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Dublin: 7 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

This is how the world reacted to the Magdalene Laundries report

There were mixed messages across the world’s newspapers and news websites today.

Image: Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland

JUSTICE FOR MAGDALENES, an advocacy group for survivors, warned yesterday that the State’s involvement in the workhouse system and the Government’s failure to issue a formal apology would make international headlines.

“There is significant international interest. There is international spotlight on Ireland and the news today is that there is absolute irrefutable evidence of State involvement in the Magdalen Laundry system and the State has refused to apologise. And that’s the story that’s going to be out there for the next two weeks, watching to see what the Government does,” said Katherine O’Donnell.

Unfortunately for campaigners, a mixed message was emanated from the world’s media. Some, including Sky News and The Independent mistook Enda Kenny’s words in the Dáil for an apology.

However, this morning the horror stories from survivors became the key focus for most newspapers and websites.

In the US, The New York Times notes the Irish Premier’s apology “fails to appease workhouse survivors” and The Wall Street Journal reported an “Irish apology on workhouses”.

The Washington Post and the Financial Times told Margaret Bullen’s story and spoke with her daughter Samantha Long.

The inscription above the door claims it was a place of refuge. But for Margaret Bullen and thousands like her, the Magdalene laundry on Sean McDermott Street in Dublin’s city center was a prison and a workhouse.

In 1967, a 16-year-old Bullen was sent to the laundry, which was run by nuns, from an industrial school for neglected children. She did not leave until it closed in 1996. She remained institutionalized until she died in 2003 and was buried in a communal grave.

Al Jazeera’s video report says the report reveals the State was “working in tandem with the Catholic Church in getting girls into the workhouses”. It also described Enda Kenny’s reaction in the Dáil as a “sort of apology”.

Laurence Lee said there is a good reason why Ireland should want to offer an apology and compensation: its recently acquired seat on the United Nations Human Rights Council.

The UN itself has described what happened in the laundries a form of torture.
Most of the victims are dead, many in communal graves, so are most of the nuns who locked them up while the Irish State and society looked the other way.
If a line has been drawn under the past, it is still far too late for many thousands of Irish women known throughout this county as the Magdalenes.

The Boston Globe highlighted Kenny’s emphasis on the “nuanced view of life in the laundries”, which was “far less stark or one-sided than has been depicted on stage and in film”.

Kenny rejected activists’ claims of laundry conditions akin to prison and slavery, and confined his statement of regret to the longtime popular view in Ireland that most residents of the Magdalene Laundries were ‘‘fallen women,’’ a euphemism for prostitutes.

The Guardian‘s headline read: ‘Ireland accepts state guilt in scandal’

Labelled the “Maggies”, the women were sent to the Magdalene laundries where they worked for nothing, serving in some cases “life sentences” simply for being unmarried mothers or regarded as morally wayward.

The Huffington Post, using Associated Press copy, ran with the headline:

Magdalene Laundries: Ireland Oversaw Abusive Catholic Asylums

It noted that the Prime Minister had stopped short of making an official apology.

CBS News in the US looked more deeply at the report, acknowledging:

Hard labour, enforced silence, and imprisonment – that was the sentence for more than 10,000 young Irish women sent off to the church-run Magdelen Laundries between 1922 and 1996, a dark chapter in Irish history that Steve Kroft reported on for 60 Minutes in January 1999.

CNN focused on the “ugly legacy” of the Magdalene Laundries, including the 130 unmarked graves at one of the former convents. Laura Smith-Spark and Peter Taggart’s comprehensive article, Report: Irish state sent thousands of women to infamous workhouses, noted that Kenny stopped short of the formal apology “many of the women have called for”.

‘Ireland finally says sorry to the 10,000 ‘Magdalene Sister slaves’ of its Catholic workhouses who were locked up and brutalised by nuns’ was the header on the UK’s The Daily Mail website. Although the piece led with what has been described as a “mealy-mouthed” apology, the report acknowledged the survivors’ total rejection of it.

Women who had their childhoods ‘stolen away’, locked up in Catholic-run workhouses received a qualified apology from the Irish government yesterday.

The Telegraph reported that Kenny “angered” many of the victims of the Magdalene Laundries by stopping short of a full apology.

The Irish prime minister apologised on Tuesday for the suffering endured by thousands of women locked up in the country’s Catholic-run workhouses after an inquiry found that 2,000 of them had been sent there by the state.

Emily Alpert in the Los Angeles Times says the Irish government was “enmeshed in a harsh system of laundries run by Catholic nuns, where women and girls worked behind locked doors without pay”.

The findings were heartening to activists who had pushed for acknowledgment of state involvement. However, activist groups were bitterly disappointed that Prime Minister Enda Kenny, who said Tuesday that he was sorry for how the women were treated, did not make a formal apology on behalf of the state.

BBC News shared the stories of Marina Gambold and Maureen Sullivan:

Marina Gambold was orphaned when she was eight years old after both her parents died. She lived with her grandmother for a couple of years but when she was 16 she found she had nowhere to go.

The priest then took her to the Magdalene laundry.

“I walked up the steps that day and the nun came out and said your name is changed, you are Fidelma, I went in and I was told I had to keep my silence. I was working in the laundry from eight in the morning until about six in the evening. I was starving with the hunger, I was given bread and dripping for my breakfast every morning. We had to scrub corridors, I used to cry with sore knees, housemaids’ knees, I used to work all day in the laundry, doing the white coats and the pleating.”

BBC also noted the lack of formal apology in a separate report.

Read TheJournal.ie’s coverage of the Magdalene Laundries report:

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Comments (34 Comments)

  • If ever you had a reason to be embarrassed by Enda Kenny, yesterday’s speech was a disgrace. Nothing will ever make amens for the suffering endured but at the very least the government should recognise it and apologise.

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  • and still the story continues abroad that Enda has apologised…

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  • Time Magazine ,European of the year , ah ya they were slaves sorry about that i spose but im really sorry for my beloved state being dragged into another scandal why cant we just sweep these things under the rug anymore like the days when i became part of the state machine in 1974.Yours Sincerely European of the year Mr Enda Kenny.

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  • Enda should hang his head in shame, there should have been an immediate apology, I wonder how do the government get it so wrong!! And Kathleen Lynch on Primetime last night was no better, fluffing around the apology issue and not giving answers but the same old rehearsed bull.

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    • We should hang our heads for being represented by this coward. The State committed offences against these women and we should recognise that by apologising through having our Government do it for us. Any apology from Enda now will seem hollow, it should not have needed to be dragged from him. The abuse if these women should have stopped and not have them victimised again. This Government does not care about the Irish people.

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  • From watching Enda Kenny talking in the Dail today and yesterday and he not able to give an apology to all the poor women and children that were affected by the control the Catholic Church and the government of Ireland had on the people of this state from 1922 to 1996 and the poor treatment that they received back then I am honestly ashamed to be Irish the government are a disgrace and the Catholic Church should have all their land and property taken off them and sent packing they along with the government have a record of abuse and torture that would make the nazis look good how do our politicians sleep at night knowing that they always put the people of Ireland last just ask all the banks and bond holders and the church who do the government put first in this country

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  • Seperate religion from our politics. The worldview backwardness of this country makes us a laughing stock internationally. Just apologise and give these poor ladies who’s lives were ruined by catholic church and State collusion some compensation. This for their exploitation and cruelties inflicted upon them.

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  • The survivors should be comforted, the lost ones should be remembered with their real names and all should receive a full apology for the cruelty they have been put through.

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  • I watched Kenney’s response to the Magdalene revelations on 3Player today and was appalled at the behaviour of this venal, unprincipled, self serving shyster. Did Michael Martin have anything to say on the subject or was he quietly keeping his head down. A sad day for Ireland, fast becoming the laughing stock of the world.

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  • I can well believe it when former inmates of the Magdalene laundry human trafficking operation say that they were not subjected to overt violence in contrast to the victims of the ineptly named industrial “schools”. Just a quarter of those sent there between 1922 and 1996 were sent by State Institutions but *all* the victims in the Magdalene laundry complex were kept in there by the state by means of the state institutions, the police, the courts, health and education inspectors and so forth. That is the truly frightening vista that has been presented by this report and that horror, I am afraid, our Taoiseach has failed to address.

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  • My mother was friends with 2 women who were sent to these evil laundrys, both of them became terrible alcoholics, one of them died a few years ago with a bottle of vodka in her hand, alone and without her family.. She literally lost her mind with drink. My mother used to tell me her hands were like leather to the touch.. Awfull awfull places, I can’t believe enda Enda Kenny even has to think twice about an apology. The state sent more women to those slave labour camps than anyone!

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  • state found guilty, head of state needs to address the victims, alive or deceased – president Higgins step forward now please

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  • And we still let them run our schools.

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  • Shame on Ireland!

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  • Don’t be surprised by the lack of appropriate responses, from our Elected Ones, on any issue of the day. Collectively, regardless of party affiliation, they are but rabbits caught in the glare of monetary acquisition (security) without any notion of how to earn it. True state(wo)manship requires the individual to remain loyal to ones own principles; sadly, a quality lacking in our society for so long now. If the electorate has not realised by now that an entire new constitution needs to be drawn up then the filth, degradation, and dehumanisation of our wee state by, essentially, warped civil war mentalities will continue to win out. Heartbroken!

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  • MrKnow 06/02/13 #

    Its shows how much as a country we have changed. There is no credibility left being Irish, so many of us ashamed of a country we as a nation fought so hard to get. I hope the people of Ireland never forgive enda and his shameful government.

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  • Why do our public elected officials and ministers consistently embarrass us? Well… I would argue these folks have no real world and real life experience outside of the institutions they experienced while maturing. The same schools, same education, same religion, same sports clubs, same holidays and maybe a J1 thrown in there for good measure. In essence they all have been indoctrinated to act alike and think the same. So a new thought is impossible. The ability ti self-assess and come back with truths are also impossible. With the inability to self critical and think outside of the box, these folks will always follow the same path. With most first world countries moving forward… We will always be stuck in a rut. Thus comes the embarrassing situations.

    Sadly. .. We need people to run this country to run this country who have experienced the world. They could persons of Irish heritage who returned to roots. They can be naturalized Irish citizens. Whatever the case… New blood, new experiences, new solutions… A better Ireland…. Because from where I sit.. Things just aren’t working….! I mean really… When was the last time we we’re proud of our collective goverment for who they are or what they’ve done?

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  • Backward Ireland! And we’re heading that way again, unless we stand up to what’s happening to our country. Isn’t the jobsbridge the new magdeline laundry system? And we’re just letting it happen, letting our youth and indeed our grown work for 1.30 an hour and calling it an internship when really we all know its a job!

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  • And people still walk in there to that cult of a church like the sleeping robots and “holy communion” and “confirmation” like some sleeping hypnotised machines with their children. Lambs to the slaughter those women were perpetrated by the evil of those hiding in an evil institution. I’d like to see The back of the church for good out of this country and the back of the political corrupt system here

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  • @si regano ah but y’see they didn’t make a living, they did all that “hard graft” in intolerable conditions ending up with worse scars than just work worn hands to line the pockets of the church. The very church that was teaching us to treat others as we liked to be treated were exploiting women and children to satisfy their own greed! Don’t try to make out what these women and children endured was in any way for a noble cause!

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  • Ends and eamonn and Alan s**ter were so vocal in opposition but what am embarrassment now with half baked apology drawn up by an overpaid civil servant and read by Enda who looked about as interested as a eunuch in a harem . Do one Enda and grow a pair apologise to these women for the dreadful things the state did . Bertie did it but then he had a pair

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  • Reason he didn’t apologise is because the State admits guilt and then will have to pay millions in compensation. Mind you he should on behalf of all of us and they deserve the compensation

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  • Nazareth houses in England were run on the same lines as the homes in IRELAND ,BEXHILL home was shut down under the official secrets act,Would of caused a massive scandal at the time.I know as i was in home at the time,In fact i was so damaged i was the last kid there as to difficult to place any where.East Sussex county council was left to deal with me as i was so problematic They tried their best with me nothing seem to work, Then before i knew it I was in the juvenile system in and out approved schools,As i got older thanks to W.D.WILLS and his wife who through all the kindness shown me they and i turned my life around,I brought up three children who have turned out very kind and caring. Was stopped from suing the home by government of the day with a time directive 1663,.Never was it to be made public.

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  • I thought I heard Enda say “sorry”. I thought it was an apology. Enda didn’t lock anyone in the laundry himself.

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  • you really are one bitter person. The church has done countless good deeds, i know they have made some bad mistakes. I reckon you dont give one damn about those unfortunate children which i admit had a tough time. Your just using it as leverage to get at the Roman Catholic Church. So troll somewhere else!

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    • “Some bad mistakes” bit of an understatement there Regano how about multiple crimes against humanity such as torture , rape , human trafficking , slavery and displacement of persons to name but a few . You clearly know sweet f@#k all about the RCC and you clearly don’t give a damn about its victims. Shame on you ! Shame on them !

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  • did u see the pint of lager behind Kinny in the Dail?

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