INTERVIEW : Magdalene laundries became society’s dumping ground, says former Sister of Mercy Phyllis MacMahon
In
her early 20s Phyllis MacMahon was Sr Adrian of the Sisters of Mercy in
Galway where she stood in charge of dozens of girls and young women as
they scrubbed clothes in the Magdalene laundry on Forster Street.
Decades
later MacMahon, who became an actor after she quit the order, played
the role of Sr Augusta in 2002 in Peter Mullan’s Magdalene Sisters, the
film that did much to bring the existence of the laundries to national
and international attention.
She has written a play, Divorcing
God? based largely on her experiences in the Sisters of Mercy – a
congregation she had wanted to join since she was a seven-year-old
attending Mass with her mother in Dublin
On entering the order in
1952, she was filled with hopes of following the path of Sisters of
Mercy founder Catherine McAuley: “I was 17; I thought I was going to do
wonders for the poor and save the world. I was very idealistic.”
‘Fights would break out’
Six
years later she was sent to Forster Street to run part of its
operations. However, it was a punishment, not a sign of favour: “I had
been sent to the boarding school in Spiddal, but I was reported for
talking too much to the locals.”
From Finglas in Dublin, MacMahon,
who had joined the nuns against the wishes of her family, struggled in
Forster Street: “I was too young to be in charge of the girls. Often,
fights would break out. Not surprising that they would, given that you
had all these people held in one place. Sometimes I got the wash-board
in the face when I tried to stop them by standing in between them. That
was accidental; they weren’t trying to hit me.”
Some of the women
opted to stay by “consecrating themselves to the house”, wearing a black
dress. Most, though, wanted out quickly, some by escaping through a
window: “They were brought back by the guards.”
Punishment was
meted out for escapes: “They were taken to a small room where two of the
girls would hold the escapee down and a nun would hit them on the back
of the legs with a stick. It was like how children were beaten at the
time.”
Today, the religious congregations who ran the laundries
stand in front for blame, as they should, says MacMahon, but Irish
society cannot escape its responsibilities: “Society locked them up in
institutions and sent them its laundry.”
The laundries had begun
with high purpose, she believes, but changed over two centuries into
“asylums and institutions” where society “dumped the people that it
wanted to be rid of”, including “sisters raped by their brothers on
farms”.
Religious turmoil
“I remember
asking one nun why these girls were here. The reply was, ‘Ah, sure, God
help them, they can’t help themselves’. They really thought that they
were doing well by these women, even if it was said with a note of moral
superiority.”
Nearing her final vows, McMahon’s doubts about her
vocation were rejected by the Rev Mother, who dismissed a letter from
her mother saying it could not have been written by her.
Soon, MacMahon,
in a state of emotional and religious turmoil, was sent to a Jesuit
priest for counselling.
Surprisingly, he advised her to quit.
Having
become an actor, she appeared in Shaun of the Dead , an episode of A
Touch of Frost and as a prostitute in the hit TV mini-series, Pennies
from Heaven.
Later, she ran a restaurant, Trattoria Filomena near
St Paul’s Cathedral with her Italian husband, Bruno, until his early
death and then for a further 12 years.
“I had one photograph of me as
the blonde whore in John Boorman’s Leo The Last and one beside it from
my days in the Sisters of Mercy.”
Despite quitting the order, she
was unable to leave behind all of her life in the cloth.
“When my
husband died, do you know the people I rang first after he died? The
nuns. I spent the most impressionable years of my life there. I just
couldn’t get away from them, really.”