In the Irish gulags abusers roamed free because children didn’t matter

By Fergus Finlay

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

I DROVE to Clonmel on Sunday for the finals of an under-nines and under-10s football tournament. It was organised by Clonmel FC and brought together young footballers from the six Munster counties. They (and the rest of us) had a brilliant afternoon and we were made to feel really welcome by the Clonmel team.

“Kids for kids” is the slogan of this invitational tournament, and it raises money for the work we do in Barnardos. It’s a great idea that, isn’t it – kids enjoying their sport, really having a go at competition, learning a bit about themselves in the process and raising a few bob for other kids along the way.

All the clubs that took part have wonderful youth policies and they’re all staffed (if that’s the word) by dedicated volunteers – coaches and parents, and people who’ve given their lives to their clubs and the kids they work with, year in and year out.

Looking at the kids playing, each of them able to imagine a bright future as the next Roy Keane or Damien Duff, and watching the pride and joy of their parents and coaches, you could almost forget for a moment the darkness that unfolded across our country last week.

But in some ways the contrast between the happy-go-lucky kids I met on Sunday and the tortured, hunted children I’ve been reading about all week made it even more painful.

I don’t feel I have the right to speak for the survivors of institutional abuse in Ireland. I’ve met many of them over the years and I’m in awe of their courage and determination.

The anger of people like Christine Buckley and John Kelly, even today in the wake of their total vindication, is both palpable and entirely justified. Theirs is the authentic voice of reproach to a system that betrayed them and left them in hell.

And yet I do believe the rest of us have an obligation to try to analyse this and to see what sense, if any, can be made of it. I heard someone on radio say the other day that everyone over 50 in Ireland shares some portion of the blame for what happened.

I’m not sure if I agree with that – but I do keep asking myself the same question: if I had known, would I have tried to stop it? Because there is one conclusion that I believe has to be faced up to after you finish reading the report of the commission, and it is this: power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. That is no cliché; it is the most profound point of the entire history of institutional care in Ireland. The torture and degradation of generations of children was not the work of bad apples. It was the result of a corrupt system. The failure to stop it was not the result of oversight or mistake. It was part of the same corruption.

The glib words being uttered now that stop well short of any acknowledgement of systemic abuse, and very well short of a declaration that the perpetrators will be handed over to the justice system, is part of the same corruption. And so too is the insistence that people who did horrible, terrible things to children cannot even be named.

We know that many – probably almost all – of these abusers who are still alive feel no shame. By not naming them we are allowing them to have the last laugh. That it beyond corrupt.

I am not saying that in any sense the commission itself is corrupt as a result of its decision not to name abusers. It has a variety of reasons for not doing so – not the least of which, I imagine, is that it would have been dragged through the courts by some of the religious orders had it decided otherwise.

But there is no reason for the rest of us – at least those of us who know the real identity of these abusers – to carry on with that pretence. Until the report of the commission was published, for example, anyone who had any understanding of what had happened in Goldenbridge knew the principal perpetrator was a woman called Sister Xaviera. There is no basis whatever, having read the report, why she should be entitled to a new and anonymous identity as Sister Alida.

To get back to the essential point – the core issue at the heart of the abuse of thousands of children was an abuse of power. The children concerned, by and large, didn’t matter to the system – they were a burden. Their lives were already blighted by poverty and right from the very beginning it was considered alright to treat them as less than citizens.

Consider four basic facts.

First, there was, for example, no due process about the way they were sent to institutions. Children were, literally, plucked from their families and incarcerated for years, although they had committed no crime. Not one of those tens of thousands of children, throughout that entire period, was ever represented.

No judge or court ever heard a defence of them, or ever heard any complaint they might have to make about their incarceration. The most basic legal rights were simply, and casually, removed from them.

Secondly, one of the underlying facts about the way they were treated was that the worse the treatment, the bigger the profit for the religious orders. The way in which the entire system was funded provided a built-in incentive to starve the children and to deprive them of heating and clothing.

For years the religious orders have asked us to take into account that the system was underfunded by the state and that the religious had to go to great lengths to make up for that deficiency. It was a gigantic lie. State funding wasn’t huge, but if the orders hadn’t siphoned off money for their own purposes, it would have provided at least better nutrition.

FACT three. The orders protected abusers, especially when the abusers were their own. They pretended they didn’t understand, or that it might be possible to reform the abusers with prayer.

Another lie. They knew full well that everywhere they sent an abuser they were putting more children at risk. But to protect the institution, they shuffled the abusers around anyway.

Fact four. The state was complicit. Once the state had got rid of the problem of needy or troublesome children, it bent over backwards to facilitate the religious and to help them cover up any problems. Throughout the terrible decades that this abuse went on, I have no doubt there were some civil servants who would have conspired, if they had to, in covering up murder.

In short, there was as much accountability throughout the entire system as there was in the Gulag Archipelago or the killing fields of Cambodia.

Profits were made, abusers went free, power was wielded mercilessly because the children were invisible and therefore, ultimately, they didn’t matter.

Well, there are still invisible children in Ireland. Children whose voices aren’t heard, who may be suffering in silence.

The question we have to ask ourselves is: do they matter now?

This story appeared in the printed version of the Irish Examiner Tuesday, May 26, 2009

 

1 Response » to “In the Irish gulags abusers roamed free because children didn’t matter”

  1. Lilith Barrett says:

    “We know that many – probably almost all – of these abusers who are still alive feel no shame.”

    Abusers are predators and innocent children and adults are their energy meals.

    Without this “food” they die.

    These abusers have this knowledge which they kept to themselves and kept the masses uneducated, in order for them to keep control.

    Only the abusers and those who were in positions to help the victims but did nothing are the ones who ought to be ashamed, but these beings have no emotions, so please do not expect them to change ever.

    As children in the fiftees and sixtees, many of us did wonder why our parents lived in such fear of rhe Catholic Church.

    The church controlled everything- you could go nowhere without a reference from the priest.

    The anger expressed by Christine and others is part of the healing process.

    Humanity must understand this, as for too long the Church has been preaching forgive those who have hurt us.

    And what a scam that was- a nice handy way to order us to forgive and then shut up.

    The day I discovered that I did not have to forgive these men in frocks for the pain they caused me, was the best day of my life.

    I was in charge now- I could decide if I wanted to forgive or not.

    Those who need to express anger to release the inner pain, must be allowed to do so- Scream the Priman Scream if necessary, and let the rest of us allow them the freedom to do so.

    Let us call a spade a spade.

    Let us tell it as it was and as it is today.

    And if that means getting angry and using a so called swear language then so be it.

    Language is simply energy, and without our native language anymore, many find it difficult using English.

    The eugenics principle in the Church and state meant that the poor and ill were a burden to the collective hive, and still are- make no mistake about it- the priests are now replaced by social workers who are often equally evil and cruel and corrupt- because once again, they are not accountable to anyone and have more power that Taoiseach.

    No due process is still in existance in the same secret family courts today.

    Children can be plucked from loving families and placed in institutions for being too strong willed.

    No, you won’t have heard the story- why?

    Because once again the powers that be- judges- can gag any service user from telling the world.

    Even today the Ombudsman for Children is not allowed to help children, once their case is inside the family court system.

    Children today are supposedly represented, but once again, that is all for show- all a pretence to the world that all is good for children.

    If that were true, how come the Ombudsman is shut out?

    What is being kept hidden from the people.?

    The children with disabilities today are worth more to the system too- more jobs, more for “caring” for them.

    We rarely saw an autistic child in the old days, now there are so many due to vaccines- so does the state really care about the children of 2009? No.

    Children are still a commodity to be used for profit.

    That birth cert that each parent gets means you just signed your child away to the state and that birth cert is used to borrow money, based on the amount of money it expects to make out of that person during their working life.

    Make no mistake, the state- nameless, faceless entity is not your friend.

    The state agents still protect abusers and perjurers and those who fabricate lies and knowingly place them before the judge, who as any social worker will tell you- is his/her Rubberstamp.

    Only the other day, speaking to a barrister- who was shocked that the judge had rubberstamped the care order before the court hearing took place.

    This is 2009- still it goes on in secret- get the kids into state care, create trauma and fear and treat them as slaves.

    How strange author mentions Cambodia, and does he know then of the Catholic priest- now a bishop who betrayed 14 Buddhist monks and 800 children? Does he know the cruelty inflicted on those children- by his hand- cutting nipples off all the girls, cutting their flesh off, raping, abusing in every way.

    Seems the men in frocks have no problem causing pain to innocent children worldwide.

    Now is our chance to speak out.

    So let us all write our truth of what each one of us knows and share it with our brothers and sisters.

    This is one of the way the innocent children of 2009- who ARE PREY TO THE EVIL BEINGS- are going to stand a chance of remaining safe from abusers.

    This is the only way the predators will be seen for who they are- in their real shapes and colours.

    We the people have to do the work as we cannot depend on any church or state agency, whose only interest is money and feeding off the innocent energy of decent human beings.