions, availability, in the Brothers' community relations. He points out that the post-Conciliar and post-Chapter gener



Looming large in the preoccupations of the members of the convention was the “crisis of identity". Had the Brothers' vocation become irrelevant? Was there any real need any longer for the Institute? What was a Brother doing, anyhow, that a good Catholic lay-master could not do equally well, if not better? The different language groups attempted to grapple with this problem, and we find the echoes of the debates in the pages of Br. Maurice's diary. "Why be a Brother"?  he asks on one page and replies summarily:

(a)  Ours is a unique way of living the Christian life;

(b) The world needs God and dedicated persons to show them God

(c) The Brothers' community forms community in the school,

(d)  He has a special mission to the poor.

The debates at the convention ranged over many topics - community, authority, prayer, recruitment, formation, missions, finance. There was even a discussion as to whether the Brothers Assistants should travel round the Institute in teams.  This proposition was rejected on various scores, among others that they would be regarded as a "travelling circus".!

A number of Br. Maurice's "personal" applications are interesting as showing his desire to improve his own performance as Visitor and raise the standards of his District. Thus on community prayers "Perhaps we could make an attempt to vary our community prayers, to introduce more meaning into them, to make them living prayers for the Brothers. Dialogue together is necessary to get us to think better on the subject. The effect this would have on the community. Perhaps some samples carefully prepared and distributed would help introduce the idea."

On the canonical visits “Visiting the communities, especially on the official visit, to be prepared to open up any and every question for discussion with the Brothers. To call as often as possible and to have the subjects prepared - read them up, have notes taken, to be familiar with them.. .





THE END:

The funeral in Castletown on Holy Saturday [1974] was a massive demonstration  of  the  high  place  Br.  Maurice had attained in public opinion and of the deep sympathy for the Order that his tragic end inspired.

"Brother Maurice" writes a Brother "was taken from us just when he was coming to the summit of his powers, when he was, perhaps, beginning to see a glimmer of light from the end of the tunnel, when he was beginning to apprehend the shape of things to come and to be able to offer us the vision and the inspiration that would enable us to emerge from our present impasse and discover what God wants from us in the future. His sudden and tragic death at this critical juncture was indeed a heavy loss to the Irish District and we hope that from a better world he is still concerned for us, still helping us along the road."


 


Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Proposed Restorative (Redress) Scheme for Former Residents of Mother and Baby Homes

 

Minister for Children, Roderic O'Gorman

Minister for Children, Roderic O'Gorman

OAK Consulting
c/o Department of Children, Equality and Youth
Block 1, Miesian Plaza
50-58 Baggot St Lower
Dublin 2

With reference to the "Restorative Recognition Scheme" I note that "Submissions are being invited from former residents, their families, advocacy and representative groups and other interested parties." I am definitely an "interested party". I was a De La Salle Brother from 1966 to 1969 and details of my background are in the article "The Reason Why: Brother Maurice Kirk and I" on my Blog IrishSalem.Blogspot.com. I believe that nearly every one of my former colleagues who worked in an Industrial School or similar institution was accused of child abuse and if I had done so myself, I'm sure I would have been accused also. Hate Speech from the media plus the almost evidence-free payouts from the previous Redress Board, encouraged people to lie. I am therefore concerned that there is going to be a repetition of the previous fiasco.

(A) Richard Webster regarding our previous Redress Scheme

I corresponded for years with the late UK cultural historian Richard Webster on the issue of false allegations and the Irish Redress Board. I gave him the material regarding Ireland that he included in his book "The Secret of Bryn Estyn - The Making of a Modern Witch Hunt" - a work that mainly concerns a child abuse panic in North Wales but also material on similar bouts of hysteria in other countries. (His book is mainly about lying attacks on secular child care personnel but he sees the link with similar attacks on the Catholic Church).  He published the Irish material separately on his website in an essay "States of Fear, the Redress Board and Ireland's Folly". Unfortunately Richard Webster died in 2011 aged only 60. His friends maintained the website RichardWebster.net until recently but it's no longer available (although his Blog is). Fortunately I copied the text onto my old website and I have linked to that. 

The data regarding Ireland in the book mainly concerns the allegations made by Pat Rabbitte, and the late Christine Buckely and Mary Raftery.

I also gave Richard the material concerning the Redress Board on which he based his essay "The Christmas Spirit in Ireland" dated 24 December 2005. Again I copied it onto my old website IrishSalem.com My contribution to that essay mainly consisted of the the statistics and the quote with which Richard ended it: 
With the standard of proof dangerously close to zero it is clearly, for the moment at least, almost impossible to be refused compensation. As the former bank robber James Gantley put it a year ago, the Redress Board is 'The Good Ship Lollipop, lots of dosh for everyone'.

The Secret of Bryn Estyn was published at the beginning of 2005 but was 9 years in the making.  In the book  Richard wrote that: 

Once again it must immediately be acknowledged that some of the allegations which have been made against Roman Catholic priests – possibly the majority of the early ones – are genuine. Others, including a number based on bizarre recovered memories, are quite evidently false.

But in the later essay he said: 

But it is also likely to be the case that a very large number of the claims received [by the Redress Board], perhaps as many as 90%, would prove, if it were possible to investigate them fully, entirely false. If that is indeed the case then the Irish government has committed a protracted act of folly on a scale unprecedented in the entire history of sexual abuse compensation schemes. [my emphasis]

 I hope that I contributed to his change of emphasis! 

(B) My Testimony to the Ryan Commission re False Allegations

I gave evidence to the Ryan Commission on my own behalf and as a member of the group "Let Our Voices Emerge" that represented victims of false allegations. I had a letter in the Irish Examiner on 7 November 2011 "Ryan Report Did Not Deal with False Allegations"
that summarizes our experience. 

My own testimony concerned false allegations of child murder - mainly targeting the Christian Brothers but also against the Sisters of Mercy. An updated version of my testimony is contained in my article "Blood Libel in Ireland - directed against Catholics not Jews"  The same kind of allegations have been made against the Bon Secours Sisters in Tuam (and Good Shepherd nuns etc) - except they are supposed to have starved children to death rather than beaten them to death!

In that connection, I also contributed to Hermann Kelly's 2007 book "Kathy's Real Story: A Culture of False Allegations Exposed" which deals mainly with fake abuse "survivor" Kathy O'Beirne but also goes into the culture of hysteria that made her own book "Kathy's Story: A Childhood Hell Inside the Magdalen Laundries" into a best-seller in 2005. I contributed to the second part of Mr. Kelly's book and especially to the section he which he discusses claims that the Christian Brothers had been responsible for the deaths of boys in their care. Because many of these claims refer to periods when no boy died of ANY cause(!), I coined the phrase "Murder of the Undead". Since Hermann Kelly is more moderate than I, he uses the subheading "Funerals of the Undead"  in his discussion of this issue! 

(C) History Seminar on Tuam Children's Home etc

This History Seminar was held in Galway on in October 2020 and - apart from myself - it featured Eugene Jordan, recently the President of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society and Brian Nugent ,author of  @Tuam Babies: A Critical look at the Tuam Children's Home Scandal. A major topic was the claim that the Bon Secours and other nuns allowed children to starve to death. These allegations were based on a (deliberate?) misunderstanding of the medical term "Marasmus". (The Final Report of the Commission on Mothers and Baby Homes later confirmed that Marasmus on a Death Certificate did not mean death by wilful neglect.)

In my own lecture, I quoted from a crazy article by Emer O'Kelly in the Sunday Independent on 8 June 2014 "Tuam Babies Cry Not For Justice But For Vengeance" that opens with the following:
Seventy years ago, on the orders of a maniac, little children and babies were herded into barren camps in Germany and occupied Poland by men in black uniforms. They were starved to death in those camps; sometimes they had hideous medical experiments carried out upon them while alive, so hideous the silence of death was probably merciful. And when they died, their little bodies were thrown into huge pits. Because they were scum: Jewish scum.
In the course of the article Emer O'Kelly trice denounces the Good Shepherd Sisters  i.e. the wrong nuns!

Similar thuggish articles appeared in other newspapers (including the Sunday World) and obviously affected former residents. In my "Open Letter to Archbishop Michael Neary regarding Tuam Home" I quoted one of them (regarding the Good Shepherd Home in New Ross in 1964) : 
I saw a baby in a nun’s arms and blood dripping along the floor. I saw another nun standing with a shovel in her hand. I was a 12 year old. I knew they were going out to do something, or dig a hole for that child but nobody would listen to me.
This was published in the Sunday World on 29 June 2014. Earlier that same month Fr Brian D’Arcy had an  article  entitled “Fr Brian: Baby Graves are Our Greatest Crime” that includes the following:
When I first heard the news that more than 800 babies were buried in what was formerly a septic tank I was astonished – because initially I thought it happened in some famine-stricken country today. Then I thought I was hearing about Nazi Germany….
Please note that part C of my article "Deaths of Children in Mother and Baby Care Homes" is entitled "Commission Acknowledges Existence of False Allegations!" and includes the Commission's conclusion that "A number of witnesses gave evidence that was clearly incorrect. This contamination probably occurred because of meetings with other residents and inaccurate media coverage" [my emphasis]

(D) SUMMARY

I had intended to write more but today 31 March 2021 is the deadline for submissions. I may send additional material as an Appendix later tonight. To summarise my concerns I will repeat the above quotation from Richard Webster's 2005 essay "The Christmas Spirit in Ireland":
But it is also likely to be the case that a very large number of the claims received [by the Redress Board], perhaps as many as 90%, would prove, if it were possible to investigate them fully, entirely false. If that is indeed the case then the Irish government has committed a protracted act of folly on a scale unprecedented in the entire history of sexual abuse compensation schemes.

I am concerned to ensure that Minister for Children, Equality and Youth, Roderic O'Gorman does not repeat this "protracted act of folly" !

[ I note that "submissions received will be subject to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act 2014 and may also be published as part of a final report on the Restorative Recognition Scheme." I am publishing my submission on my Blog IrishSalem.blogspot.com . You may find it easier to access the links via the Blog rather than the email! ]

Best wishes

Rory Connor
11 Lohunda Grove
Clonsilla
Dublin 15




Submissions
10:32 PM 
to me

Dear Rory
I wish to acknowledge receipt of your written submission which we will take into consideration when compiling our report.

With my thanks and kind regards
Mary Lou

Dear Mary Lou
Thanks a lot. Before clock strikes midnight I'm sending you links to two articles I wrote regarding Richard Webster after his death (Appendix 1) and a link to his Blog that is still online (Appendix 2). Both have material on Redress Boards in Nova Scotia and Jersey as well as Ireland

Appendix 1 "In Memory of Richard Webster" - article/obituary on my old website after he died on 23 June 2011 and "Richard Webster, The Idea of Evil and Operation Midland" my Blog article comprising some of our correspondence regarding the Jersey lunacy.


Rory


EPILOGUE:

(i) Associated Press Apology to Bon Secours Sisters
I had intended to add more to my submission but, as usual for me, ran up against a deadline. The main thing omitted is reference to my article "Tuam Babies and Associated Press Apology to Bon Secours Sisters

The Jesuit magazine "America" got the AP to apologise for its worldwide publication of stories that the Catholic Church had refused to baptise the Tuam babies and that it was Church policy to refuse Baptism to the children of unmarried mothers. The AP apology indicated that they had repeated "incorrect Irish news reports"

THIS lie isn't on the same level as the ones about Nazi nuns starving babies to death but it's important because it can be PROVEN false- even half a century or more later. I'm not sure how it started BUT I recall reading reports about "Survivors" claiming that nuns had insulted them and referred to their babies as "Spawn of Satan". I assume that some "Survivors" then progressed from telling stories whose credibility can't be established decades late, to telling lies that can. And Irish media published their lies!  

It's interesting that it was a publication in the USA that got the AP to apologise. I'm sure there are many Americans - ignorant of or prejudiced against the Catholic Church - who would have seen nothing remarkable about this tale. (Just another routine example of Catholic Evil). However is there a single Irish editor - or journalist - who actually believed it? Probably not but there are no Irish MSM editors who are interested in nailing the lie or securing an apology! 

(ii)  "A Redress Board for Jersey"
[Extract from R Webster's article dated 9 June 2008 - no longer online but I quote from it in my article "In Memory of Richard Webster" - see Appendix 1 above]
There have also been a number of other developments. More than a week ago the Jersey Evening Post reported that calls had been made by victims' advocates for Jersey to set up a 'Redress Board'. In practice this would mean that compensation could be awarded to alleged victims without the the need for allegations to be tested in a criminal court. In support of this move Fay Maxted, chief executive of the Survivors' Trust, actually cited the examples provided by compensation schemes set up both in the Republic of Ireland and in Nova Scotia:

"The redress boards set up in Nova Scotia and Ontario in the 1990s, and in Ireland in 2002, have been able to allow victims the opportunity to be heard and recompensed in some way and given communities the opportunity to challenge the silence and secrecy that concealed the abuse in the past."

Today almost exactly the same story appears in the Guardian. What neither the Jersey Evening Post nor the Guardian pointed out was that there is a significant amount of evidence that both in Ireland and Nova Scotia these schemes have in practice functioned almost as a compensation-on-demand scheme for anyone who has made allegations of abuse, whether or not there is any evidence to support these allegations. 

In both cases there have been well-informed claims that the creation of such redress schemes has led to, or intensified, a veritable culture of false allegations. This is the argument put forward by Herman Kelly in the closing sections of his book Kathy's Real Story: A Culture of False Allegations Exposed. The same argument was also implicit in the conclusions of the Canadian judge Fred Kaufman when he was commissioned by the Nova Scotia government to conduct an inquiry into the compensation scheme there.

For my own comment on the workings of the Irish redress board, click here.

If the Jersey parliament were to act on the ill-judged recommendations reported today by the Guardian, they would be committing an act of the grossest kind of folly[My emphasis RC]
(iii) Ireland, Jersey and Myself as Footnote in History!
[ Extract from R Webster's article of 19 April 2008  Flat Earth News and The Jersey Child Abuse Scandal - Part 1 
The idea that residents of children homes were being murdered played little or no part in the Kincora, North Wales and Casa Pia scandals. But such ideas were prominent in the moral panic which overtook the Irish Republic in 1999 after the broadcast on Irish TV of States of Fear, a three-part documentary series about the Irish industrial schools. Amidst the widespread allegations of abuse which were made in the wake of this programme, many children were said to have disappeared or been murdered in schools run by the Christian Brothers. As the tireless campaigner Rory Connor has pointed out, in a comment posted on the Community Care website, ‘these included accusations in a major Sunday newspaper of mass killing (“a Holocaust”) at Letterfrack in Co. Galway.’ However, as Connor notes, ‘Not a single claim has proved to be correct. This is not surprising as several relate to periods when no child died of any cause.’

In Ireland, as in North Wales and Kincora, there can be no doubt that some children were physically or sexually abused in children’s homes. But in all these cases what has happened is that a small nucleus of reality has had woven around it a vast tissue of fantasy and fabrication. Both in Ireland and in North Wales, as in similar scandals in Cheshire, Merseyside, Northumbria (and indeed in Nova Scotia), the evidence indicates that overwhelming majority of allegations associated with such scandals are false. [My emphasis]

 

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Seminar on Tuam Children's Home (Online) - Transferred to Galway


This is a follow up to my article "Archbishop Diarmuid Martin and Cancellation of Seminar on Tuam Children’s Home" The Seminar originally scheduled for Dublin University Church on 30th August was cancelled by Archbishop Martin and eventually held in Galway on 4 October. I had intended to do an article on the subject but www.CatholicArena.com have done so much better than I could. This is a link to their article IRELAND'S MOTHER AND BABY HOMES: THE REAL STORY (After several postponements, Judge Yvonne Murphy is due to present the Report of the Commission on Mother and Baby Homes to Government on 30 October 2020).

At the conference in Galway, three historians (including my amateur self), Brian Nugent, Eugene Jordan and Rory Connor discussed the various inconsistencies in the prevailing public narratives of this period of Irish history. 



Brian Nugent: Did Home Rule equals Rome Rule in Independent Ireland?



SUMMARY: Brian Nugent (author of  @Tuam Babies: A Critical look at the Tuam Children's Home Scandal) spoke on the topic “Did Home Rule equal Rome Rule in Independent Ireland?” He endeavoured to show that the frequently repeated claim of a kind of Catholic dictatorship in Ireland can be shown to be false. Firstly by examining the attitude of the Taoisigh [Prime Ministers] of Ireland in those years, then from the pattern seen in a number of other important institutions, such as the Judiciary, Presidency, and Lord Mayoralties of Dublin, and sectors like healthcare and especially education, and finally by raising the surprising subject of anti-Catholic discrimination in the South of Ireland in those years

W.T. Cosgrove was effectively the first Taoiseach (Prime Minster) of independent Ireland - from 1922 to 1932. He was indeed very religious and a close friend of Frank Duff, the founder of the Legion of Mary. However in a letter to Archbishop Gilmartin of Tuam on 11 March 1931 he wrote (in relation to a dispute about the appointment of a Protestant librarian in Co Mayo):
"As I explained to Your Grace at our interview, to discriminate against any citizen - or to exercise a preference for a citizen - on account of religious belief, would be to conflict with some of the fundamental principles on which this State is founded."

A look at the career of Eamon de Valera (first became Taoiseach in 1932)  throws up three issues which are infrequently brought up: i) his excommunication, along with all the anti-Treaty side, during the Civil War. He and his colleagues didn’t modify their behaviour to accommodate the Bishops admonitions then, so surely that proves  their independence in political matters from the latter? ii) The angry reaction from many important Catholics to the lack of recognition of that religion in his constitution, including to a degree from the Pope and certainly from influential clerics like Fr Edward Cahill S.J. and Fr Denis Fahey C.S.Sp, who campaigned vigorously against his constitution on those grounds for many years. iii) The surprising fact, thrown up by modern research in archives in Dublin and Rome, that de Valera himself seemed to be most responsible for the appointment of Michael Browne to the Bishopric of Galway, and Dr McQuaid to Dublin. The State also influenced the Church as well as the other way around!

Sean Lemass (Taoiseach 1959-66 and de Valera's Deputy since 1932)
Extract from his taped Memoirs:
 "I think there was a political advantage in having a certain anti-clerical tinge.......The only time in my life that I ever got an enormous vote, the highest vote ever accorded to any candidate in a general election was when I was having a full-scale row with the bishop of Galway [Dr Michael Browne in 1944] and this was dominating the political scene and I found this on other occasions too – that having a good row with the bishop is quite a political asset and you do not suffer politically for it because there is an anti-clericalism in the Irish people."

First Four Presidents of Ireland
1. Douglas Hyde (1938 - 45)                     Protestant
2. Sean T. O'Kelly (1945 - 59)                   Catholic
3. Eamon de Valera (1959 - 73)                Catholic
4. Erskine Childers (1973 - 74)                  Protestant 

Lord Mayors of Dublin
Robert Briscoe (1956-57 and 1961-62)    Jewish
Maurice Dockrell (1960-61)                       Protestant

Judiciary
From the biography of Timothy Sullivan, first President of the Irish High Court (1924-36):
"Throughout his tenure Sullivan presided over a high court whose membership of six was equally divided between judges of a nationalist and unionist background."
Examples of non-Catholic judges of the time include:
 T. C. Kingsmill Moore, son of  a Protestant Minister, a Senator 1943-47, he was a High Court judge 1947-51 and on the Supreme Court 1951-66.

James Creed Meredith, President of Dail Supreme Court 1920-22, judge of the High Court 1924-37, on the Supreme Court and for a time President of it, 1937-42.

Gerald Fitzgibbon T.D. 1921-23, judge on the Supreme Court 1924-38.

Healthcare: Some Dublin Hospitals in 1959 (amalgamation was being considered)
The hospitals concerned are Sir Patrick Dun's; Mercers; the National Children's Hospital, Harcourt St; the Meath; Baggot St; Steevens and the Adelaide. With the exception of the Meath, they could all be referred to as Protestant Hospitals, controlled by Protestants and largely staffed by Protestant doctors.

Rotunda Hospital
The Rotunda Hospital, Dublin was founded in 1745 as a Maternity Training Hospital, the first of its kind. It got its first Catholic Master in 1995!

Education (1964 quote from Irish Senator)
"We in Ireland are justly proud of our school system, he continued. Scrupulous care is taken that Catholicism, Protestantism or Atheism are not imposed on any pupil against his will. Any denominational group can, at any time, set up its own school and the corresponding State support is immediately made available on the basis of the number of pupils in attendance"

At Independence in 1921, the new Irish State took over the education system set up by the British in the 19th century without making any major changes. There had been furious controversy between the Bishops and the British Government in regard to the setting up of the National Schools (primary) system and the Queens Colleges (university) system. This was largely settled in the 1870s when the British agreed that all religious denominations in Ireland could build and run their own schools, while the State would pay the salaries of the teachers. The curricula for the Primary Certificate, Intermediate Certificate and University entrance examinations were set by the State but apart from that, the school managers could create their own study programmes for Religion, History  etc. The Catholic Church and all major Protestant Churches established their own schools on that basis. A Jewish Primary School was set up in south Dublin in the 1930s and later a a Jewish Secondary School.

In more modern times Educate Together (or atheist) schools were set up on the same basis from about 1979 and a Muslim school in 1990.

Trinity College
 Ireland's first university established by the British Government in 1592 appointed its first Catholic Provost in 1991. Its reputation as a Protestant/Unionist stronghold was such that until 1970, Catholic students were not  permitted to attend without permission from the Archbishop of Dublin. After 1921 it continued to be subsidised by the State on the same basis as the other universities. Under the terms of the 1937 Constitution, graduates of Trinity College elect three Senators to Seanad Eireann.  

Guinness 
"It (Guinness) had no qualms about selling drink to Catholics but it did everything it could to avoid employing them until the 1960s ...the blatant discrimination continued far longer than it should have(Irish Independent, 17 June 2013)

Bank of Ireland
Founded in 1783, the Bank of Ireland got its first Catholic Chief Executive Officer in 1991.

Irish Times
Founded in 1859, the Irish Times appointed its first Catholic editor in 1986

Brian Nugent stated that it is nonsense to talk about some kind of Catholic dictatorship and Home Rule did NOT equal Rome Rule in Independent Ireland!



Eugene Jordan:'Tuam Children's Home Story & Failure of Modern Irish Historiography'



SUMMARY: Eugene Jordan, recently the President of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, spoke on the question: “The Tuam Children’s Home story, a failure of modern Irish Historiography”. He described a lamentable pattern of how modern Irish historiography – the history of history –  unfairly runs down the Catholic Church, and frequently the good work of Irish people in general in the recent past. He spoke about the inferiority complex that seems very prevalent among Irish people in modern times, and to a degree among modern historians, and  questioned the sometimes intimidatory atmosphere created by feminism over some of these issues.

Regarding the limitations of Historiography in general (and the claim that the Catholic Church is hostile to Science) Eugene presented us with names of famous scientists few members of the public are aware of:
  • Lazzaro Spallanzani: First person to perform In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) in 1786 meaning in the glass as opposed to in utero, in the womb. Pioneer into the study of echo location in bats.        
  • Eugenio Barsanti: Inventor of the first practical internal combustion engine. 
  • Giovanni Castelli: Inventor of the Fax machine       
  • Jean Antoine Nollet: Discovered the osmosis of membranes        
  • Giovanni Battista Venturi: The Venturi Effect is named after him   
  • René Just Haüy: Father of Crystallography
  • Georges Lemaître:  One of the most famous scientists in the world you have never heard of. First person to come up with the Big Bang Theory
All were Catholic priests! .......... So indeed was the anatomist Gabriele Falloppio, for whom the Fallopian Tubes and other anatomical structures are named. So feminists who talk about the female sexual organs are invoking the name of a priest!

Deaths at the Tuam Children's Home have been compared to a "Holocaust" and explicit references have been made to the Nazis. So let's compare the statistics for the 36 year period from 1925 to 1960 inclusive) when the Home was open to a recent 36-year period from 1982 to 2017. 

The number of births between the two 36 year periods is remarkably similar with a figure of close to 2.2 million. Points to note. A mere 12,632 infants (less than one year old) died in the 1982 to 2017 period representing a massive drop from the 145,818 infant deaths in the earlier period. This means that 4,166 babies died on average in Ireland each year in which the Tuam Home was open. That figure has dropped in recent decades to an average of 361 infant deaths per year - or less than one tenth the number. This is in line with the drop in infant mortality that has taken place over the developed world - although the drop in Ireland lagged behind the rest of the world for  a few years due to the continuing economic deprivation.

There were 64,290 illegitimate children born in Ireland between 1925 and 1960 of which 13,431 children died but that figure is dwarfed by the deaths of 132,387 legitimate children, a figure nearly 10 times greater. Nearly all of these infants and children died from birth defects and diseases, which could not be inoculated against and were incurable at the time.

Compare Deaths by Age Groups THEN and NOW. According to a CSO graph (that compared 1916 to the present day), in 1916 slightly over 8,000 children under the age of 5 died in Ireland - compared to a few hundred in 2014. However in 2014 a little over 8,000 people died in the Age Group 75 - 84 i.e. similar to the number of infants in 1916!  Where children are concerned the pattern of deaths has to an extent been reversed in the last century! This can also be seen in the age group 5 to 14 where close to 2,000 children died in 1916 compared to a tiny number in 2014





Eugene stresses the connection between poverty and childhood death rates, that continues to the present day - and not just in the Third World. He quotes a Newsweek headline from May 2015 "Washington's Poorest Infants are Ten Times More Likely to Die Than Richest" He discusses the claim that Catholic nuns (and the Protestant women who ran Bethany Home) allowed  children to starve to death. 

"The primary evidence put forward for abuse and starvation is the appearance of the word Marasmus. Marasmus found on Death Certificates is what is chiefly used to accuse the nuns and the Protestant women of murder. 

Only 14 out of 796 death certificates from the Tuam home record the cause of death as being due to marasmus (10 as the primary cause) with a further 156 recording debility as the primary and contributory cause of death. It would appear that the journalists sensationalising the murder claims could not find the term debility associated with starvation on Wikipedia, even though it was classified alongside marasmus as ‘wasting disease’ thus they missed the opportunity to increase the number of ‘starved to death’ by tenfold!

"Looking at an extract from the Registrar General's Report for 1919, you can see what the medical profession think Marasmus is. It's a developmental and wasting disease and the three of them are there Atrophy, Debility and Marasmus. THIS is significant. Marasmus was also a killer of infants in Maternity Hospitals outside of Mother and Baby Homes. 

"Here is a Certificate with Marasmus on it. It's from the Adelaide Protestant Hospital (now amalgamated with Tallaght Hospital). Here we have evidence of Murder, Slaughter! [3 month  old infant died of Marasmus 25 July 1935]
Here we have Marasmus again. It's at Temple St Children's Hospital - murder taking place there! [10 week old infant died of Marasmus 21 May 1942
Here is another case of Marasmus where the child died at home and death has been certified by a medical professional. A doctor visited the home, certified that a child suffered from Marasmus and subsequently when the child died of Marasmus.[6 months old child, died of Marasmus, 26 November 1942, Ashtown

"Here is the famous Rotunda Hospital. Two cases of Murder there as well! [One infant died on 13 May 1942 aged 15 days and the second on 14 May 1942 aged 7 weeks, both from Marasmus]

"Here is an advertisement entitled "CURE OF MARASMUS: At seven months, she weighed under nine pounds". If Marasmus is Starvation as they are trying to make out, why is there a cure for it? Surely it's food or adequate food? [The Evening Herald, 3 March 1902]

"Here is a newspaper article from 1925 headed Death of Nurse Child. It states that Death from Marasmus was the verdict returned at an inquest held at Sir Patrick Dun’s Hospital on the body of a 9 months old nurse child of Thorncastle St., Ringsend. The coroner said that because of the condition of the child when it was brought to the hospital, the house surgeon was of the opinion that it had died from starvation but the post mortem showed that death was due to natural causes. The child had been under treatment for six months  in the Children’s Hospital, Harcourt St. and did not seem to improve. Dr. Hogan, house surgeon, stated death was due to marasmus, the child not being able to assimilate the nourishment given itThe jury found in accordance with the evidence."

i.e. the child did not die from starvation!



Rory Connor: False Allegations of Child Abuse Against the Catholic Church, including Homicide


SUMMARY: My talk is based on my Blog article "Blood Libel in Ireland - Directed Against Catholics not Jews!".  I had originally intended to make limited reference to the Tuam Home itself BUT I had come to realise that it also included references to the Nazi Holocaust and claims that the Bon Secours Sisters had starved children to death (an issue highlighted by Eugene Jordan in his talk). Accordingly Tuam assumed a higher profile than I first thought necessary. In the above-mentioned article I assumed that Ireland's Blood Libel hysteria had come to an end in 2010 when the Gardai informed the then Minister for Justice that their year long inquiry into the murder of Bernadette Connolly in 1970, had disclosed NO evidence of involvement by the Catholic Church. But of course, anti-clerics - like anti-Semites - are immune to rational considerations and an article by Emer O'Kelly in the Sunday Independent on 8 June 2014 "Tuam Babies Cry Not For Justice But For Vengeance" opens with the following:
Seventy years ago, on the orders of a maniac, little children and babies were herded into barren camps in Germany and occupied Poland by men in black uniforms. They were starved to death in those camps; sometimes they had hideous medical experiments carried out upon them while alive, so hideous the silence of death was probably merciful. And when they died, their little bodies were thrown into huge pits. Because they were scum: Jewish scum.
[I could also have pointed out that Emer O'Kelly twice denounces the Good Shepherd Sisters in her Sunday Independent article  i.e. the wrong nuns!]

I date the start of my present "Crusade" to 25 September 1999 when the Irish Times published an article by Patsy McGarry quoting a leading member of Survivors of Child Abuse Ireland who claimed he had attended the funerals of boys in Artane who died after being punched by a Christian Brother. No boy died of ANY cause while this gentleman was in Artane Industrial School! There were numerous such allegations published and broadcast between about 1997 and 2010. As indicated in "Blood Libel in Ireland" the first and last related to the deaths of real children - reinterpreted to blame the Catholic Church - but in between hysteria reigned in the media and there were a number of articles and broadcasts in which the Christian Brothers were accused of killing non-existent boys. I coined the phrases "Murder of the Undead" and "Victimless Murders" to describe the latter. 

About 2000 and again in 2001, I approached the Gardai (Irish police) about two of these Murder of the Undead claims (by the Irish Times and TV3 respectively) as I felt they must be in breach of the Prevention of Incitement to Hatred Act 1989. The Director of Public Prosecutions declined to prosecute - perhaps on the basis that false allegations of child killing do not PROVE that the media are motivated by hatred!  In 2004 I approached the Irish Human Rights Commission who were no help at all. (One reason they gave me for refusing to look into the issue of false allegations of child murder, was that it wasn't in their Three Year Plan!) However my dealings with the IHRC inspired me to summarise the allegations of child murder against the Catholic Church into one document. The above-mentioned article "Blood Libel in Ireland - directed against Catholics not Jews" is an updated version of that 2004 document.



Tuam Mother and Baby Home: The REAL Story (Brian Nugent)


SUMMARY: The Tuam controversy alleges that babies were buried in a septic tank. This arises from no other source than the coincidence that the area of the current graveyard of the Children's Home, corresponds with old maps referring to a 'cesspool' attached to the old workhouse, as discovered by Catherine Corless. But this can be easily disproved as insignificant, for example:

- the cesspool corresponds to about a quarter of the area of the current graveyard, but that graveyard was condensed drastically around 1980 and was a much bigger area when the nuns were there which therefore makes it unlikely that they buried bodies at that exact spot;

- the large old cesspool, was only an over ground structure where manure was temporarily placed before being sold off to use on farms, therefore it isn't very significant to say that the same area could be used for burials some 100 years later;

- and it can be easily proved that the bones discovered by recent excavations are reburials by the County Council during c.1970-1981, creating a dedicated structure, an Ossuary, to house bones thrown up by their development of the site during that period. This of course is long after the nuns had left.




 A Discussion about Tuam and other topics


SUMMARY: The seminar ended with a discussion among the three speakers. Rory described some of the atmosphere in the Irish religious orders and congregations when these scandals broke. One congregation of nuns went from naivete, in cooperating and apologising enthusiastically with sometimes unfair allegations, to terror, as they realised to what extent it was a witch hunt against the Catholic Church. Hence his blog is called irishsalem.blogspot.com (with reference to the original Salem Witch-hunt).

[I also spoke of my Novice Master in the De La Salle Brothers, Brother Maurice Kirk, a conservative who nonetheless invited the "radical priest" Fr Michael Sweetman SJ to give us our 8-day Retreat at the end of the novitiate - August/September 1967. I suppose I am a relic of that long ago era that might have been a historical Turning Point - but History failed to turn and the world is as it is now!].   

Eugene pointed out that when the Ryan Commission expanded its remit to include physical abuse, rather than just sexual, then any teacher – and maybe parent – of that time could have fallen foul of their criticisms because corporal punishment was widespread everywhere at the time, not  just among the religious orders.

Meanwhile Brian pointed out the too trusting attitude that the modern Irish Church has to the State with respect to these inquiries. The Church overdoes its cooperation with the inquiries expecting justice, whereas some in the State see the advantage in discrediting the Church in the eyes of the populace, to assist in their various referenda campaigns etc

My Conclusion 

An article by Alison O'Reilly in the Irish Daily Mail on 8 April 2017 is headed "We Want Inquests Into All Deaths, Tuam Victims Tell Zappone" and begins
The families of the children buried in a mass grave in Tuam have told the Minister for Children, 'We want an inquest into all the children's death', the Irish Daily Mail can reveal.. It follows a two-hour meeting which took place yesterday between the Minister for Children Katherine Zappone and local Government Minister Simon Coveney as well as Kevin O'Kelly, chief executive of Galway County Council  and survivors of the home as well as relatives....

Those in attendance included local historian Catherine Corless who uncovered the names of the 796 children who died in the home, as well as Tuam resident John Rodgers, PJ Haverty, Walter Francis and and Michael O'Flaherty....During the meeting, Ms Zappone was given a brief submission by solicitor for some of the residents Kevin Higgins. In it he asked that the Government 'act with urgency' and to hold  a proper coroner's inquiry. The submission also said 'the failure of the Attorney General to invoke 24 of the Coroners Act as early as 2014 represented a serious failure of judgement'. It also urged against carrying out inquests into 'unidentified infants', and sought individual post mortems for each body....

Catherine Corless said: 'I am quite pleased, I expected an hour but they gave us a good bit of their time. It was good. They were fairly challenged and everyone got a chance to talk. They need an inquest, there's no point in moving them into a big grave.'.[my emphasis]

Regarding Inquests and Inquest reports, Citizen's Information states that: 

If a person dies and the death cannot be explained, an inquest may be held to establish the facts of the death, such as where and how the death occurred. An inquest is an official, public enquiry, led by the Coroner (and in some cases involving a jury) into the cause of a sudden, unexplained or violent death. An inquest is not usually held if a post-mortem examination of the body can explain the cause of death. [My emphasis]

 So it seems we are back where it all began more than 20 years ago with claims that Catholic nuns - in 1997 it was the Sisters of Mercy - were criminally responsible for the deaths of children in their care. All deaths in the Tuam Home were certified by doctors appointed by Galway County Council so it is clear that the reputations of those doctors are also being trashed!

Perhaps Catholic activists like myself should respond in kind? I noted above that a doctor at the Rotunda Maternity Hospital certified two infant deaths from Marasmus on consecutive days in May 1942. Compare the Tuam Home where doctors certified 14 Marasmus deaths over a period of 36 years (1925-1961)! Moreover the Rotunda, founded in 1745, did not get its first Catholic Master until 1995! Is not this deeply suspicious? Perhaps we should have a series of inquests on all Catholic children who died in the Rotunda from the foundation of the State until 1995. To reduce the size of the task, we could include only cases where the Death Certificate for a Catholic child was signed by a Protestant doctor! The resulting investigation should be of no greater size than holding inquests into the deaths of the 796 children who died in Tuam.


Rory Connor

30 October 2020