Newsfour June/July

Page 1

June / July 2019

Page 1

June / July 2019

Web: www.newsfour.ie  Email: newsfour@gmail.com  Local newsdesk phone: 01 667 3317 Serving Sandymount, Irishtown, Ringsend, Pearse Street, Docklands, Ballsbridge & Donnybrook

FREE

www.newsfour.ie

DONNYBROOK MAGDALENE LAUNDRY ABOUT TO DISAPPEAR? n Eoin Meegan

O

nly last month Dublin City Council gave the green light for the demolition of the former Magdalene Laundry at the Crescent, Donnybrook, to make way for 44 new apartments. For over 150 years women and girls who committed no crime were incarcerated there, some remaining all their lives, and forced to work long hours without pay. To its shame the State was complicit in this wrongdoing, firstly by failing to protect and look after the welfare of the inmates, as was its duty, and secondly, by availing of the services those same laundries provided. If this building is razed to the ground, one of Dublin’s most important sites of significance will disappear for good, and for a second time the women and girls who lived and worked there will be airbrushed out of history. Action needs to be taken immediately. The Government, or Dublin City Council should step in as a matter of urgency and purchase this building. Why is it here in Ireland we are so eager to lay waste iconic structures of significance that would be protected and preserved in other European cities? Former concentration camps such as Auschwitz and Dachau are preserved as a permanent reminder of the past, so that the passage

of time cannot erode it from the public memory. Do the women who suffered in these Irish institutions deserve less? In many ways the Laundries, Mother and Baby Homes, and Industrial Schools are our Auschwitz. The abuse and suffering of those who went through them cannot be allowed to fade into oblivion. In 2018 a special two-day summit was held in Dublin where Magdalene laundry survivors discussed preservation of the buildings. One laundry survivor said: “Bear in mind, a person who was adopted might

Page 10: Herbalism for Health

want to return to the place where their mother was kept.” Another survivor added: “The State and the nuns should never be allowed forget what happened.” If we allow this cultural vandalism to continue all that will be left of this site will be the chimney stack which is a protected structure, the rest will be lost forever.

Stolen Lives Countless unmarried mothers, victims of domestic abuse, sexual abuse, incest, and even mental illness were consigned to Donnybrook laundry, and

others like it. Upon arrival they were given a new name, or sometimes just a number. All their belongings were taken from them and they were set to work washing clothes, ironing and sewing from eight in the mornings until evening. If they tried to escape, as many did, they were arrested, often on the charge of stealing the institute’s uniform, and swiftly returned. Punishment for any kind of disobedience included forced kneeling, beatings, and shaving of the head. At a conservative estimate 10,000 women and girls went through these institutions since 1922. Considered penitents or ‘fallen women’, they were subjected to verbal and sometimes physical abuse. Survivors recount how they often went to bed hungry and cold, but many say what hit them hardest was being denied any kind of education and the senseless waste of their lives. Due to the ridiculously low rates the laundries were able to tender, many businesses, hotels and hospitals availed of their services. To our national embarrassment so too did State agencies. The Gardaí, Prison

IN THIS ISSUE…

Page 14: Save Our Trees

Page 32: Vienna Housing Model

Services, and the Department of Defence, to name but a few, had their linen washed in Donnybrook. Numbered among its illustrious clients was Áras an Uachtaráin. In fact among the artifacts which survived in the Donnybrook laundry is a basket marked ‘Áras an Uachtaráin’. State inspectors regularly visited these institutions, but only examined the machinery and premises, and did not inquire into the girls’ ages or working conditions. Some girls were there sent by the judicial system, but most ended up there because their families didn’t want them, or were brought in by religious groups such as the Legion of Mary. As was the case in the following story.

Sara’s Story One day in 1954 Sara W. was taken by the Legion of Mary from a B&B where she was then employed to the Donnybrook laundry. She describes the conditions: “The door was locked and the windows used to be up very high, like a small little window … and I used to climb up the top of the bed to look out. I never seen daylight for two years. At nine o’clock every night you were locked into that cell – summer and winter.” She continues. “The only bit of freedom we were allowed to walk up and Continued on page 2

Pages 35: Euro 2020 FAI Update


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Newsfour June/July by News Four - Issuu