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Dead babies remembered in Ireland as Pope visits

Updated on: 27 August,2018 12:00 AM IST  | 
PTI |

The people lit candles and placed hundreds of pairs of tiny shoes around a tiny white coffin to honour the babies.

Dead babies remembered in Ireland as Pope visits

Protestors against clerical abuse and the visit of Pope Francis, including a woman dressed in a nuns habit with a doll and a handmade sign referencing the research that suggests that the bodies of hundreds of children were buried in a mass grave at a home

Hundreds of people have marched through the town of Tuam, Ireland, reading aloud the names of an estimated 800 babies who died at a Catholic Church-run orphanage and were buried in a mass grave near a sewage area on the grounds. The somber protesters read out: "Elizabeth Murphy, 4 months. Annie Tyne, 3 months. John Joseph Murphy, 10 months" and on and on. They lit candles and placed hundreds of pairs of tiny shoes around a tiny white coffin to honour the babies.


The demonstration took place near the Marian shrine at Knock, which Pope Francis visited earlier today. The demonstrators were hoping to draw attention to the plight of the Tuam babies, who were exiled to the home because they were born to unwed mothers. An amateur Irish historian, Catherine Corless, researched the deaths of some 800 children at the Bon Secours home. Last year, a government-mandated survey of the grounds determined there was a mass grave at the site. Corless said of the Tuam protest: "This is much more moving than watching the pope deliver prepared speeches."


Pope Francis has denounced how Irish children were "robbed of their innocence and taken from their mothers" by Catholic Church-run institutions that put them up for adoption for the shame of having been born to unwed mothers. Francis spoke out about Ireland-s haunting history of forced adoptions during a prayer Sunday in Knock, the country-s main shrine dedicated to Christ-s mother, Mary. He did so after meeting yesterday with some of the adoptees, who urged him to denounce the practice, demand an apology from the religious sisters responsible and assure the mothers they could search now for their lost children without fear of sin. Francis prayed that such abuses never occur again and for the church "to proceed with justice and reparation, where responsible, for the violences." Pope Francis has visited a famous shrine in Ireland and was to celebrate a Mass dedicated to families a day after an emotional meeting with victims of cleric sex abuse and some of Ireland-s thousands of forced adoptees. Francis arrived today in Knock, the Marian shrine in northwestern Ireland, where he prayed and blessed thousands of jubilant Irish faithful, who gathered in raincoats under clouds.


Francis- first day in Ireland was dominated by the abuse scandal and Ireland-s fraught history of atrocities committed in the name of preserving the Catholic faith. He received a lukewarm reception on the streets, but tens of thousands thronged Dublin-s Croke Park Stadium for a family rally and concert. The US sexual abuse scandal took on a new twist today, with a former Vatican ambassador to the US purportedly penning a letter accusing Vatican officials of knowing about the sexual escapades of ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick since 2000, but making him a cardinal anyway.

The letter was attributed to Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, a staunch conservative. Pope Francis has held an emotional meeting with Irish victims of clerical sex abuse and those wrenched away from their unwed mothers in forced adoptions demanded by Catholic authorities. Yesterday, Francis spent 90 minutes meeting with victims of clerical and institutional abuse, including two people forcibly given up for adoption as newborns. Clodagh Malone said Francis was "shocked" at what they told him and "he listened to each and every one of us with respect and compassion." The survivors asked Francis to speak out today at Mass in Dublin to let all the mothers know that they did nothing wrong and that it wasn-t a sin ¿ as church officials have told them ¿ to try to find their children later in life.

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