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Sisters
Recount Despair of Derry Care Home Trauma
By Dan Keenan Irish Times February 12, 2014
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/courts/sisters-recount-despair-of-derry-care-home-trauma-1.1687911
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One sister spoke of the fear
they felt when they were taken from their home and left at
Nazareth House at Bishop Street in Derry.
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Two sisters who were moved to a Derry residential care
institution run by the Sisters of Nazareth have given graphic
evidence of their fear and isolation.
The first said they were “brutalised” and “not
protected”.
Her sister told the inquiry of an incident when she was
forced to eat her own vomit as staff at the home did not believe
she was ill.
The two told the inquiry examining alleged abuse in care
homes across Northern
Ireland of their fear and isolation while at Nazareth House in
the city’s Bishop Street in 1960s.
The sisters, who cannot be identified, testified
separately.
One spoke of the fear they felt when they were taken
from their home and left at Nazareth House.
“Nobody explained anything,” she said. “We were
terrified of the unknown. We would reach out to any adult who
went past, but we were just dismissed.”
Both testified that they arrived with new clothes
provided for them by their father who had to leave to find work
overseas, but these were taken from them.
Misery and punishment
“I just remember being happy to get something new from
my father but it didn’t last long,” said one. “The nuns and the
workers
just took them. I didn’t see my clothes again.”
She said she and her siblings were abused spiritually,
physically and mentally on a daily basis, often by older girls.
“Doing anything was pointless,” she said. “I didn’t
bother to cry.”
Nazareth House was “a terrifying, cold, impersonal
place”. She was “always beaten back, brutally” from going to see
her siblings.
“It felt like I had descended into hell. There was no
love, it was always cold, everyone was so aggressive, so
terrifying. I lived in fear all the time.”
Her sister, giving evidence by videolink from abroad
where she now lives, became distressed as she told how she was
once forced to eat her own vomit after becoming ill at one meal.
Forced to eat vomit
A civilian worker at the home refused to believe she had
taken ill. She spooned all the vomit back into the bowl and
insisted it was eaten, she
added.
Breaking down in tears repeatedly, she said she was
“beaten about the head for making a mess”.
She said she was “in a strange place . . . I was in
survival mode and I was frightened most of the time.”
The nuns and other staff there were largely “cruel and
sadistic” said one, “and I couldn’t understand why as I’d never
experienced that treatment before”.
The second witness recalled seeing a girl being severely
beaten, struck repeatedly “from head to foot with a thick stick”.
“I feel guilty because I didn’t help her,” she said,
fighting back tears. She said the girl was covered in blood and
screaming like an animal in distress. “Escaping” from Nazareth
House was the happiest day of her life, she said. But she still
has nightmares after her experiences. “It is like it haunts me
until this day.”
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