Thursday, June 05, 2014

The bodies of almost 800 children hidden for decades by the Irish Catholic orphanage. Can you say "pro-life?"

Courtesy of Salon:  

They have no headstones, no coffins. No memory boxes of toys and photographs. There are nearly eight hundred of them – and counting. They are the 796 babies and young children aged between two days and nine years whose grave, “filled to the brim with tiny bones and skulls,” was found last week in an unmarked site that once housed a septic tank near a County Galway home for unwed mothers. 

Local death records show that the children, mostly babies and toddlers, died during the years The Home, run by the Bon Secours Sisters, was in operation — between 1926 and 1961. The causes of death listed include “sicknesses, diseases, deformities and premature births.” A full tally of the bodies has not yet been made, and it’s unknown yet if investigators will find more bodies than the ones whose deaths were recorded. 

The grave was first discovered nearly forty years ago. In 1975, two boys playing in the area first uncovered a broken slab that revealed small skeletons underneath. As the Guardian reports, “a parish priest said prayers at the site, and it was sealed once more, the number of bodies below unknown, their names forgotten.” But more recently, local historian Catherine Corless spearheaded a long overdue investigation into what happened to the bodies of those children. She was inspired in part by her own memories of the children from The Home that she grew up with. “They were always segregated to the side of regular classrooms,” she recently told Irish Central. “By doing this the nuns telegraphed the message that they were different and that we should keep away from them. They didn’t suggest we be nice to them. In fact if you acted up in class some nuns would threaten to seat you next to the Home Babies. That was the message we got in our young years.” When Corless contacted the Galway registry to find out how many children had died there, she said the person at the office asked her, “Do you really want all of these deaths?” It was only then she learned the magnitude of her task. 

The bodies of 796 children left to rot in a hole in the ground by people who are the very definition of "good Christians. "

The same "good Christians" who will aggressively shame a young woman for choosing to terminate her pregnancy, or choose to utilize birth control, claiming that "all life is a gift from God."

And yet hundreds died in their care. And once dead their bodies were tossed aside like unwanted garbage.

I think this next portion of the article sums up my feelings quite adequately.

Remember all of this the next time someone uses the words “dead babies” to talk about reproductive choice. Tell them there’s a place in Ireland full of dead babies. Babies who were born to women who were exiled from their homes, even if they were pregnant as the result of rape. Babies who were not loved, not cared for, not treated with dignity even when they died. Say that they’ll have a hard time finding that place now, but someday, Catherine Corless hopes, it’ll be easier. She has the names of the children who died at The Home, children whose bodies were cast into the grounds near a septic tank. “I have the full list,” she says, “and it’s going up on a plaque for the site, which we’re fundraising for at the moment. We want it to be bronze so that it weathers better. We want to do it in honor of the children who were left there forgotten for all those years. It’s a scandal.”

Yes, yes this exactly. 

21 comments:

  1. I have not yet seen the movie, but the book Philomena by Martin Sixsmith made me weep with pain and frustration. Philomena Lee, an unwed mother who gave birth at an Irish convent, made a prolonged and fruitless attempt to find her son, Anthony.

    He was sold--no other word applies--at age three to a Catholic couple in the U.S., and spent part of his anguished life searching for his mother. Long story, much publicized...

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    1. Anonymous5:38 AM

      I did see the movie. It was a great movie, but very sad. It's well worth seeing. Reading this post immediately brought it to mind.

      Delete
    2. Crystal Sage6:16 AM

      I immediately thought of Philomena when I read this article. The movie explains the treatment of unwed mothers in Ireland. Pro-life? I think not.

      Delete
  2. Anonymous2:52 AM

    How sad, and disgusting at the same time. I wonder how many of these babies were born to nuns? When the list is released, there will be mnny people searching to see if one of their own relatives was one of the victims. These religious organizations are so "full of love and compassion" aren't they?

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  3. Anonymous3:53 AM

    If anybody deserved to go to their Hell, it would be "Christians".

    I am sick to the back teeth of Catholics wiggling out of these sick and evil doings -- when these atrocities continue to come to light -- by saying it's just an isolated, human failing but The One True Faith Is Still Perfect and God is Great Blah Blah Blah --

    It's not isolated, it's endemic. The whole ridiculous business
    -- and I mean that in more ways than one -- of Religion is a crock. Do horrible, inhumane things, confess to a man/pedophile in a dress and Bob's your uncle, you go to Heaven. Give me a break.

    Anybody who believes in this shit is clearly demented. Their shame is letting themselves be brainwashed and then calling those who don't believe immoral!

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    1. Anonymous5:26 AM

      As long as the money keeps flowing, these charletans will keep fleecing people. Want to help a charity - give your time.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous6:16 AM

      The unwed pregnant girls were shamed, while the fathers of the babies were not. Too much shame to go around, yet none for the priests who abused the children. Surely even the church realises that abstinence only does not work? Instead of going backward, why not embrace birth control, save countless babies from being born into unhappy circumstances. One of my sisters had a very difficult birth, after which the doctor said "Well, the easy part is over" She said "Easy??" He replied, "Yes, having them is easy, RAISING them is hard"

      Delete
  4. Anonymous4:22 AM

    Hey, they gave birth. That's all that matters, right?

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  5. Anonymous4:37 AM

    The nuns used the women as laundresses and prevented them from breastfeeding their children, many were sent off to a random lactating female who may or may not have fed them. They died starving to death while the nuns made major bank on the backs of the women whose babies they killed. The ones "lucky" enough to survive and go to school were treated like 4th class slaves, segregated from the other "pure" children of legal parentage and abused in school as well.
    This whole sordid pile of shit did not stop until the 70's, the 1970's. There are people alive to day who remember the children they were classmates of, dog knows how fucked up those kids are.
    No matter what the RCC says or what they do, they can NEVER undo this stain on their mantle of religion. May every single one of the people who ran this or covered it up or let it go on, burn in whatever hell they believe in.
    Who the fuck know how may other places like this one exist... oh wait, the RCC does as they keep as meticulous of records as the Nazi's did.

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    1. Anonymous5:28 AM

      Well, they keep close track of the money, kids not so much.

      Delete
  6. Anonymous4:46 AM

    It will be interesting to see what kind of a spin that Pope Frank will use for this scandal. I can't believe that people continue to support the Catholic Church (or any other church for that matter). There only purpose is to keep fear in the hearts of the masses as a means of control.

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    Replies
    1. Pope Frank is trying to rebrand the Catholic Church -- like a conjurer with classic misdirection. Same evil pedophilia happening, though, probably as I type.

      Delete
  7. Anonymous5:15 AM

    Pope Bill Donohue will soon be on fox saying "Meh, it's only 800 babies, there are MILLIONS of fetuses killed this way every year. Wah wah wah." Difference being of course is that these were fully developed babies w/brains and nervous systems many of whose mothers WANTED THEM and would have KEPT THEM w/some assistance. These were not pre-viable (80% or more) non-nervous-system fetuses.

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  8. ibwilliamsi7:37 AM

    There was an Irish Nun at our school when I was a girl. The woman was intense, to say the least.

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  9. Super Fan In Atlanta7:48 AM

    Thanks for posting this story Uncle Gryphen! No matter how many times I read it, it feels like I'm getting punched in my gut. So heartbreaking...

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  10. Anonymous8:38 AM

    NO kidding. If that state that wants to ban abortion and even birth control, look what will happen to all the unwanted babies. History repeats itself. Today there are many many homeless and homeless "children". I know it stated diseased, deformed, but still, today most will be normal babies.

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  11. Anonymous9:46 AM

    Oh my God, I cannot believe these so called religious people did this to these little children!!!!!! How disgusting. I am sure many were neglected. My daughter's father actually was from an unwed Irish mother who was left in this country in the early sixties. I think she was sent away in shame to have her baby. He died a long time ago, but I guess if she had not been forced to come over here and have him, he may have ended up in one of these Godforsaken places. What is wrong with Catholics and other so called Christians who are so cruel, so judgmental and so awful? I left the church long ago. So much hypocrisy. What a world, what a world as the wicked witch said as she melted. Say, has anyone tried throwing water on Palin? She may melt!

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  12. Anonymous12:45 PM

    I have known about this for a while. I wasn't able to write anything about it as it was so disturbing. Not so much this story about the 800 bodies in the cesspool, but the practice of throwing live and already dead babies into killing fields where they were left to die.

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  13. Anonymous1:38 PM

    I have 6 Catholic cousins. Their mom was catholic and their dad was not. They attended the catholic school here that was taught at that time, by nuns. They were called the bastards by the nuns as they weren't "pure". How loving and kind.

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  14. Anita Winecooler6:34 PM

    There seems to be no end to the evil deeds done in the name of religion, especially the RCC. What "sin" did these dead do to deserve a cesspool for a "grave"? My kids show more respect and reverence for a dead guppy than priests and nuns (who should know better and be "experts" at compassion. It all boils down to taking advantage of the poor and the almighty dollar. Free slave labor from girls who somehow got pregnant while the boys get a free pass. Beyond sickening.
    And the priest who first knew about it had it sealed and said a few prayers? WTF?
    I guarantee this isn't an isolated incident.

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  15. Anonymous7:48 PM

    Gryphen check out these additional links.

    There is no doubt that these Catholic extermination homes were all over. The government reports show they knew it. The public knows about it.

    From today: http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/mother-and-baby-scandal-hidden-in-plain-sight-271157.html

    From yesterday: http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/baby-homes-death-rate-up-to-50-271048.html

    "Child death rates in three mother-and-baby homes that were run by religious orders were as high as 50% during the 1940s.

    According to new research, death rates at homes in Bessborough in Cork, Sean Ross Abbey in Tipperary, and Castlepollard in Westmeath ranged between 30% and 50% between 1930 and 1945.

    The Adoption Rights Alliance say children in mother-and-baby homes often died of “entirely preventable ailments” and, at worst, from “infanticide and/or neglect” as children of unmarried mothers were regarded as “sub-human”.

    The claims follow the discovery of hundreds of children buried in a septic tank at a former home for unmarried mothers in Tuam, Co Galway.

    The Government is under pressure to launch a public inquiry into all deaths of babies, children, and mothers at such homes around the country.

    The data, based on preliminary research from the Adoption Rights Alliance found that the average death rate for children born in Sean Ross Abbey in 1932-37 and 1940-45 was 30.73% (846 births/260 deaths) and 30.72% (882 births/271 deaths), respectively. "




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