IRELAND
Irish Independent
11 February 2013
THE Martin McAleese Report on the Magdalene Laundries is a flawed document. It is not based on the best evidence. Its focus is inappropriately narrow. Its research, despite claims of prodigious hunting through the enormous ocean of state records, missed obvious and important information about the laundries.
Its terms of reference were wrong and have been dishonestly represented to the Irish people. The Government issued what can only be described as ‘a mandate both broad and narrow’. The narrow bit was “to establish the facts of state involvement with the Magdalene Laundries”. This was primitive and clumsy. Its objective seems to have been to find out where the State was at risk from legal pursuit.
The committee broadened this into ‘a Narrative Report’ on the laundries, into which they threw every possible document, many of which were absurd for the task at hand. For example, what are Tomas Derrig’s ‘Rules for the Industrial Schools’ doing as a grubby photocopy appendix version for St George’s Industrial School in Limerick, signed but not dated by the minister?
Industrial school rules had nothing to do with the laundry girls. They were lucky to get a faint whiff of education as they lifted their heads from the steaming cauldrons of filthy clothing that dominated their lives.
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