Irish Times
6-2-2013
PATSY MCGARRY
Analysis: It was September 17th, 2009, and then
minister for education Batt O’Keeffe was certain. “The Magdalene
laundries were privately owned and operated establishments which did not
come within the responsibility of the State. The State did not refer
individuals to the Magdalene laundries nor was it complicit in referring
individuals to them,” he said. He also pointed out that the laundries
were not subject to State regulation or supervision. Utter bunkum, as we
now know.
O’Keeffe went further. He referred to women who had
been in the laundries as “former employees”. He retracted that,
following a furore. On September 27th, 2009, he wrote to Fianna Fáil
party colleague Tom Kitt, who posed the original September 17th
question.
He deeply regretted “any offence caused by my use of the term ‘employees’ when referring to these women”.
He said: “I fully acknowledge that the word ‘workers’ would have been more appropriate.”
Unpaid workers too, of course but, hey, let’s be grateful for small acknowledgments!
State reluctance
But it did not end there
where this State’s determined reluctance to admit the full truth of its
extensive involvement with the Magdalene laundries was concerned.
In
May 2011, Seán Aylward, then secretary general of the Department of
Justice, spoke to the UN Committee Against Torture in Geneva about the
laundries.
Yet another man of conviction, he assured the committee
that “the vast majority of women who went to these institutions went
there voluntarily or, if they were minors, with the consent of their
parents or guardians”. He knew this because he had “personally” met a
deputation of these women .
He had indeed. On November 4th, 2009,
he and other department officials met a deputation of five women who had
been in Magdalene laundries.
As this reporter established that
day, not one of those five women had entered the laundries voluntarily
or with the consent of parents or guardians.
One of them, Mary
Smyth, told RTÉ Radio One’s This Week programme later how she “cried and
cried” on being committed to the Good Shepherd laundry in Cork by “the
Cruelty man” (from the then National Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children). She recalled how “once that door was locked,
never, never, were you going to get out of there”.
Report’s evidence
Which was a rather odd form of voluntary admission.
We
now know definitively from yesterday’s McAleese report that 83.6 per
cent of women in the laundries had been put there and over a quarter,
26.5 per cent, had been put there by this State. We now know too that
the laundries were subject to State regulation and supervision and were
visited regularly by factories’ inspectors on behalf of the State.
Probation officers and social welfare officers visited regularly too. There was
direct
State funding of the laundries through subventions for women; money for
providing services not available from public authorities; payments for
the support of disabled women, etc, etc, and charitable tax exemptions.
Read all about it elsewhere on these pages.
Uncovered
Yet we are expected to believe the
State knew nothing about any of this until Martin McAleese and his
committee uncovered what has been on State files going back to 1922.
It
knew nothing of it when O’Keeffe spoke in September 2009. It knew
nothing of it when former secretary general Aylward went to Geneva in
May 2011.
Isn’t it remarkable to discover just how much the State can learn in less than two years?
It
is to be reminded of Mark Twain’s recollection of his embarrassment at
his parents’ ignorance when he was 14 and his amazement at 18 to
discover how much they had learned in four years.
Many had a
similar experience on reading the McAleese report yesterday and on
discovering the true extent of State involvement with the laundries
despite its repeated protestations to the contrary.
It was truly amazing.
In his introduction to the report McAleese suggests this tardy
discovery may have been the case “as many State records were neither
readily available nor easily accessible and the record of the religious
congregations were not available for inspection or analysis”.
But if he and his committee could uncover these records, why not others?
Shameless
This
State has behaved shamelessly where these vulnerable, long-suffering,
put-upon women are concerned. At every turn, it has abjured its
responsibility to them.
It is to be hoped that this will soon end
at last and that the Taoiseach’s tepid response to the McAleese report
in the Dáil yesterday is not a prelude to more of the same.
hese women now await the Dáil debate on the McAleese report in two weeks with anxious anticipation.
Their anxiety is warranted, as history has shown again and again.
But it must not be justified ever again.
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