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Derek Leinster at Mount Jerome Cemetery Prime Time via RTÉ Player

Bethany Home survivors to Taoiseach: "Please do not treat us differently"

The group say that they have suffered physical and mental wounds due to their time in Bethany Home.

BETHANY HOME SURVIVORS are appealing to the Taoiseach not to treat them differently in their fight for redress and an apology for how they were treated as children.

Derek Leinster, the chair of the Bethany Survivors Group, has written to Enda Kenny about the way he and his colleagues refer to the home, and asking that the State “acknowledges that it shirked its responsibility to care for children in Bethany in the past”.

Apology

The group’s members are calling for redress and an apology for their treatment in the home, saying they suffered physical and mental injuries while in the care of Bethany.

Mothers were sent to the Protestant Bethany Home while pregnant and their children were sent on from the home to Protestant families. Many of these children died from infectious diseases while in Bethany’s care, while others, such as Leinster, were left with lifelong health problems.

The letter, which is reprinted in full below, asks that the Taoiseach and ministers not refer to the home as a ‘mother and baby home’.

As well as an apology and redress, the survivors wish for a memorial to be built at Mount Jerome Cemetery, where the bodies of children from the home were found in unmarked graves.

The letter, which was also sent on to different Government departments, reads:

Dear Taoiseach,

We wish to draw your attention to the inaccurate description used to define the Bethany Home, Dublin, when it is referred to as a ‘mother and baby home’ by yourself and some of your ministerial colleagues.

Ministers for Education, Health and Justice, have historically and continually, deliberately misrepresented the true function of the Bethany by claiming that it was primarily a mother and baby home. However, children who were born in Bethany stayed there; they did not leave the home with their mothers.

While one of its roles was that of maternity, Bethany was much more than simply a mother and baby home. It was very much a children’s home, which not only kept (from birth) children up to the age of four years & more , it also admitted children from institutions all over Ireland. When mothers gave birth in the Bethany, they deserted, and left their children in the care of the State. We note that Section 44 of the Public Assistance Act, 1939, stipulates:

(1) This section applies to a legitimate child both of whose parents are dead or who is deserted by both of its parents or (where one of its parents is dead) by its surviving parent, and to an illegitimate child whose mother is dead or who is deserted by its mother.

(2) Every public assistance authority shall have, in relation to every child to whom this section applies who has not attained the age of sixteen years and is maintained by such authority, all the rights and powers of the parents of such child.

The Bethany Survivors Group holds a great deal of documentary evidence which demonstrates that public assistance authorities funded the upkeep of children in Bethany. In addition, the same authorities were aware that children in Bethany were suffering the most appalling treatment, and, that right up to the level of the Minister for Local Government, the State knew that hundreds of children were dying, due to the dreadful conditions which prevailed in Bethany.

This evidence has been furnished with ministers, and it is imperative that in the interests of justice, that the State now acknowledges that it shirked its responsibility to care for children in Bethany in the past. Former residents of Bethany still carry the physical and mental wounds and injuries, due to the State not exercising its legal right, responsibility, powers and duty to protect them, when they were children, resident in Bethany.

Over the past number of years, the State has confronted its past failings in relation to various other institutions; please do not treat us differently.

Yours faithfully,

Derek Leinster
Chair,
Bethany Survivors Group

Read: Bethany Home survivors: ‘State ignored us as children, and is still ignoring us’>

Read: “Against all the odds, I survived”: Bethany Home survivors tell their stories>

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    Mute Báidín Fheilimí
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    Mar 20th 2016, 10:01 AM

    This interview of course would never have been used to pull a book…

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    Mute Angie Lordan
    Favourite Angie Lordan
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    Mar 20th 2016, 11:36 AM

    I can’t wait to get hold of this book, I believe that more teens need to be heard, life is not easy for anyone these days and being told “you will never mount to anything!” is the last thing a teen needs to hear… Let them spread their wings and experience the world and express their feelings openly. Sounds like a great read!

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    Mute James Onedin
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    Mar 20th 2016, 11:56 AM

    Be sure to let us know how that goes Angie.

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    Mute Angie Lordan
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    Mar 20th 2016, 1:04 PM

    I will let you know now! I have two children, one is a paramedic in the Irish army who is out in Syria right now and the other one is a hairdresser, I never had one days trouble with either of them, and yes, they do have tattoos and so do I, ohhh and by the way I am a social worker, so my approach with my children paid off for me and my family. I still believe that teens need to be heard, we only ever hear the bad things about them, never the great things they do. It all stems from your approach with your children and the guidance you offer them whether right or wrong.

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    Mute Karina C
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    Mar 20th 2016, 1:23 PM

    It’s an astonishingly powerful and beautiful book Angie, and I’d urge everyone, not just young adults to read it. Ces is brave and heartbreakingly vulnerable, and is trying so hard to hold everything together for her mother and herself, at a time when she could be forgiven for falling apart completely. The parts of the book about tattoos, their history and culture, are fascinating too.

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    Mute James Onedin
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    Mar 20th 2016, 8:45 PM

    Ummmmm, Angie I was being ironic and I was referring to your reading of the book.

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    Mute Sam Barkley
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    Mar 20th 2016, 11:05 AM

    ”As you grow up, you gain scars. “To a large extent you have no control over what the world does to you, but tattooing is making an active choice to put a scar of your own choosing on your body. There is something really powerful and beautiful in that.”
    So essentially tattooing is a form of self harm, self hate.
    Amazing really that this mental aberration is not discussed more. We need a public health campaign to raise awareness about the dangers of self harming by the tattoo needle.
    Too many kids are suffering in silence.

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    Mute Gavin Carton
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    Mar 20th 2016, 6:42 PM

    No it isn’t! So you’ve fallen at the first logic hurdle there, chief!

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    Mute Not_Rod_Ten©
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    Mar 20th 2016, 9:53 AM

    I have no opinion on this

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Mar 20th 2016, 12:03 PM

    I’ve never heard anybody referring their tattoos as scars .

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    Mute cholly appleseed
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    Mar 20th 2016, 12:20 PM

    Self harming masked as tattoos. This really is a trouble revelation.

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    Mute James Onedin
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    Mar 20th 2016, 11:03 AM

    Oh right……..

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    Mute Sinéad Cronin
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    Mar 20th 2016, 1:56 PM

    Angle, judging by the number of red thumbs many people out there still don’t understand how deeply words can hurt, especially at a time when a person is trying to find out who they are and what they want from life. Bitter adults may have developed a little more open and supportive if they had learned how to express themselves as teens.Thank goodness for social workers and parents like you.

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    Mute Angie Lordan
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    Mar 20th 2016, 10:02 PM

    Thank you very much Sinead

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    Mute Jim Woodcock
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    Mar 20th 2016, 3:01 PM

    For those who are saying tatoos are a form of self loathing/hate. ..what?! It’s a tattoo with a meaning. Nothing more, nothing less. I don’t know why some people, especially those without one, always feel the need to diagnose and council people on why other people decide to get one. Ridiculous.

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    Mute Una Morris
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    Mar 24th 2016, 12:06 AM

    Ah Jim, your profile pic is of a pair of jocks with two female arms wrapped around the penis area…Maybe you don’t need to be calling others ridiculous for suggesting that for some, tattoos are more than simply skin pictures. For some, they are a form of empowerment, of bodily autonomy, a way of reclaiming something for their own. For others, it may simply be ink on skin and that’s ok too. The jocks though are a bit worrying ;-)

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    Mute Jim Woodcock
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    Mar 20th 2016, 6:12 PM

    Alright Laurence Llowellyn Bowen call down now.

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    Mute Adam Fox
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    Mar 21st 2016, 12:01 AM

    I got a tatoo of a big pirate ship on my arm last Friday….

    …I woke up on Saturday and it was gone…

    …It sank.

    1
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