Sunday, 13 July 2025

Yet ANOTHER horrific episode uncovered in Catholic Church's appalling history.

 And in the not-very-distant past too. 

Warning: This is utterly heartbreaking. It's angered me and affected me profoundly. If you wish to read on, please prepare yourself to be distressed.


Scene: Tuam in County Galway, on the west coast of Ireland. 

From 1925 to 1961, St Mary's Home was a 'hostel' administered by the Church - the 'Bon Secours Sisters' (translation: Good Help) - for mothers, some of them mere teenage girls, who had given birth out of wedlock - together with their babies. This was, as many will know, an extremely dark time when 'society' considered unmarried mothers and their illegitimate offspring to be the result of the ultimate depravity - the work of Satan himself! (No accusation of guilt directed towards the male 'culprits', of course. They had nothing to do with it!), Perhaps one or more of the girls were raped by a perpetrator who was related to them, maybe even their own father. That doesn't matter. For a girl to 'allow' herself to be raped was still a most grievous mortal sin, any child resulting from such a physical union necessarily having to share that 'guilt'. 

The mothers themselves at this home were constantly treated like dirt by both nuns and staff - and their babies, usually separated from their mothers, some girls never being given the chance of even having seen their offspring, were treated hardly any better. But yet worse was to come. If their health was in trouble, that was too bad. They were the Devil's children! Many, many babies died, some maybe just a few months old - but some lasted long enough to become young girls! But it wasn't the Church's problem. And where were bodies of the little ones 'buried'? In the establishment's back garden - thrown into a sewage tank!!!! Oh my GOD! Pointless to wonder if any departing prayers were said for their innocent souls. The act says it all.

Here is a 'shrine' for them created later - yes, 796 of them, all their little bodies disposed of (i.e. hidden) under the grass. It's absolutely beyond words and imagination!


While it was operating, a total of 3,349 children lived at this 'home'. Some of them are still alive and able to recount their experience, how their stigma was carried into every area of their lives, including of course and prominently, schooling, where they were shunned by other pupils - on their teachers' instructions, naturally.

The old home has itself been long demolished, but work is now proceeding to identify bones now being extracted. Whether this will go far in identifying any of these young victims it's hard to ascertain.

And how did the present Church react? Well nothing too surprising. I suppose we can over time expect the episode to being forgotten, never to be mentioned, certainly not by the Church itself. Only the usual, almost reluctant, mealy-mouthed 'apology' of sorts - together with the inevitable "This can never happen again!" kind of reassurance. Big deal! We all look forward to something to show how much anyone in the Church who knew about this home, most especially those in senior positions (bishops, even maybe cardinals?) were aware of what went on. The present Archbishop of Tuam described the revelations as he being "horrified", "shocked" and a "body-blow". Well, don't that make you feel a lot better?

Meantime, is there any non-religious institution anywhere which, if it had allowed such an establishment as this to run and thrive for decades, to not be closed down forever. I doubt it. But for the Catholic Church - and 'Christianity' in particular - as well as religion in general - just claim that you are pro-'God', and you'll get off practically scot-free - and your 'business' certainly will not be shut down. 

Now 'scuse me while I just go away and vomit! 



10 comments:

  1. The real devil is the church in this tale.
    Such a disgusting story and all in the name of an invisible icon in the sky.
    Sickening.

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    1. Exactly. And they always hold themselves up as 'beacons of morality', acting as if they really believe that they are. The true great tragedy is that so many people fall for it, so big a number that that's where the power and influence lie. Words fail!

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  2. Ray,
    Just another reason I don’t like organized or as I say “man-made” religion So many religious people are hypocrites and don’t follow the teaching of Jesus Christ. It doesn’t let off the other religions like Muslims or many other organized religions. They are so hateful and deadly.
    Ron

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    1. Time and time again it's become quite apparent that religious establishments, or those just administered by such, are the WORST institutions when it comes to morality and ethics, or simply following the teachings of its founder, WHATEVER religion. There's never been
      a more sound argument for wholesale secularisation - though political parties won't ever go there, at least not their leaders. They dare not. Its all about holding onto those damned VOTES that got them elected in the first place!

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  3. Replies
    1. As so often, you've got it exactly right.

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  4. Hopefully the ones making a living hell for the mothers and children, are now buring in hell themselves. Being treated over and over like they treated the poor mothers and children.

    Man. The most dangerous animal on the planet.

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    1. Yup! If only Hell was a reality! And if there WERE a God - possible, though really unlikely IMO - she can in no way be a benevolent one. Much more likely to be one who doesn't give a flying f*ck for her 'creations'.

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  5. Don't get me started on the Catholic church. My mom's family is Irish-Catholic. They of course all went to parochial school. My mom always said the nuns running the schools were the nastiest people on the planet. I can only imagine the self-righteousness cruelty of nuns in these laundries. Have you seen the movie Philomena? It is very touching. I had honestly thought it was fiction but it's based on a woman's experience in one of these homes and having her son taken from her. Judi Dench is in it. Worth the watch.

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    1. Starting at the end, yes I have indeed seen 'Philomena' - and loved it. Judi D. was, I believe, Oscar-nominated for the part. Just as good, though perhaps better known in our own country, was Steve Coogan, often here as comedian at which he's very good, but here playing a rare (for him) serious part of the real-life journalist/investigator. (Coogan also played Stan Laurel in 2018's film, 'Stan & Ollie' covering their final tour in Britain, including a scene made in my very town here which had actually taken place. (John C. Reilly played Oliver). Another very good film which drew plaudits all round.
      But, as you agree, Philomena was and IS a first-rate film.

      Now the Catholic Church and religion. I myself am, I suppose, still nominally R.C., and was devoutly so up to my mid-20s. Both my primary and Grammar (secondary) Schools were run by religious clerics, the former's two most senior were two nuns - the headmistress could be fierce at times, but not really that often. The other, who taught the eldest class of 10-11 year-olds, was lovely, and a brilliant teacher as well as being an effective one. She was also deputy head-mistress. I've no complaints about these two. All the other teachers were regular lay people, though always Catholic. Most were pretty good.
      However, my next school was a Marist (Society of St Mary) College, boys only, most of the teachers being priests - and Irish to boot! Teaching was strict, pupil's conduct ruled regimentally, misconduct always punished, sometimes severely, with a hard leather strap on the palm of the hand (which hurt like hell, believe me), sometimes for the slightest of reasons. Even the giving of a wrong answer in class was sometimes subject to this unnecessarily harsh treatment. About three-quarters of the teachers were priests, the rest lay-people, all but one being male. Half the 15 or so priests were scary, some even tyrannical, with most of the rest so-so, though a couple were really good. I've a lifetime gratitude towards the youngest priest there, perhaps then in his mid-20s, who, in my final year, taught us Eng. Lit. and instilled into me the most profound love of the subject, Shakespeare above all, which has never left me since, now more than 60 years ago! Without him I'd have now been a very different person, and almost certainly a worse one.

      Anyway, all this is rather removed from what we were saying about the Catholic Church's malice in the past and their continued malicious influence to this day. But I do take the points you were making.
      Thanks very much for your contribution to the argument - if there is an argument to be had at all!

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