Mary Raftery was the most important journalist of the past 30 years.
The work of the late documentary-maker changed Ireland, significantly
and for the better, as explained in this introduction to a new ‘Irish
Times’ collection of her columns, two of which appear below
Mary
Raftery, who died far too young in 2012, was unquestionably the most
important Irish journalist of the past 30 years. The best journalists
hope they might manage to reflect with reasonable accuracy the society
they inhabit.
Mary Raftery didn’t just reflect society; she changed
Ireland, significantly and for the better.
The paradox of her work is that she made the place more decent
and civilised largely by showing it the indecent and uncivilised sides
of itself. She was an old-fashioned optimist who believed that the
truth, however frightful, makes us free.
Mary Raftery was born in Dublin in 1957, spent part of her
childhood abroad (her father was a diplomat), excelled in maths, physics
and music and went to University College Dublin in 1975 to study the
then almost exclusively male subject of engineering.
She first appeared in The Irish Times in 1977, when its
education correspondent Christina Murphy interviewed her because she had
been elected as the first female full-time officer of the students’
union: “Mary Raftery is 19 years old, she looks about 14 and she goes
about her job in a manner which makes you think she might be 25.”
She never went back to finish her degree and instead began to
work as a freelance journalist, first for In Dublin magazine and later
for Magill.
In 1984 she went to work as a television producer for RTÉ, where
she made investigative programmes for Today Tonight (later Prime Time)
and the pioneering health series Check Up. It was typical of her
tenacity and courage that, at Today Tonight, she produced the first
documentary evidence of a truth that every Irish journalist knew but
none could prove: that Charles Haughey was on the take. She found, in a
receiver’s report on Patrick Gallagher’s failed property and banking
empire, reference to a payment Gallagher made to Haughey.
Not for the first or last time, she had to battle through legal
obstacles to tell the public what she had discovered: RTÉ “ruled that we
should exclude all reference to money handed out to Haughey by
Gallagher from our programme exposing the latter’s fraudulent
activities”.
Famous definition
From early on, Mary Raftery’s career was the
embodiment of Lord Northcliffe’s famous definition: “News is what
somebody somewhere wants to suppress; all the rest is advertising.”
The stories of appalling abuse of children in industrial schools
that became the explosive States of Fear series were not the classic
stuff of investigative journalism, in that they were not secret. The
institutions in which the abuse occurred were not hidden: they loomed
over many Irish towns. About 170,000 children had been through those
institutions, and almost all of them had experienced or witnessed
systematic cruelty.
So much has gone wrong at RTÉ and the BBC in trying to tell
stories of child abuse that States of Fear and Cardinal Secrets, the two
key documentaries on abuse and cover-up within the Irish Catholic
Church, now seem even more remarkable in their clarity, precision and
unimpeachable accuracy.
What is more remarkable still is that this exemplary
professionalism was at the service of the simple, instinctive emotions
of compassion for people.
These were personal, not just professional, qualities. Mary
Raftery was a very private person, but she spoke once about her memory
of being a very little girl, jumping off the stairs at home into her
father’s arms. She would go up another step higher and jump again,
completely sure that he would be there to catch her. It was an image of
what every child should have: the confidence that comes from
unquestioning trust.
One might speculate that this memory drove her on, that because
she had emerged from her own childhood armoured with this confidence and
comfort, she could not abide the thought of such trust being abused and
betrayed.
What made this impulse so potent was Mary Raftery’s unique mix
of steeliness and tact. She was uncompromising in her attitude to those
who had abused power but extremely sensitive to the dignity of those who
had been abused.
That kindness is everywhere in a new collection of columns,
written for The Irish Times between 2003 and 2007. Almost of all of them
are about matters of public policy – official decisions or systems or
sometimes simply official ignorance and neglect – or of corporate or
institutional irresponsibility.
What makes the columns so compelling, long after the original
occasion for their publication has passed, is that their touchstones are
not statistics or abstractions but deep human emotions and impulses:
sadness, grief, memory, oblivion, justice.
The standard by which everything is measured in Mary Raftery’s
columns is the way it affects so-called ordinary lives, especially those
at the bottom of the heap: the disabled man in the sheltered workshop,
the prisoner in vile conditions, the child at the mercy of a chaotic
care system, the person with a mental illness stuck in a Dickensian
hospital.
The columns cast an acutely sceptical eye on the values of the
time, not least as expressed in The Irish Times itself (and reprinted on
this page, right): “In a fashion article in this newspaper a few weeks
ago featuring charity ball organisers, one said that her ideal charity
event is Elton John’s, with its concept of wearing as many diamonds as
possible. Another spoke of the downside of € 2,000 designer gowns – once
you wear them to a ball, it’s very hard to wear them again to another
event. She assured us, however, that she does get two to three years out
of an Armani outfit.”
These vignettes have a certain rueful humour now, but they
remind us that there are many different ways in which a society can lie
to itself.
Dangerous ignorance can be created by overly mighty churches or
overly greedy secular elites. It can manifest itself in unspeakable
darkness or in crass glamour. But, whatever form it takes, it has seldom
had a more potent enemy than Mary Raftery.
Dancing night away for charity December 8th, 2005
Who
are these people who attend charity balls? They must be peculiar
creatures indeed, who squeeze themselves with nary a squirm of
embarrassment into their obscenely expensive designer gowns and tuxedos,
as they parade down the red carpets to do their bit for the less
fortunate. What, if anything, goes through their minds as they sip
champagne and nibble canapes in aid of the dying, the abused and the
maimed, secure in the knowledge that these latter know their place and
will never intrude to spoil the fun?
The charity balls are usually
the major events in the social calendars of the great, the good and the
rich of Irish society. They get to dress up, show off their wealth, and
rub shoulders with their own kind, all in a good cause, of course.
Newspapers and celebrity magazines feed off the events with lavish
displays of photographs. A line of text is usually appended giving the
amount raised for charity. A warm glow pervades the air at the gorgeous
goodness of it all.
In a fashion article in this newspaper a few
weeks ago featuring charity ball organisers, one said that her ideal
charity event is Elton John’s, with its concept of wearing as many
diamonds as possible. Another spoke of the downside of €2,000 designer
gowns: once you wear them to a ball, it’s very hard to wear them again
to another event. She assured us, however, that she does get two to
three years out of an Armani outfit. A third tells us that she keeps the
clothes she likes, but the rest she gives away to one of her “cleaning
ladies” (note the plural).
These women are a step up on the ladies
who lunch, soldiering socially as they do for charity. And it is
certainly true that their efforts raise very substantial sums of money
for organisations which might otherwise either not survive or have to
curtail the services they provide. The charities concerned are rightly
grateful for their efforts, as indeed no doubt are the direct
beneficiaries of their bounty.
Looking at the area as a whole,
though, a few salient features emerge. In general, the charities which
benefit from the balls tend to be the less controversial, those which
devote themselves to healthcare or medical research, rather than any
which seek to effect fundamental change within society.
Giving money to a
hospital or a hospice through a charity ball does not threaten the
status quo. It does not challenge the fairness of a society where some
people get to shop for designer gear in New York and Paris while others
die homeless on Dublin’s streets, outside the glitz and the glamour. Nor
does it in any way tackle the fact that hospitals and hospices are in
desperate need of this charity as a direct result of the disgraceful
underfunding by the State.
Such challenges to the way we order
this society, entailing as they would the espousal, for instance, of
increasing taxes on the wealthy, would most likely be anathema to the
charity ball constituency.
They are the contents of company
boardrooms and their spouses, the shareholders of Ireland, and those
much-caressed creatures the entrepreneurs.
They are the kind of people
who approve, for instance, of the Irish Ferries approach towards
maximising profit.
They might decry the boot-boy tactics, but you
certainly won’t find many of them protesting against that company’s
actions on the streets of Dublin tomorrow.
Organising a charity do, to
help the victims of the untrammelled pursuit of wealth, would be more
their style.
Charity is, and has always been, the easy outlet for
the beneficiaries of our inequitable society, who may from time to time
feel sorry for the less fortunate. Vehicles for the distribution of
largesse were in the past very much the territory of the churches and
served to keep the poor in their place by instilling feelings of both
gratitude and insecurity.
The emphasis was on charity and
generosity rather than on the rights of people to services.
The charity
ball is the shiny, modern, secular replacement, complete with its fringe
benefits of networking and securing business contacts. One sales
recruitment firm has even singled out the charity ball (together with
the golf club) as a most profitable arena in which to do business.
But,
like their church-bound predecessors, today’s charity fundraisers are
also predicated on the principle that the poor and the downtrodden will
always be with us.
Nothing about them has the slightest intention
of shaking the comfortable notion that there will forever be an
unlimited supply of those in need of our generosity, which in turn
allows us to surround ourselves with an aura of virtue as we dance the
night away.
Restoring dignity to Magdalenes August 21st, 2003
Exactly
10 years ago, a firm of Dublin undertakers began a mass exhumation in
Drumcondra.
As far as they were concerned, the papers were all in order:
133 bodies were to be dug up and ferried to Glasnevin Cemetery, where
they would be cremated. It was a small burial plot, with the graves
unmarked except for a few plain black crosses.
Not exactly a
run-of-the-mill job for the undertakers, but not that unusual either. It
was only when they discovered 22 additional bodies that alarm bells
began ringing. This was a burial site for Magdalenes, women who had
effectively been locked up for most of their lives, working for no wages
in High Park convent, one of the largest and oldest Magdalene laundries
in the country.
By the early 1990s, the laundry had closed and
the nuns – the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of Refuge – were selling
their land to housing developers. The nuns had gambled and lost on the
stock exchange and needed cash.
The snag was the graveyard for the
Magdalene women who had died in their service was on the land they had
sold.
So the good sisters did a deal with the developers that each would
pay half the cost to clear the land of the remains.
To exhume a grave,
you need an exhumation licence from the Department of the Environment.
The nuns were granted such a licence for 133 bodies buried at the High
Park plot. The list of names they provided to the department makes for
interesting reading.
Twenty-three of the women are listed under
the heading “quasi-religious name” – the nuns admitted that they did not
know their real names.
They called them Magdalene of St Cecilia,
Magdalene of Lourdes, Magdalene of St Teresa and so on. Another woman
had only a first name.
The nuns told the department that as they had no
names, death certificates for these 24 women could not be produced.
The
department raised no objection, despite the fact that some of the women
had died as recently as the late 1960s.
The nuns also said that there
were no death certs for a further 34 women.
These women at least had
names.
But the cause and date of death for most of them are listed as
“not known”. Some of these women died as recently as the mid-1970s.
It
is a criminal offence to fail to register a death that occurs on your
premises.
This is normally done by a relative.
In the case of the
Magdalene women, it was the legal duty of the nuns to register their
deaths.
It would appear that for at least 58 of these women, the nuns
failed to do so.
And then there were the additional 22 bodies discovered
by the undertakers.
All work on the graves had to cease immediately, as
these remains were not covered by the exhumation licence.
What the
Department of the Environment then did beggars belief.
Rather than
halting proceedings to investigate, they simply put through an
additional licence to allow the nuns to remove all bodies from the
graveyard.
They didn’t even ask if anyone knew the identities of the
extra 22.
All but one of the bodies were cremated, destroying any
possibility of future identifications.
The nuns had been informed that
the cost of reburying the remains intact would be considerable, and so
they went for the cheaper option.
Until 20 years ago, cremation
was forbidden by Catholic Church canon law.
Even today it is frowned on
as undesirable.
Canon 1176 now “earnestly recommends that the pious
custom of burial be retained”.
None of this cut much ice with the
High Park nuns.
Cremation proceeded smoothly, despite the fact that the
State was fully aware that more than half the deaths of those exhumed
had never been certified.
The ashes were interred in a plot in
Glasnevin.
A headstone with a list of names now marks the grave.
However, a comparison of the names and dates on that headstone and the
list supplied by the nuns to the Department of the Environment is
startling.
Only 27 of the names and dates coincide.
So either the
list of names given to the department to obtain the exhumation licence
was substantially false, or the names on the Glasnevin gravestone bear
little relation to the identities of those actually buried there.
Last
Easter, I asked the nuns at High Park to explain all of this. They
chose not to respond to any of the 19 detailed questions I put to them.
Instead,
earlier this week, they issued a statement claiming that the exhumation
was carried out in order to provide the women with a permanent resting
place.
Their concern to respect the dead Magdalene women is no doubt
touching.
But might perhaps the Minister for Justice be concerned enough
to investigate so many unexplained and unregistered deaths?
And who
will care enough to restore to these women the dignity of their real
names – something the nuns stripped ruthlessly from them in life?
It
is surely the duty of the State to return some respect to these, its
citizens, whom it deserted so comprehensively both in life and in death.
Do They Think We’re Eejits?: A Selection of The Irish
Times Columns of 2003-2009, by Mary Raftery, is launched on February
22nd, and priced at €13.99