When Dr Douglas Hyde died in 1949, Irish Catholics did not venture inside the Pepper Canister Church.
THE
liberalisation of Ireland really began 50 years ago, with the launch of
Vatican II, when Pope John XXIII opened the Vatican Council whose
purpose was to renew the Catholic Church, and indeed, modernise it.
The
trendy word was 'aggiornamento' -- bringing things up to date -- and it
was, believe it or not, widely used in the inns and taverns of Ireland
wherever lively conversationalists gathered.
Almost overnight, it
seemed, the tone of Catholic values softened, just as, almost overnight,
nuns threw off their wimples and their 17th Century habits to wear more
simplified, modernised garb.
A few costume romantics might have
regretted the loss of those beautiful butterfly bonnets of the St
Vincent de Paul (so clearly identified in the paintings of Muriel
Brandt, showing nuns ministering to the 1916 wounded in the streets of
Dublin), but the religious sisters themselves, in every order, hated the
starchy materials which rubbed roughly against skin.
In the
devotional magazines, themes changed from prohibition -- the list of
'thou shalt nots' -- to more positive issues on social justice.
The care
of the old, the cruelty of apartheid in South Africa and of race
segregation in the United States were now more underlined as being
against the spirit of Christ than the injunction to leave off meat on
Fridays.
Discrimination against 'travelling people', said several
Irish bishops, such as Dr Peter Birch at Ossory, was a greater sin than
'impure thoughts', which had formerly been an occasion of much
reproving.
Bishop Lucey of Cork, who was given to banning
dance-halls in Lent, pointed out that if Communism was odious, Communists
were only people like ourselves.
Women were no longer required to
cover their heads in church, and scarves and hats disappeared, again,
almost overnight, at least in Dublin, and what was gained in heady
freedom was, perhaps, lost in millinery elegance.
The Council,
attended by 2,000 bishops from all over the world, was devised to serve
Catholics, but its impact on ecumenical relations was seismic.
No longer
was Martin Luther to be denounced as an apostate: now, in the new
ecumenical era, he was to be respected as a thoughtful historical figure
who was, perhaps, only trying a bit of 'aggiornamento' in the 16th
Century.
In the religious magazines, Luther's continued devotion
to the Virgin Mary - notwithstanding the break with Rome - was
underlined.
Protestants in Ireland were henceforth to be embraced
as 'our separated brethren': and there was to be a reconciliation with
the Jewish people, with the Catholic press running splash headlines such
as 'No Christian Can Be Anti-Semitic'.
Ecumenism was not only
advocated: it became virtually a fashion accessory. Previously, those of
other faiths had been referred to as 'non-Catholics', but this was now
ruled out as unkind and narrow: these were people of other faiths, and
they were our brothers and sisters.
'Mixed' marriages were henceforth to
be called 'inter-faith' marriages. (Atheists, at this point, didn't
come into the picture.)
But Irish Catholics could henceforth
attend Protestant services, and John Horgan, who was a reporter at the
Council, wrote that the main anxiety, in the West of Ireland, was that
'there mightn't be enough Protestants to go around'.
This was not a
problem in Sandymount, Dublin 4, where I grew up, where Catholics and
Protestants had always been on good terms, although Protestants
themselves were as keen on respecting 'separate spheres' in education,
sport (Protestants didn't play games on Sundays), dancing (strict
Presbyterians didn't dance) and, sometimes, job situations (The Irish
Times ran 'Protestants only' job adverts right into the middle 1960s).
But
as Professor Horgan pointed out, the rush of 'ecumenism' unleashed a
very natural urge in Irish people, all over the country, to be genuinely
neighbourly towards 'separated brethren'. The ordinance that Catholics
didn't attend Protestant (or Jewish) funerals had really gone against
the grain of Irish traditions of warmth towards friends and neighbours.
It
was pitiful that when the first President of Ireland -- and founder of
the Gaelic League -- Dr Douglas Hyde, died in 1949 -- Irish Catholics
lined the streets outside the Pepper Canister Church in Dublin to pay
their respects, but did not venture inside.
The ecumenical spirit
even reached Belfast: when John XXIII died in 1963, Belfast City Hall
flew the flag at half-mast in mourning -- regarded as a mighty change
from the traditional Orange sentiments of what they'd like to do to the
Pope.
There were, of course, great liturgical changes within the
Catholic Church, with the Mass switching from Latin to the vernacular,
and the priest facing the people. Some of these were bewildering to
older people (and to people who like rite and ritual, or those who
argued that Latin was universalist).
The church inherited by Pope
Benedict is now a completely different organisation. Yet the social
changes which were triggered were just as enormous, and marked the
beginning of modern times in this country.
Of course, there were
other momentous events occurring in 1962: the Cuban Missile Crisis, the
first James Bond movie, the Beatles' 'Love Me Do', and the ever-widening
availability of the contraceptive Pill which fed into modernisation.
Vatican II was, in that sense, part of the spirit of its age -- aggiornamento, indeed.