Auxiliary Bishop of Dublin Eamonn Walsh said yesterday that helping
women who had been in the Magdalene laundries was “a matter for all
parties involved”.
He was responding to media queries as to
whether the four religious congregations which ran the 10 laundries
should help fund compensation and services for the women.
“Everybody who held responsibility [where the laundries were concerned] should step up to the line,” he said.
It was “up to everybody to be responsible”, he said, and that “the religious won’t be found wanting”.
It
was learned last night that the Minister for Justice Alan Shatter is
now contacting the religious orders that ran the laundries in connection
with the funding of the redress scheme.
Earlier Mr Shatter and
Minister of State for Equality Kathleen Lynch met Magdalene Survivors
Together spokesman Steven O’Riordan in Government Buildings to discuss
what some of the women were hoping to get.
“The women would be open to a cap being put on the amount an individual can claim, perhaps €200,000,” Mr O’Riordan said.
He
said they were seeking about €20,000 per year they spent in the
laundries as compensation for unpaid work, along with a lump sum fee of
€50,000.
Mr O’Riordan said the women also hoped a concert could be
staged featuring various artists who have supported their campaign over
the years to which they could invite members of their extended
families.
A proposed title for the concert was A Song for the
Magdalenes.
Other women supported by the Justice for Magdalenes
group have proposed a €100,000 sum in addition to a package of services,
including pensions and lost wages.
Meanwhile, there has been a call for compensation to be extended to children of deceased women who had been in the laundries.
Speaking
to The Irish Times yesterday Mary Collins, whose mother died in 1988 at
the Sisters of Charity laundry on Peacock Lane in Cork city, said her
mother’s unpaid wages should be her’s and her sister’s inheritance.
Her mother had spent 27 years in the laundry and was buried in grave 73 at St Gabriel’s Cemetery nearby.
Older sister
Mary’s
older sister Bridget spent three years in the Good Shepherd laundry in
Cork. She has since died by suicide. Her other sister Teresa was adopted
and attended a school in Cork that had a choir which sang occasionally
for the women in the Peacock Lane laundry.
It was many years later
before Teresa realised that her own mother was among the women she had
been singing for all those years beforehand.
The family originated at Caherciveen, Co Kerry, where their mother lived with her own sister and that sister’s husband.
He was Mary’s father and that of her two sisters.
As
Mary recalled it her mother was sent to a psychiatric hospital in
Midleton, Co Cork, but escaped from there and was caught by gardaí.
They
brought her to the Peacock Lane laundry, where she would spend the rest
of her days.