The report described the children as “emaciated”


More on the mass grave discovered on the site of a Mother and Baby home for “fallen women” in County Galway in Ireland.

Catherine Corless, the local historian and genealogist, remembers the Home Babies well. “They were always segregated to the side of regular classrooms,” Corless tells IrishCentral. “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,” Corless recalls.

They were outcasts. They were shunned. They were treated like dirt. They were treated like dirt by the nuns. So much for the Catholic church’s endless efforts nowadays to present itself as Caring and Compassionate.

In the few surviving black and white photographs taken at the site no child is smiling. Instead they simply frown at the camera, their blank stares suggesting the terrible conditions.

A local health board inspection report from April 1944 recorded 271 children and 61 single mothers in residence, a total of 333 in a building that had a capacity for 243.

The report described the children as “emaciated,” “pot-bellied,” “fragile” with “flesh hanging loosely on limbs.” The report noted that 31 children in the “sun room and balcony” were “poor, emaciated and not thriving.” The effects of long term neglect and malnutrition were observed repeatedly.

Just observed, and recorded. Photographed, written down, and then forgotten.

Children died at The Home at the rate of one a fortnight for almost 40 years, one report claims. Another appears to claim that 300 children died between 1943 and 1946, which would mean two deaths a week in the isolated institution.

In The Home’s 36 years of operation between 1926 and 1961 some locals told the press this week of unforgettable interactions with its emaciated children, who because of their “sinful” origins were considered socially radioactive and treated as such.

One local said: “I remember some of them in class in the Mercy Convent in Tuam – they were treated marginally better than the traveler children. They were known locally as the “Home Babies.” For the most part the children were usually gone by school age – either adopted or dead.”

It was Corless who ripped this particular bandage off, because she went looking.

“First I contacted the Bon Secours sisters at their headquarters in Cork and they replied they no longer had files or information about The Home because they had left Tuam in 1961 and had handed all their records over to the Western Health Board.”

Undaunted, Corless turned to The Western Health Board, who told her there was no general information on the daily running of the place.

“Eventually I had the idea to contact the registry office in Galway. I remembered a law was enacted in 1932 to register every death in the country. My contact said give me a few weeks and I’ll let you know.”

“A week later she got back to me and said do you really want all of these deaths? I said I do. She told me I would be charged for each record. Then she asked me did I realize the enormity of the numbers of deaths there?”

The registrar came back with a list of 796 children. “I could not believe it. I was dumbfounded and deeply upset,” says Corless. “There and then I said this isn’t right. There’s nothing on the ground there to mark the grave, there’s nothing to say it’s a massive children’s graveyard. It’s laid abandoned like that since it was closed in 1961.”

It turned out that was because the babies and children were treated like so much garbage, or like the corpses the Nazis piled up in such numbers. They were just dumped in a hole, and that was that.

The certificates Corless received record each child’s age, name, date – and in some cases – cause of death. “I have the full list 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.”

Corless believes that nothing was said or done to expose the truth because people believed illegitimate children didn’t matter. “That’s what really hurts and moved me to do something,” she explains.

During its years of operation the children of The Home were referred to as “inmates” in the press. It was believed by the clergy that the harsh conditions there were in themselves a form of corrective penance. The state, the church and their families all failed these women, Corless contends.

“Inmates” – because their mothers were unmarried!

“I do blame the Catholic Church,” says Corless. “I blame the families as well but people were afraid of the parish priest. I think they were brainwashed.  I suppose the lesson is not to be hiding things. To face up to reality.

“My fear is that if things aren’t faced now it’s very easy to slide back into this kind of cover-up again. I want the truth out there. If you give people too much power it’s dangerous.”

Living and dying in a culture of shame and silence for decades, the Home Babies’ very existence was considered an affront to Ireland and God.

When all along it was the church that was an affront to Ireland and its people!

It was a different time, some defenders argued this week, omitting to mention that the stigmatizing silence that surrounded The Home was fostered by clerics. Indeed the religious orders were so successful at silencing their critics that for decades even to speak of The Home was to risk contagion.

796 babies and children who died in misery and loneliness.

 

Comments

  1. Bernard Bumner says

    I heard Corless being interviewed by the BBC this morning, recounting how at perhaps six years old (I think) she had copied a girlfriend to play a trick on one of the Home Babies’ – offering a sweetie which was actually just a stone in an empty paper. I think it still grieves her to remember that small act of naive cruelty, but such was the culture to which all of the children were indoctrinated.

    It is amazing to realise that she is still scarred by that small act when so many adults were complicit and still slept soundly.

  2. says

    Yes. That was in this story, too, but I didn’t quote it because I quoted so much else. It pains me. I can see why it still pains her – little shaming wounding cruelties like that bother me horribly too.

  3. says

    I need to find ways to have more to say about things like this. Often just reading about it makes me want to hide somewhere where there are no other people. It’s just so horrible and you feel so small next to it. It makes you wonder about just how many other people around you are similarly callous about people different in ways that should not change their humanity to them at all.

  4. Bernard Bumner says

    Oh yes. Make no mistake, that story like so many of the details brings tears to my eyes. So how could the adults not weep for what they did? How could they run these death houses in the name of morality and of righteousness? How could they pervert innocence? How could they look at into the faces of vulnerable children and see something shameful and dirty and to be punished?

    A suitable hell would have been for those adults to understand for a moment, to have utter clarity and insight into the evil they did. These stories should make every good Catholic turn upon the Church to tear it down and grind it into dust.

  5. Claire Ramsey says

    This makes the church’s representatives sound like a satanic cult. . .

  6. Blanche Quizno says

    It’s not that “people” believed that illegitimate children didn’t matter.

    It was CATHOLICS who believed that illegitimate children didn’t matter.

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