The_Banker
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This is getting repetitive. Is it your contention that the nuns had adequate resources to properly feed their cares but purloined those resources for their own gratification?
Yes.
This is getting repetitive. Is it your contention that the nuns had adequate resources to properly feed their cares but purloined those resources for their own gratification?
Yes.
Well that is infanticide, motive self enrichment. You have clearly bought the line that the British Mail is peddling.
We certainly need an enquiry to address that vile accusation. If the enquiry finds that the nuns used the £1 a week to dine on wood pigeon and caviar washed down with fine wines then the State would have a moral right to do a Henry VIII and confiscate all the Church's property. The churches could then be converted into offices for the civil service.
In that context, the average industrial wage at the time of the £1 per child payment was £3. Today's equivallent would be AIW of €803.98 p/w and €268 per child. Also bear in mind that this was a time of overcrowding and essentially slums in housing areas too.
However, based on a dad earning £3 per week and this probably going towards food, clothing and rent for a family of at least 4, there was still an infant mortality rate half that of the Mother and Child homes.
However, the £1 per child isn't the case because the stipend was for the child and mother which worked out to the average industrial wage. They essentially got £1 for the child, but £2 for the mother.
The other context is:
CICA report (Vol iii) lists the cases of physcial, mental and sexual abuse at institutions. It lists evidence of maltreatment.
We have recorded witness testimony of nuns putting pillows over a child's face to stop it from crying (it was hungry). Mothers forced to work in laundries and cleaning while heavily pregnant and immediately after birth. The healthy children being put work which the nuns charged money for.
Mothers and children forced to work for money paid only to the homes despite the stipend being equal to the industrial wage that families had to survive on alone (and appeared to survive better than those in the homes).
Then you have the disposal of babies into an in use septic tank. It was too much to even dig a separate hole for the mass burial.
Taken into the greater context than the burial of babies it is clear that there was abuse (physical, mental and sexual) at these institutions.
It is clear that those homed there were seen as inhumane and lacking the same attention or respect as other humans.
It is clear that on death, this view carried through to how the remains were treated.
Yet we are expected to believe that despite this whole record of abuse and mistreatement, those in charge of the homes did their best on £1 per child and couldn't do anything or any more about the mortality rate?
The weight of evidence is completely against such a conclusion.
Nice one, Sunny, I am trying to avoid defending the indefensible and am certainly no supporter of the suffocating Catholic ethos, but you have expressed it well - we should look for the facts not hysterical caricatures.
Latrade, it is always difficult to compare the domestic economics of quite different periods. Here is a spreadsheet of UK prices of food and other things going back. Given that we tracked the British Pound it is a reasonable indicator of RoI data. I pick out one in particular. The price of a pint of milk increased from 7.3 in 1955 to 35 in 2004. So in the currency of pints of milk (which seems relevant to me) £1 per week in 1955 was the equivalent of £5 per week in 2004. A contemporary commentator described the payment as a "pittance". And this was 1955. What was it like in 1935 in the middle of the economic war? I think arguments that these institutions were money making abuse centres detracts from your case. I hope that an enquiry probes the finances of these institutions. My guess is that not withstanding the indentured labour and the baby exports and the State subsidy they were probably further subsidised from the Sunday collections and the nuns were not wallowing in a life of luxury. I also think that reference to sexual abuse in the context of nuns dealing with infants must be very wide of the mark.
I doubt that any enquiry will find that the nuns were predators seeking out mothers and babies for financial exploitation and sexual gratification.
A more correct interpretation is that society dumped its problem at the hands of the nuns and expected them to get by on a pittance of conscience money.
The economic comparisson was that the nuns recieved the average industrial wage to take care of the mother and child. This is the same average industrial wage that families had to survive on and in many cases in much much worse and deprived conditions.
I reject the argument or supposition that there is any hysterical caricatures in my post. The issue of those housed in the homes working is not disputed in any report. The fact that children were also asked to work is also not disputed. The fact that they worked indentured labour/slavory for money paid to the homes is also not disputed.
I never said they lived in luxury, at least to my recollection, but it is indesputable that they recieved the stipend while making the mother and child work to "pay" for their time there (even though the nuns were paid the stipend for this) and that the stipend was supplimented by the labour.
The reference to all abuse (lets not just isolate sexual abuse) was from the CICA report. However, if you wish remove the finding of sexual abuse and just leave it at physical abuse, mental abuse and maltreatment, then sobeit.
The point being that investigations have shown a specific picture of abuse and cruelty at all institutions. It is natural and not a hysteria to conclude that there was negligence and cruelty that played a part in the high mortality rate.
Sunny, I read the proper story, it seems to imply that there may "only" be 200 bodies in the septic tank. I fail to see how that in any way tempers the utter disrespect to those placed there. Also Catherine's main issue is that she never used the word "dumped". The IT article was 3 pages around her research, how she never actually said "dumped" (does it matter what verb is used for this act?) and all without once mentioning the church.
As to Fintan's comments; why can't we do both? Why can't we judge how these mothers and babies were treated and judge how we treat asylum seakers too?
Former residents at these institutions are still alive and have been judged all their lives. They've been called liars. In some cases those involved in running the institutions are still alive.
I reject the argument that just because it happened to a different generation that we shouldn't judge. I'm not judging through 21st century eyes, I'm judging from a humanitarian's eyes.
This wasn't the dark ages where all involved are dust in the ground, many are still alive today.
It was a different time, but also better that we use any outrage to judge ourselves and our attitudes to any institutionalised abuse. Our treatment of the mentally ill and the stigma attached to mental illness has hardly improved from then.
Catherine Corless isn't the only source on what happened in the Mother and Baby Homes. Many have tried to get heard for years, even when there was acceptance of the abuse at laundries and other institutions, this one area was ignored and stigmatised.
Just because the Mail is leading with it, doesn't mean its all hyperbole. We ignored it and the Irish media ignored it until the point when they couldn't any more. Sometimes it takes this one incident (even one so old) to get full public attention.
And as I said in an earlier post, the same issues are found across the world wherever we had these institutions. I do not accept that it is simply an Irish or an Irish state issue.
Sunny, I read the proper story, it seems to imply that there may "only" be 200 bodies in the septic tank. I fail to see how that in any way tempers the utter disrespect to those placed there. Also Catherine's main issue is that she never used the word "dumped". The IT article was 3 pages around her research, how she never actually said "dumped" (does it matter what verb is used for this act?) and all without once mentioning the church.
You might need to read the article again.
"Between them the boys levered up the slab. “There were skeletons thrown in there. They were all this way and that way. They weren’t wrapped in anything, and there were no coffins,” he says. “But there was no way there were 800 skeletons down that hole. Nothing like that number. I don’t know where the papers got that.” How many skeletons does he believe there were? “About 20.”
and
“Even if a number of children are indeed interred in what was once a sewage tank, horrific as that thought is, there cannot be 796 of them. The public water scheme came to Tuam in 1937. Between 1925, when the home opened, and 1937 the tank remained in use. During that period 204 children died at the home. Corless admits that it now seems impossible to her that more than 200 bodies could have been put in a working sewage tank.”
Latrade
We have come a long way in this thread from OPs comparisons with mass ethnic cleansing to asking why M&C Homes were no better than Dublin slums.
Meanwhile we have been duped by an "anti Irish, fascist" (your words) British newspaper into digging into all aspects of this going back over 80 years, even into comparatively trivial issues about why adoptions did not follow the Queensbury rules.
The nuns welcome the enquiry and I don't think that is tongue in cheek. I think a fair enquiry will properly contextualise all these matters.
Why do you keep dragging in paedo priests? Now that is a whole different ball game for wish there is no contextualisation possible.
Nuns I sense were, by and large, themselves victims of the oppressive culture of the times.
Betsy, that is a dreadful comment not typical of your usually balanced posts. The worst that can be accused, so far as I can see, is malnutrition? Is that the nuns' fault? Do we blame African parents on the malnutrition of their children? Were the nuns living a life of luxury at the expense of the children in their care? If there was malnutrition the fault does not lie with the nuns, it lies with a society that didn't provide for them.
You bet... and unless the story was mis-presented ...
You betAbsolute max is 200 (if every single baby who died over the 20 odd years is involved) but the smart money is little more than 20 and they weren't "dumped in a septic tank". Admit it Betsy, you fell for what Latrade would call a fascist, anti Irish smear.