In a country like Ireland
“there is a public interest in supporting and defending independent
Protestant schools in order to allow the particular role of the
Protestant communities in Irish society to flourish,” the Catholic
Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said.
“These separate schools
have in fact lead to an enrichment of Irish society through allowing the
specific contribution to society of the Protestant communities to
emerge,” he said.
Speaking last night at a Contending Modernities conference in the University of Notre Dame’s
London centre, he noted Catholic dominance of the educational system in
Ireland was “an unintended fruit of history”.
He said “the national
school system introduced in Ireland in the mid-19th century aimed at
having a system of State schools for all, but with separate religious
education within the school. Some Protestant authorities rightly saw
that this system might effectively leave them as a permanent minority in
every school. They withdrew from the system, leaving the majority of
schools demographically Catholic and with the passage of time they
became institutionally Catholic.”
‘Growing pluralism’
‘Growing pluralism’
Now there was, he said, “a growing pluralism in patronage of schools in Ireland but the vast majority of the population attends a school that is Catholic.”
He believed “denominational education has a place within a
pluralist society but for that to work it requires that those in
leadership in both religious education and education of other
inspiration have to change attitudes and be mutually respectful and open
to dialogue”.