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  The Irish Problem

By Amy Welborn
Beliefnet
May 24, 2009

http://blog.beliefnet.com/viamedia/2009/05/the-irish-problem.html

Irish novelist John Banville said everyone knew

Ireland from 1930 to the late 1990s was a closed state, ruled -- the word is not too strong -- by an all-powerful Catholic Church with the connivance of politicians and, indeed, the populace as a whole, with some honorable exceptions. The doctrine of original sin was ingrained in us from our earliest years, and we borrowed from Protestantism the concepts of the elect and the unelect. If children were sent to orphanages, industrial schools and reformatories, it must be because they were destined for it, and must belong there. What happened to them within those unscalable walls was no concern of ours.

We knew, and did not know. That is our shame today.

The discussions are raging about this tragedy and crime. Of interest to me are discussions on Traditionalist forums are at this moment tending to blame Jansenism, which is an interesting thought, considering the other systemic similar type of abuse exposed in the last couple of decades has been in Canada - but then, perhaps not, because the abuse there was not limited to the French Canadian end of things and (you know if you have followed this) it was not just the Catholics who were guilty. Anglican institutions were implicated as well. So perhaps the Jansenist angle only gets you so far.

 
 

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