Irish police on Guard the garden of remembrance
Odogwuemekaodogwu.com is coming with
such a sad news from Dublin via (AFP) . The news had it that almost 800 babies
and children were buried in a mass grave in Ireland near a home for unmarried
mothers run by nuns.
This was according to new research
Wednesday which throws more light on the Irish Catholic Church's troubled past. The girls who gave birth to the children were ostracized as felon and were forced to give out the babies for adoption, odogwuemekaodogwu.com can report.
Death records suggest 796 children,
from newborns to eight-year-olds, were deposited in a grave near a Catholic-run
home for unmarried mothers during the 35 years it operated from 1925 to 1961.
Historian Catherine Corless, who
made the discovery, says her study of death records for the St Mary's home in
Tuam in County Galway suggests that a former septic tank near the home was a
mass grave.
The septic tank, full to the brim
with bones, was discovered in 1975 by locals when concrete slabs covering the
tank broke up.
Until now, locals believed the bones
mainly stemmed from the Great Irish famine of the 1840s when hundreds of
thousands perished.
St Mary's, run by the Bons Secours
Sisters, was one of several such 'mother and baby' homes in early 20th century
Ireland.
Irish police stand guard outside a
Garden of Remembrance in Dublin, on May 15, 2011 (AFP Photo/)
Thousands of unmarried pregnant
women -- labelled at the time as 'fallen women' -- were sent to the homes to
have their babies.
The women were ostracised by the
conservative-Catholic society and were often forced to hand over their children
for adoption.
Health issues and problems
associated with the homes have long been documented. As far back as 1944, a
government inspection report of the Tuam home described some of the children as
"fragile, pot-bellied and emaciated."
The recently discovered death
records for St Mary's show the 796 children died from malnutrition and
infectious diseases, such as measles and TB.
Conservative Catholic teaching at
the time denied children of unmarried parents baptism and therefore burial in
consecrated lands.
The home was knocked down many years
ago to make way for new houses, but the area around the unmarked mass grave has
been maintained by locals.
A fundraising committee has now been
formed and it is hoped that a memorial will be built with all the names and
ages of the children displayed.
The Archbishop of Tuam Michael Neary
said he would meet leaders of the Bons Secours Sisters to assist with the
memorial.
Meanwhile, Archbishop of Dublin
Diarmuid Martin said that if a public inquiry into the 'mother and baby' homes
in Ireland was not established then a social history project was necessary.
Martin also said he supports
"excavating what may be unmarked graves" at these sites.
A junior government minister has
called for an inquiry to be established and the issue is expected to be
discussed at cabinet.
The development is a yet another
damning disclosure of a Church-run institution in Ireland following almost
countless revelations of abuse and neglect at Catholic-run schools or
institutions in recent decades.
Courtesy AFP
How Catholic Church Buried 800 Babies In Septic Tank At Irish Home For Unmarried Mothers
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Thursday, June 05, 2014
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