The congregation of nuns which ran the mother- and-baby home featured in the film Philomena has denied receiving money for babies put up for adoption.
The
Sisters of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary say no children “were
sold by any mother or the congregation, to any party, nor did the
congregation receive any monies in relation to adoptions while we were
running the mother and baby home”.
The film, which stars Judi Dench and Steve Coogan and is now open in cinemas, is based on the true story of Philomena Lee from Limerick. She became pregnant at 18 and was sent to a mother-and-baby home in Sean Ross Abbey, Roscrea, Co Tipperary.
Forced adoption
She was forced to give up her three-year-old son Anthony for adoption in 1955. Philomena focuses on her search to find her son, who was adopted by a couple in St Louis in the US and became Michael Hess.
He rose to the position of senior counsel in the Reagan and Bush snr administrations but died in 1995, aged 43, from an Aids-related illness.
The film, based on a book by former BBC journalist Martin Sixsmith, alleges that Anthony Lee and other children were sold to US families for a “donation” of £100.
Options
The congregation ran the mother-and-baby home between 1930 and its closure in 1970. Its spokeswoman Sr Julie Rose said: “In those days, the options open to single mothers were very restricted. Adoption by a family who could take care of the child was often seen as the best outcome.”
The
book states that Mr Hess, who is buried at the abbey, made several
trips there before he died, inquiring about the whereabouts of his
mother, but was told nothing.
Sr Julie said
records that used to be held by the congregation “were that of the
mother and up until the transfer of the records to the HSE, due to legal
constraints . . . the congregation was obliged not to divulge any
information held on file to children as this information was
confidential to their mother.”