NUALA O’LOAN

Baroness Nuala O'Loan

Baroness Nuala O’Loan

Baroness Nuala O’Loan was the first Police Ombudsman in Northern Ireland, who carried a number of reports into some of the most controversial killings during the troubles. Originally from England, she was a solicitor and then a senior law lecturer at the University of Ulster. As a member of the House of Lords, she is a legislator. She has spoken about her Catholic faith on a number of occasions, visiting parishes in different parts of Ireland. So I listened to her talk at the Irish Catholic 125 years conference at All Hallows College in Dublin with particular interest. She made a number of interesting observations about the Irish government’s proposed legislation on abortion, including its provision where suicide is threatened by the mother. In order to give readers the chance to consider her remarks, I looked for a copy of her speech, which she kindly provided and I now publish in full:-

“It is  a great honour to be invited to speak to you at this important conference, important because it marks 125 years of publication by the Irish Catholic, and important too because we meet at a time of great hope for this Church of ours.  I would like to congratulate the Irish Catholic and its loyal staff for all that it has achieved over the years, and for being a source of light and understanding for those of us who read its columns, and who seek accessible answers to some of the great questions which arise in relation to our life and our faith.  Accessibility, in terms of format, but much more importantly in terms of content is profoundly important.  One of the problems which we face is that much of the authoritative written material about faith is articulated in language which can be very dense and of great complexity.  The Irish Catholic makes a great contribution in this and in the range of its coverage and photography!

Audience at Irish Catholic conference

Audience at Irish Catholic conference

It is wonderful, too, that as we meet the world here in Ireland is glorious, blue skies, wonderful sunshine.  I as thinking about it yesterday as I drove around the north – it seem as if all the flowers are blooming at once, flowers of every colour: deep pinks, crimson, lilac, the golden yellow of laburnum, the blues and whites – all so beautiful and all telling of the wonder of God’s creation and the beauty of His work.

I have been asked to speak about Catholicism in public life. The reality is that the complexities and challenges of faith are never more obvious than when one actually tries to live them, especially when one moves outside the comfort zone of church and people of a like mind into the public place.  That is, of course what we are all called to do, and that is what Jesus himself did, at the greatest personal cost.  Being called to Catholicism is not an easy thing, although the fundamentals of our faith are profoundly pure and simple.  We know them well.  We are called to love God and to love one another as he has loved us, to act justly, to love tenderly, to walk humbly.  We know that those who feed the hungry, visit the sick, comfort those who mourn, visit the imprisoned, etc. are blessed.   All very simple in theory.  All quite complex in the playing out of daily life, both at home and in the public sphere.

I wondered what I should say to you today about Catholicism in public life.  I wondered too what you might be expecting me to say.  The reality, as I am sure you know, is that each of us plays some role in public life, if we define public life as that part of the world which exists alongside our family and private life.  Our daily lives are lived in the public sphere – in community, in work, in school, college and university, in politics, in recreation and leisure pursuits. For some of us our public lives are more public than others.  For many of you your decision making will be your private business.  Very often people will not know whether you have agonised over the morality of something, whether it is ethical to act in a particular way.  For others their decision making is the subject to analysis and comment, some of it offensive, much of it robust.  Those of us who move across the public arena, whether by way of journalistic contribution or in politics or others can be very much aware of this.  it is part of our lives.  It can take courage to articulate the truth when it is not a commonly held or easily accepted  view.   We are much blessed, for example, by the integrity of columnists like Breda O’Brien who writes so informatively and so compellingly in defence of the right to life of the unborn. In a world which proclaims the defence of freedom of speech, and human rights, it can seem as if the right of freedom of religion, conscience and thought is not accorded the same respect as the other rights.  We have to reclaim that territory and speak with courage about what we believe.

There are those who said that we live in post Catholic Ireland, that religion has no part to play in public life.  To say this is to misunderstand the nature of Catholicism.  Robert Barron wrote of Christianity in his book, ‘The Strangest Way: Walking the Christian Path’:

‘Christianity, before all else, is a form of life, a path that one walks. It is a way of seeing, a frame of mind, an attitude, but more than this, it is a manner of moving and acting, standing and relating. It is not simply a matter of the mind but of the body as well. In fact, one could say that Christianity is not real until it has insinuated itself into the blood and the bones, until it becomes an instinct, as much physical as spiritual. Perhaps, the most direct description is this: Christianity, the way of Jesus Christ, is a culture, a style of life supported by a unique set of convictions, assumptions, hopes, and practices. It is like a game with distinctive texture, feel and set of rules’ [The Strangest Way 2002].

For those of us who are Catholic there cannot be and should not be any disconnect between our daily lives in the public place and our religious faith.  So a life lived in the community of the Church,  a life as part of the Body of Christ which is the Church, must be led in a way which reflects its divine maker and which acknowledges the responsibilities and great joys inherent in our greatest gift – our faith.  Once we accept the chain of connectedness from our baptism to our membership of that community, and, through the Eucharist to the fact that Christ lives in each of us, that he lives also in the lives of friends and stranger, that he is constantly to be encountered in the lives of all His people, even in the paedophile, even in the murderer, (utterly challenging as that may be), we live in a very different public place.  We no longer really have the option of behaving as if we really matter more than anyone else.  We no longer have the option of ignoring the common good and of not attempting to make a contribution to our brothers and sisters in Christ. To do so would be to ignore that Christ whom we profess to love as we walk along the way, deciding whether or not to pass by on the other side!

This faith of ours makes many calls on us.  As Christians, as Catholics we know that our faith calls us to honesty and integrity, but above all to holiness – as the Catechism tells us, to ‘do the will of the Father in everything, that they may wholeheartedly devote themselves to the glory of God and to the service of their neighbour’ [Catechism para 2013.2014]. And of course the reality is that so many Catholics do recognise this.  They do make a significant contribution.  John XXIII wrote of this 50 years ago, in his 1963 encyclical Pacem in Terris, Peace on Earth.  Talking of human society, he said:

‘through it, in the bright light of truth, men should share their knowledge, be able to exercise their rights and fulfil their obligations, be inspired to seek spiritual values; mutually derive genuine pleasure from the beautiful, of whatever order it be; always be readily disposed to pass on to others the best of their own cultural heritage; and eagerly strive to make their own the spiritual achievements of others. These benefits not only influence, but at the same time give aim and scope to all that has bearing on cultural expressions, economic, and social institutions, political movements and forms, laws, and all other structures by which society is outwardly established and constantly developed’.

And so it is – the Catholic Church has a proud reputation in terms of its contribution to the development of society across the world.  In country after country its missionaries, lay and religious have established the schools, the hospitals, the health centres, the social centres, the programmes for the relief of poverty, the development of agriculture, all the structures of a modern society, and in so doing have contributed to the growth of society.  In saying this I do not ignore the terrible scourge of child abuse, or the unfaithfulness of some members of our church, nor do I ignore the shocking failures at the heart of the Vatican.  But it is important to remember the good that was done, the sacrifice which was made by so many here and in foreign lands.  We had African visitors last month, a man on his 40s, his wife and their four children.  we had known him as a very bright but very poor, and often hungry  schoolboy for whom education had brought liberation. He is now a civil engineer working on water projects across Africa, and he had  had travelled with his family across the world,  to see the place which had brought the missionaries who built the schools he had attended.  It was both warming and humbling to see our world through their eyes, and to sit around our dinner table as his little daughter prayed the grace, praying for me who had cooked her dinner, giving thanks to God for all the fun they had and praying for all the little children in the world who do not have enough to eat. Life brings us many blessings, doesn’t it?

We all have to make choices about what is right and that which we know to be unethical or wrong in legal or moral terms.   It can challenge us all.  We often don’t think of the consequences of our decisions.   We could decide to drive too fast.  We could decide not to point out to a waiter that fact that there are drinks missing from the bill when we get it.  We could conclude that the taxman does not need our money as much as we do, and not declare all our income.  All these things, and many many more, are not ways which we should behave if we are followers of the man who walked the dusty roads of the Holy Land for such a brief time, before he allowed himself to be taken away and crucified.

Faith calls us to walk in a different way, acknowledging our call to give all we have for others, even when it is inconvenient, or too demanding, or frightening, or even when we are just feeling a bit lazy.  Our faith, though, is not a threat to others though some may interpret it as such.  For all of us, but particularly for those who carry responsibilities as influencers of political, social and religious development, as decision makers, as representatives of authority, our lives as Catholics should  permeate and enable every part of our beings, every conscious thought.   When we feel isolated or concerned about our capacity to do what is right, we need only remember the words of Jesus on so many occasions: at the Transfiguration, when he walked on the water, when he met the women at the tomb who could not find his crucified body: ‘be not afraid’.  Those words have comforted men and women over the ages, they have comforted me when I have feared because of what my public life called me to do.  Jesus left us himself in word and sacrament, we know, and in the words of scripture we find not only challenge (and there is plenty of that) but also comfort and viaticum, food for the journey.    I was very privileged towards the end of his life to come to know Cardinal Daly  who was wonderfully supportive to me at times of difficulty.  He did not tolerate self pity or anything like that, but he would pray with such love to the Father, calling him so tenderly, Abba Father, and he would quote, with a twinkle in his eye St Paul, who said: ‘I can do all things through him who strengthens me’ [Philippians 4:13].

Those called to public life in the world today will face many challenges.  The dilemmas are not new.  Speaking of this in Westminster Hall in 2010, Pope Benedict recalled:

‘the figure of Saint Thomas More, the great English scholar and statesman, who is admired by believers and non-believers alike for the integrity with which he followed his conscience, even at the cost of displeasing the sovereign whose “good servant” he was, because he chose to serve God first. He spoke of The dilemma which faced More in those difficult times, the perennial question of the relationship between what is owed to Caesar and what is owed to God’ .

He went on to say:

‘Religion… is not a problem for legislators to solve, but a vital contributor to the national conversation. In this light, I cannot but voice my concern at the increasing marginalization of religion, particularly of Christianity, that is taking place in some quarters, even in nations which place a great emphasis on tolerance. There are those who would advocate that the voice of religion be silenced, or at least relegated to the purely private sphere. There are those who argue that the public celebration of festivals such as Christmas should be discouraged, in the questionable belief that it might somehow offend those of other religions or none. And there are those who argue – paradoxically with the intention of eliminating discrimination – that Christians in public roles should be required at times to act against their conscience. These are worrying signs of a failure to appreciate not only the rights of believers to freedom of conscience and freedom of religion, but also the legitimate role of religion in the public square. I would invite all of you, therefore, within your respective spheres of influence, to seek ways of promoting and encouraging dialogue between faith and reason at every level of national life’ [http://www.thepapalvisit.org.uk/Replay-the-Visit/Speeches/Speeches-17-September/Pope-Benedict-s-address-to-Politicians-Diplomats-Academics-and-Business-Leaders].

The call could not be clearer.  People do seek to put pressure, as they always have done,  on Christians to act against their conscience. We can see it in Ireland today in the context of the Heads of Bill on abortion.  There is no duty on the state under Human Rights Law to provide abortion on demand. The current proposals,  as they stand, would result in a situation in which  Ireland faces the prospect under the proposed law of terminating the pregnancy of a mother whose baby has been in her  womb for up to nine months, because she is threatening to commit suicide.  Women in this situation require every assistance and support, they need compassion and pragmatic solutions to the problems  they face. But to suggest that abortion will solve the problem of threatened suicide not only fails to acknowledge and protect the little child in her womb, but, as research in 2011 shows, actually  increases the risk of suicidal behaviour by 155%.

The reality is that the only way in which abortion can be conducted in the later stages of pregnancy is either through normal delivery or Caesarian Section.  The mother must give birth. She is carrying a child and what will be removed from her womb will not be foetal tissue, but will in most cases be very recognisable as a little boy or a little girl. Who in their right minds can believe that going through the process of giving birth to a little child, which is intended to die because it has been deliberately born too early, will bring peace of mind to a girl or woman who is suicidal?

We face difficult ethical and moral issues in the UK too.  I think of the Bill which has been laid before Parliament this session which will permit assisted suicide, and which we must both challenge and debate very soon.  I am very clear that this bill must not be passed because it will leave sick, elderly and vulnerable people in a perilous situation in which issues of financial costs of care, and decisions about the value of their lives could be made, which might lead to them being euthanased.  In the Netherlands where euthanasia is lawful the most recent Report on the matter stated that over 300 people were put to death without their consent.  As we contemplate the horrendous suffering of some individuals, and as in some cases they approach the courts and legislators seeking changes to the law to permit assisted suicide or euthanasia, there is a temptation to think that it would be the hallmark of a civilised society to allow them to die at a time and in the manner of their choosing.  But it is not as simple as that.   All human life is sacred to God.  It is not ours to dispose of.  Rather it is our duty on all occasions to do all we can to protect it.

It can be easy to take the articulated majority view on things.  For elected politicians there is a great temptation to vote and behave in a way which they think will secure their seats at the next election.  That is very human.  But the reality is  that those who speak loudest are not necessarily the majority.  They are simply the people who speak loudest.  They may be presenting considered views, but the legislator must look at the exact words of any proposed text and work out what they mean and what the consequences will be.  He  or she must then make decisions about how to act. An interesting document from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, issued in 2002 is as resonant today on these issues as it was when it was issued:

‘The complex array of today’s problems branches out from here, including some never faced by past generations. Scientific progress has resulted in advances that are unsettling for the consciences of men and women and call for solutions that respect ethical principles in a coherent and fundamental way. At the same time, legislative proposals are put forward which, heedless of the consequences for the existence and future of human beings with regard to the formation of culture and social behaviour, attack the very inviolability of human life. Catholics, in this difficult situation, have the right and the duty to recall society to a deeper understanding of human life and to the responsibility of everyone in this regard. John Paul II, continuing the constant teaching of the Church, has reiterated many times that those who are directly involved in law-making bodies have a «grave and clear obligation to oppose» any law that attacks human life. For them, as for every Catholic, it is impossible to promote such laws or to vote for them.[19] As John Paul II has taught in his Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae regarding the situation in which it is not possible to overturn or completely repeal a law allowing abortion which is already in force or coming up for a vote, «an elected official, whose absolute personal opposition to procured abortion was well known, could licitly support proposals aimed at limiting the harm done by such a law and at lessening its negative consequences at the level of general opinion and public morality»’ [Evangelium Vitae, 73  JPII from DOCTRINAL NOTE on some questions regarding The Participation of Catholics in Political Life].

It is very difficult to find one’s self in the position in which one must vote for something one knows to be wrong  in order to try and prevent a greater harm.  This is what John Paul was telling us we must do.

Baroness Nuala O'Loan

Baroness Nuala O’Loan

I think, too, of the Marriage (Same Sex) Bill which is currently before the House of Lords and on which I spoke and voted on Tuesday last. The Church is very clear in her teaching that those who have a same sex orientation must be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity, and every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided. The European Court of Human Rights stated in 2012 that there is no discrimination in excluding same sex couples from marriage.

The UK Government, in their rush to pass this legislation and to provide equality, as they describe it, for same sex couples, have produced a bill which will create two types of marriage – marriage between a man and a woman which will continue to involve a lifelong commitment, has a sexual aspect involving consummation, and has a presumption that the husband is the father of any child born to the mother during the marriage, and that the partners will remain loyal to each other. That legal definition of marriage is the same as the Catholic definition of marriage.  Under the proposed English Law there will then be a second type of marriage which will be between same sex couples, has no requirement for consummation, in which any child of a mother cannot be presumed to be the child of the other partner, and in which a same sex partner cannot be divorced on grounds of adultery with another same sex person.  Effectively as I said, there will be two sets of rules: one for same sex couples, one for opposite sex couples. Is this equality?  Can it be right?  Will it not lead to endless legal challenges as parties to one type of  marriage seek to assert rights against the UK government in the European Court which are available to parties in the other type of marriage but not to them.  And what does the proposed law do to the institution of marriage and its role in society?

These are the types of issues which legislators must face.  I often walk through Westminster Hall and pass the spot on which Thomas More faced the judges and was sentenced to death for his refusal to yield to Henry V111’s demands.  He could have lived had he denied his faith.  He chose to go to his death rather then deny God.  We do not face such challenges today in most parts of the world.  We are subject to all sorts of derision and to contempt however.  For elected politicians there is always the risk that doing the right thing will lead to loss of an election, status, income and their whole life style.  Politicians, like influences and decision makers everywhere need your prayers and your support.

For all of us, as we contemplate the richness and wonder of the faith that is ours, as we thank God for the beauty of our world, for the great gifts he has given us there is still a need to be aware that we must constantly and consciously, if we really are part of the body of Christ, live our lives in the constant awareness that we are in the presence of Christ.  If we do this we will lead lives of prayerful alertness.  We will acknowledge our obligation to understand the teaching of our church, to distinguish between that which is doctrinal and binding on us and that which has evolved and will continue to evolve.  Under Canon Law, Catholics should:

 ‘distinguish carefully between the rights and the duties which they have as belonging to the Church and those which fall to them as members of the human society. They will strive to unite the two harmoniously, remembering that in every temporal affair they are to be guided by a Christian conscience, since no human activity, even of the temporal order, can be withdrawn from God’s dominion’ [Catechism paras  912, 913].

‘Formation and enrichment’ of all members of the Church, John Paul II said  will enable ‘the proclamation of Christ to reach people, mould communities, and have a deep and incisive influence in bringing Gospel values to bear in society and culture’. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops wrote in 2004 that:

‘Catholics who bring their moral convictions into public life do not threaten democracy or pluralism but enrich them and the nation. The separation of church and state does not require division between belief and public action, between moral principles and political choices, but protects the right of believers and religious groups to practice their faith and act on their values in public life. Catholics need to act in support of these principles and policies in public life. It is the particular vocation of the laity to transform the world’.

Finally then I want to return to that aspect of life which is critical for all of us  if we are to be able to fulfil this vocation which has so many aspects – from the call to holiness to the call to transform the world. We will only be able to do this if we make sure that we know that God holds us in the palm of his hand and if we make space in our lives for the Lord who loved us so much that he gave his life for us.  Maybe like me you can be very busy, you can feel that there is not much time for prayer, for reading of scripture, even for church and sacrament.  it is an easy trap to fall into.  The deepest traps are always the easiest to fall into, and the challenge for each of us is to ensure that we do not think that doing the work of the Lord is enough, that we pray by what we do and that will suffice.  We can delude ourselves, especially when things are going well.  We must make time too for the Lord of the work, for it is in and through and with Him that we will be able for the work, and that we will be gifted with that courage and energy which will enable us to do what we should do.

As we gather together today, we do so in hope: that hope of eternal life, which is already happening as we walk our journey home to God, for death it was written is an horizon  and “an horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight” [Rossiter, W Raymond  1840-1918] but also in the hope that our Church, which has been much battered will grow stronger, more attuned to the call of scripture, and will be a body which truly is the body of Christ here on earth.   As Pope Francis said last week, the Church is ‘the work of God, born of His love and progressively built in history”  “born of God’s desire to call all men and women to communion with him, to friendship with him, even further, to participate as his children in his very divinity’.   

It is perhaps appropriate to end with some words which are attributed to St. Augustine of Hippo [354-430AD] :

‘God of our life, there are days when the burdens we carry chafe our shoulders and weigh us down; when the road seems dreary and endless, the skies grey and threatening; when our lives have no music in them,  and our hearts are lonely, and our souls have  lost their courage.  Flood the path with light, run our eyes to where the skies are full of promise; tune our hearts to brave music; give us the sense of comradeship with heroes and saints of every age; and so quicken our spirits that we may be able to encourage the souls of all who journey with us on the road of life, to Your honour and glory’.

Baroness Nuala O'Loan

Baroness Nuala O’Loan

VIGIL FOR LIFE

Message from rally to Leinster House legislators

Message from Vigil for Life rally to Leinster House legislators

They came in their coachloads from all parts of the island: North, South East and West. Organisers say a crowd of 50,000 people, young, old and middle-aged, attended the national Vigil for Life on Saturday (8th June) at Merrion Square in Dublin city centre. Among the slogans they chanted: “We are Pro-Life” and “Kill the Bill”.

Mickey Harte and Peter Mathews TD

Mickey Harte and Peter Mathews TD

One of the first people I noticed near the platform was the Fine Gael TD for Dublin South, Peter Mathews. He is a former classmate of mine in secondary school in Dublin. I mentioned him in a recent blog on Mount Anville. Close by was another TD, Peadar Tóibín of Sinn Féin (Meath West) and also the current Tyrone GAA football manager, Mickey Harte. Mickey applauded following the video contribution by his son-in-law John McAreavey. Mr McAreavey warned against the development of an abortion culture and said there was no more positive thing than standing up for the human rights of another person, especially the most vulnerable, and unborn children in danger of abortion were about as vulnerable as it got.

Mickey Harte watches John McAreavey's contribution
Mickey Harte watches John McAreavey
Meath West TD Peadar Tóibín, Sinn Féin

Meath West TD Peadar Tóibín, Sinn Féin

Peter Mathews became the first government TD to break ranks and commit to voting against the proposed abortion legislation when it comes before the Daíl. He told the Irish Independent:- “I will do what I have to do and that is vote against the bill”, because it is “mistaken in its foundation……It is a very badly formulated bill, on bad foundations and it should be withdrawn…..I will not support the bill as it stands. I will vote against”, he said. In his view, legislation for the X Case is not required. He told the newspaper he is prepared to face the consequences of voting against the party whip. “Anything I do in life has its consequences and I will deal with the consequences when and if they arise”, Mr Mathews told Gareth Naughton.

Crowd in Merrion Square

Crowd in Merrion Square

The Fine Gael member made his pledge after the Taoiseach Enda Kenny had rejected a call from the Archbishop of Dublin Dr Diarmuid Martin for deputies to be given a free vote on the proposals. For further details of Archbishop Martin’s views, see his interview in the Irish Independent on Saturday. The Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin has given his TDs a free vote, although this was against his original wishes and was granted largely to avoid a damaging split in his parliamentary party.

Vigil for Life

Vigil for Life

In looking through the photographs I took at the rally I noticed many smiling faces among the crowd. I have already referred to the range of age groups reflected in the gathering. What was also noticeable was that most of the platform speakers and contributors were women and there seemed to be a female majority amongst the attendance. One of the video contributions was by Celeste Beal King, grand-niece of the assassinated US civil rights leader Martin Luther King.

Crowd at Vigil for Life

Crowd at Vigil for Life

Placard carried at Rally

Placard carried at Rally

Maria Steen, Iona Institute, addressing rally

Maria Steen, Iona Institute, addressing rally

Banner at Rally

Banner at Rally

IC125 CONFERENCE ALL HALLOWS

All Hallows College, Dublin

All Hallows College, Dublin

Celebrating 125 years of the Irish Catholic newspaper, a conference was held at All Hallows College in Dublin entitled Horizon of Hope. I have only been there once or twice before. My uncle the late Fr Harry Smyth CM was a member of the Vincentian order and occasionally stayed there when visiting Dublin.

Fr Harry Smyth CM & his sister at time of ordination

Fr Harry Smyth CM & his sister at time of ordination

He was one of the 6000 Irish missionaries trained there who have been sent out into various countries over the past 170 years of the College. But now according to Fr Pat McDevitt CM, President of the College, said a different kind of missionary was needed for the world today: the students come from wide variety of communities.

Archbishop Charles Brown, Fr Pat McDevitt CM, John Waters

Archbishop Charles Brown, Fr Pat McDevitt CM, John Waters

One common interest among the “new” missionaries was concern for the needs of the poor, Fr McDevitt told the opening of #IC125. He was appointed to All Hallows in November 2001 when he was Associate Professor of Education at de Paul University in Chicago, his place of birth in the United States. The College is now part of Dublin City University and recently launched a plan to build its reputation as a centre of excellence for innovative teaching & learning, community-based service learning,  transnationality and applied/community-based research.

Editor, Irish Catholic: Michael Kelly

Editor, Irish Catholic: Michael Kelly

Papal Nuncio Archbishop Charles Brown was introduced by the Editor of the Irish Catholic, Michael Kelly. He told the conference he saw signs of hope in Ireland during visits to dioceses: shoots of new life springing up. One of the signs of new hope is the Irish Catholic newspaper, the principal voice of Catholics in the print media, according to Archbishop Brown and the perfect answer to clericalism. Columnist John Waters then spoke. He said Catholicism had nourished Irish culture for 1500 years. In his address he also made the point that it was the absence of questions that was most terrifying: the questions that were being eliminated from our culture. A ‘benign tolerance’ towards Catholicism is the best you will get in the present day mainstream media, he said.

Sarah Carey

Sarah Carey

Breda O'Brtien

Breda O’Brtien

Breda O’Brien spoke about “Catholic spirituality — our best hope”. Despair is not an option a Christian can afford to indulge in”, she said. She said the huge sense of the sacred in our religion eg Eucharist/Holy Communion had been lost, a point also raised by an audience member. Sarah Carey’s presentation was about marketing the Mass. ESRI Mass attendance survey: 42% of Catholics weekly, mainly over 65s (70%).

Baroness Nuala O'Loan

Baroness Nuala O’Loan

Former Northern Ireland Police Ombudsman Baroness Nuala O’Loan spoke very strongly on the proposed change to Irish law on abortion in cases where a threat of suicide existed. For those who wish to see her comments, I have published her script in a later blog. Other contributors to the conference included writer, author and playwright Mary Kenny, David Quinn of the Iona Institute and a “Youth Perspective” delivered by Maura Garrihy who went on to participate in the Vigil for Life national rally and the Meath footballer Joe Sheridan. The conference was brought to a close with a panel discussion, chaired by Eileen Dunne, newscaster and presenter of “The God Slot” on RTÉ Radio 1.

Eileen Dunne chairing panel discussion

Eileen Dunne chairing panel discussion

David Quinn, Iona Institute with Michael Kelly, Irish Catholic

David Quinn, Iona Institute with Michael Kelly, Irish Catholic

Mary Kenny

Mary Kenny

ENTERPRISE TRAIN FIRE

Train loco on fire: Photo PSNI Newry & Mourne via facebook

Train loco on fire: Photo PSNI Newry & Mourne via facebook

I have a lot of sympathy for the train passengers whose journey from Belfast to Dublin last night was disrupted by a fire on board a locomotive at the tail end (from what I see in the picture) of the 18:05 Enterprise service from Central station to Connolly. Reports of the incident carried by BBC News and other outlets say there were 114 passengers on board the train when the driver (presumably at the other end) realised there was a problem in the engine compartment. He was forced to bring the train to a halt at the former Goraghwood station in County Armagh, a few miles from Newry.

Goraghwood Station on the GNR Enterprise service: Photo Wilson Adams: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license

Goraghwood Station GNR Enterprise service: Photo Wilson Adams: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license

Goraghwood station was closed in 1965. It used to be the stop for the customs check by HM Customs & Excise, although the process was speeded up for train passengers from 1947 when customs checks were added at Great Victoria Street station in Belfast and Amiens Street station in Dublin. A General Order issued by Customs in London in 1923 following partition and the creation of a land boundary noted as follows:-

*Note. ____  There are three Customs Stations on the G.N.R. Main Line in Northern Ireland, viz.: Goraghwood, Portadown and Belfast. Trucks from the Free State for Railway Stations short of Portadown will be cleared at Goraghwood; all others for any stations short of Belfast, at Portadown; and trucks for Belfast, at Belfast. Passengers will be dealt with at Goraghwood or at Portadown, according to which is the first scheduled stop at each train.

A former customs man, Ronald, remembers his time on duty there:-

“The main railway line between Belfast and Dublin passed through the Border Railway Station at Goraghwood in Newry.  The Daily Express Trains, ‘The Enterprise’ stopped at Goraghwood for Customs Clearance, a staff of LPM’s  boarding the trains and obtaining declarations from the passengers, any Revenue payments being called for by the Preventive Officer in attendance. Bars on board the Dublin/Belfast services were sealed after declaration by the Catering Staff. Secondly, the Guinness Supply Train en route from Dublin to Belfast, stopped at Goraghwood every night with its load, which was examined, samples being taken by the Officer i/c for submission to the Government Chemist“. HM-Customs-Waterguard-L Archives 19 NOV 2007 

I wonder did they ever get a chance to sample any of it themselves!

However it was not a customs check that stopped the main rail service between the two cities last night but rather the problem of an engine fire. A few observations about the incident. I have not used the Enterprise service in recent times, preferring instead to go by car on the new motorway. A journey from South Belfast to South Dublin can now be done in under two hours. The train runs eight times daily (Monday to Saturday) with a reduced service on Sundays between the cities but often with stops, which means the journey from city centre to city centre usually takes two hours and ten minutes. The Aircoach service goes from Great Victoria Street (Glengall Street) to O’Connell Street in Dublin in the same time and is generally cheaper, as is the frequent Translink/Bus Éireann express service. So the cost and the road have played a major part in the reduction of passenger numbers on the Enterprise, which were also reduced at the time the viaduct at the Malahide estuary partially collapsed in August 2009 and was closed for three months for repairs.

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Enterprise Train at Lisburn: Photo © Michael Fisher

My recent contact with the Enterprise has been sightings of one of the trains in various locations. I noticed it going through Adelaide station in Belfast, with black smoke coming from the exhaust and I thought it was not very environmentally friendly. I saw it in Lisburn station heading for Belfast at the time I was going to the Balmoral Show last month and I got a picture of it. A few days ago as I headed on the A1 to Dublin outside Newry, I noticed the Belfast-bound train going across the Craigmore viaduct near the station at Bessbrook. The first thing that came to mind was how dirty the front engine looked and that it was a poor advertisement for what is supposed to be a “flagship service”, according to Translink.

I am not certain how many train units are currently in service. But according to the records, there are nine 201-Class locomotives built by General Motors (1994-5) in use for the Enterprise. Two of them (8208 River Lagan and 8209 River Foyle) are owned by Translink, the other seven belong to Iarnród Éireann (Irish Rail). The Wikipedia entry records that the locos have had a chequered service history and that “the authors of Jane’s Train Recognition Guide noted that IÉ had had problems with engine fires and bogie cracks” (Harper Collins, London 2005). Last night’s was not the first such incident.

Translink advised on twitter that there was already a problem with the 16:50 Dublin to Belfast service: “1650 Dublin – Belfast is now 35 minutes late – Will be formed of 4 coaches. 1st class not available & catering is reduced.” When the problem on the 18:05 service to Dublin arose, the company initially advised that “Replacement road transport will be provided between Newry and Dublin Connolly.” But after ensuring that the passengers were led to safety in the opposite end of the train, they were kept waiting until an Iarnród Éireann train arrived on the other track and the passengers were led across a ramp from one train to the other, assisted by the Northern Ireland Transport Minister and local MLA Danny Kennedy and Translink staff. The passengers arrived in Dublin after 1am, nearly five hours late.

Fire on board Enterprise locomotive: Photo: PSNI Newry & Mourne via Facebook

Fire on board Enterprise locomotive: Photo PSNI Newry & Mourne via facebook

At the end of the day, no-one was injured. Mr Kennedy said there would be a full investigation. The loco involved was number 230, River Bandon, and is part of the Iarnród Éireann stock. They are model type JT42HCW, fitted with an EMD 12-710G3B engine of 3200 hp, weigh 112 tonnes and have a maximum speed of 164 km/h (102 mph). The Enterprise locos all operate on a push-pull basis.

MOUNT ANVILLE ALUMNI

Samantha Power, interviewed by me for RTÉ News March 2008

Samantha Power, interviewed by me for RTÉ News March 2008

The appointment by President Obama of human rights adviser Samantha Power to the post of US ambassador at the United Nations was greeted with particular interest at Mount Anville girls’ school in Goatstown in South Dublin. It means that three past pupils educated there by the Sacred Heart nuns now hold some of the most important positions in the world. It is also the Alma Mater of the former Irish President Mary Robinson, now UN Special Envoy to the Great Lakes in central Africa,  and of the Secretary General of the European Commission, Catherine Day, who was a near neighbour of ours in Mount Merrion when I moved back to Dublin in 1967.

I was already familiar with Mount Anville from the 1960s as my aunt is a member of the Sacred Heart congregation (RSCJ) and entered the religious life there. She taught for a while in the Montessori school, where she ran soccer games for the children, as my former secondary school class colleague Peter Mathews TD once recalled! Over the years we have been privileged to celebrate a number of important family occasions with the community there. Now as in many towns and cities in Ireland, the nuns no longer occupy the convent, but tomorrow (June 7th) on the feast of the Sacred Heart, they will be gathering for Mass at the original convent building, once the home of engineer William Dargan. The school has a classical-style chapel, designed by EW Pugin and GC Ashlin in 1866. I understand they are hoping to open a heritage centre later this year, in which the history of the convent and the associated schools will be displayed.

Mary Robinson

Mary Robinson

One of the highlights of the calendar last year was the visit by President Robinson to deliver the Barat lecture, named after the founder (1826) of the Society of the Sacred Heart, St Madeleine Sophie.  In her speech Mary Robinson spoke warmly and movingly about the main points of her career as a lawyer, Senator, President of Ireland (her greatest honour she said), UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, and lately, her work for climate justice.  She also participated in a questions and answers session with the secondary school students.  She spoke about her time spent as a boarder in Mount Anville in the late 1950s (Mary Bourke from Ballina in County Mayo). She recalled reading in the school library about Eleanor Roosevelt, someone she said who had inspired her in her formative years. In March, she was in Belfast for a memorial service to celebrate the life of the former trade unionist and human rights activist, the late Inez McCormack.

Catherine Day

Catherine Day

Catherine Day was profiled recently in the Village magazine. She was appointed Secretary General of the European Commission in Brussels in 2005.  Born in Dublin in 1954, she was brought up in Mount Merrion and educated at Mount Anville. She has a BA in economics and an MA in International Trade and Economic Integration from University College Dublin. I remember her interest in the “Yes to Europe” campaign which we ran as students (Young European Federalists) in the 1972 referendum on Ireland’s entry to the EEC, as it was then known.  She joined the European Commission in 1979 and the cabinet of Ireland’s Richard Burke in 1982 at the age of 28, staying for a term with his Irish successor, Peter Sutherland, competition commissioner. She then transferred to the cabinet of the UK’s Leon Brittan for two terms. She returned to work for him in 1996 as director for relations with third-world countries. She became deputy director in Chris Patten’s external relations where she was deeply involved with the enlargement of the Union from 15 countries to today’s 27. Before her appointment as head civil servant she was in charge of the Environment Directorate-General.

Samantha Power (Photo: broadsheet.ie)

Samantha Power (Photo: broadsheet.ie)

Samantha Power was interviewed by Donal Lynch for the Irish Independent during a visit to Galway in April 2008 shortly after she had made a “blooper” about Hillary Clinton (I was able to get Samantha’s response during an earlier visit to Belfast). She explained how her parents had lived in Ballsbridge in Dublin. Her father, from Athlone, was a dentist and her Cork-born mother was training to be a doctor. She attended the Montessoro school at Mount Anville.  Her parents’ marriage was floundering and her mother went for further study to America, taking Samantha then aged nine and her five-year-old brother with her.

“I can clearly remember my first day of American public school in Pittsburgh. I had to wear my Mount Anville school uniform in front of all those kids because my mom didn’t have any money for new clothes. It was totally humiliating for life. The shirt, black leather shoes and pleated skirt. Years of therapy later I’m still not over it”, she laughs. “If you really want to know how I got interested in war zones you’d have to go back to that first day of school in the Mount Anville uniform.”

Those remarks were picked up by a blogger “Irish Media” in an article on “Samantha Power and Sacred Heart nuns – Magan’s World, Sept 2008”. She recalled that:-

my very best friend between the ages of four to eight in Mount Anville, Montessori School, at the Sacred Heart convent in Dublin had been called Samantha Power. We had spent every free moment together, gossiping and playing make-believe in our special den under a bush beside the tennis courts“.

So confirmation of her association with the nuns.

In 2007 the nuns handed over control to the laity and the schools now come under the aegis of the Sacred Heart Education Trust. The boarding school which my sister attended for a while on our return from London closed in 1981. Other famous past pupils include former Fine Gael Education Minister and TD Gemma Hussey, consultant geriatrician and former IMO President Dr Christine O’Malley, Sheila Humphreys of Cumann na mBan, an activist during the war of independence, the late television documentary maker Mary Raftery, the actress and model Alison Doody and the social entrepreneur Caroline Casey of Kanchi (formerly the Aisling Foundation), to name but a few!

MARTIN O’HAGAN

Martin O'Hagan: Photo Kevin Cooper

Martin O’Hagan: Photo Kevin Cooper

Passing through the centre of Lurgan in County Armagh last night (Tuesday) on my way back to Belfast from Clogher, I was thinking of Martin O’Hagan. The 51 year-old Sunday World reporter was shot dead by loyalist paramilitaries as he made his way home from a pub in the town centre, along with his wife Marie. It happened on a Friday night, September 28th 2001. The “Red Hand Defenders” a cover name used by the UVF claimed responsibility. No-one has yet been prosecuted for the murder of Martin, the only journalist to be killed during the conflict in the North. In January this year the Northern Ireland Director of Public Prosecutions announced that there would be no prosecution in relation to the killing, a decision that was criticised by the NUJ.

IFJ Congress in session at Dublin Castle

IFJ Congress in session at Dublin Castle

Today I was in Dublin where the International Federation of Journalists is holding its 28th world congress at Dublin Castle on the theme “Leading the Global Fightback”. Kevin Cooper and myself ran an information stand at lunchtime for the delegates about journalist safety. It was the theme of a conference in Belfast organised by the Belfast and District Branch of the NUJ in September 2011, at which the anniversary of Martin O’Hagan’s death was commemorated. Copies of the report of that conference will be available at the stall at Printworks. It also coincided with another conference on the safety of media workers held in Belfast’s Linenhall Library this morning, organised by Gerry Carson, Secretary of the NUJ Belfast & District Branch.

NUJ Belfast & District Vice Chair Michael Fisher with NUJ General Secretary Michelle Stanistreet & Irish Secretary Seamus Dooley

NUJ Belfast & District Vice Chair Michael Fisher with NUJ General Secretary Michelle Stanistreet & Irish Secretary Seamus Dooley

Kevin Cooper, Belfast & District Branch with NUJ President Barry McCall

Kevin Cooper, Belfast & District Branch with NUJ President Barry McCall

This evening a simple commemoration took place.

Standing Up for Journalism:

Delegates assembled on the steps of the Printworks at 7pm following close of business for a series of symbolic events demonstrating our commitment to journalism while commemorating those who have died in the service of our profession since 27th World Congress 2010

19.10  Distribution of floral tributes

19.20 Wreath laying at Veronica Guerin monument, Dubh Linn Garden, Dublin Castle

19.30 Freedom Walk to Dublin City Hall

19.50 Arrival at Dublin City Hall

20.00 Welcome by Gerry Curran, Cathaoirleach, Irish Executive Council, NUJ

20.10- 21.30: Reception and social evening 

IFJ President Jim Boumelha

IFJ President Jim Boumelha

Time to Vote! NUJ President Barry McCall

Time to Vote! NUJ President Barry McCall

DUBLIN’S FALLEN HERO

Nelson Pillar after the explosion March 1966 NLI Ref.: WALK138A  National Library of Ireland on The Commons @ Flickr Commons

Nelson Pillar after the explosion March 1966 NLI Ref.: WALK138A
National Library of Ireland on The Commons @ Flickr Commons

Author Dennis Kennedy and myself

Author Dennis Kennedy and myself

This evening (Tuesday) I launched a book in Belfast by the former Irish Times journalist Dennis Kennedy about the history of the Nelson Pillar in Dublin. It used to mark the centre of the city in O’Connell Street (formerly Sackville Street) beside the GPO. Now we have The Spire.

The Spire: Photo  © Michael Fisher

The Spire: Photo © Michael Fisher

A bomb explosion in the early hours of March 8th 1966 toppled Admiral Horatio Nelson from his perch and damaged a section of the 121 ft high column. The remaining stump and the large base which contained the entrance where you used to be able to go in and climb up 168 steps to the top to view the skyline had to be blown up by Irish Army engineers six days later. In the process they succeeded in causing more damage to premises in the surrounding area than the original explosion. The blast is thought to have been the work of a couple of former IRA members, although that group denied responsibility. It coincided with the 50th anniversary of the Easter Rising. The pillar had been opened in October 21st 1809, the fourth anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar. The inscription on the memorial plaque read as follows:-

 “By the blessing of Almighty God To Commemorate the Transcendent Heroic Achievements of the Right Honourable Horatio Lord Viscount Nelson Duke of Bronti in Sicily, Vice-Admiral of the White Squadron of his Majesty’s Fleet, Who fell gloriously in the Battle of Cape Trafalgar On the 21st Day of October, 1805, when he obtained for his Country a Victory over the Combined Fleets of France and Spain, Unparalleled in Naval History. This first stone of a Triumphal Pillar was laid by His Grace, Charles Duke of Richmond and Lennox, Lord Lieutenant General & General Governor of Ireland, On the 15th Day of February, In the Year of Our Lord 1808, And in the 48th Year of the Reign of our most Gracious Sovereign, GEORGE THE THIRD, In Presence of the Committee, appointed by the Subscribers, for erecting this Mounument“.

Dublin's Fallen Hero: Dennis Kennedy

Dublin’s Fallen Hero: Dennis Kennedy

The book launch was at No Alibis bookshop on Botanic Avenue at 5:30pm. The book is published by Ormeau Books, 3 Mornington, BELFAST BT7 3JS and costs £10 or can be purchased for €15 including free postage.

Author Dennis Kennedy and myself outside No Alibis bookstore

Author Dennis Kennedy and myself outside No Alibis bookstore

Nelson’s Pillar was the subject of a Scannal documentary on RTE1 in 2010. In January 2010 my nephew wrote the following in his blog on Dublin life and culture “Come Here to Me“:

For 157 years, he kept “a watchful half-eye over Ireland’s capital city”.

January 28, 2010 by Sam:

Earlier this week, RTE broadcast a very well made documentary on the history of Nelson’s Pillar. The programme contains amazing archive footage along with contributions from Des Geraghty, Jimmy Magee and David Norris……Though it focuses on the bombing of 1966, the documentary tells also tells the fascinating story of how in 1955 a group of UCD students, involved with the Irish National Student Council (INSC), occupied the pillar. Dropping a banner of Kevin Barry over the edge, they tried to melt Nelson’s statue with homemade “flame throwers”. Gardaí used hammers to break into the pillar and tried to arrest the students but they had to be released after the Gardaí were attacked by sympathetic members of the public. After the statue was blown up in May 1966, Nelson’s head was stolen by NCAD students from a storage shed in Clanbrassil Street as a fund-raising prank to help clear their debts. Wearing sinister black masks, they held a very civil press conference explaining their motives. The head made several secret appearances over the next six months including making its way onto the stage of a Dubliners concert in The Olympia Theatre!

Nelson’s head now rests peacefully in the Gilbert Library in Pearse Street. Photo by Alastair Smeaton, Dublin Public Libraries.

Head of Nelson

Head of Nelson

LONDON TRANSPORT

Haydon the Womble: AFC Wimbledon mascot

Haydon the Womble: AFC Wimbledon mascot

While I was writing yesterday about the Church of Ireland, one of its clergy the Reverend Patrick Comerford was blogging about a favourite subject of mine, the London Undeground: Mind the Gap, Avoid eye contact and Move along the Platform! He even mentioned my beloved Wombles of Wimbledon Common, a place where I used to go for walks around “Caesar’s Camp“, Cannizaro Park and the windmill (1817) near the golf course.

I think that title sums up well many of the features of tube travel, particularly during rush hour. He made the point that the largest part of the underground is in fact overground. Certainly many sections of the various lines run out into the suburbs. Even the original Metropolitan Line running from Baker Street and Aldgate now serves places like Amersham and Chesham in Buckinghamshire, Watford in Hertfordshire and Uxbridge. The section of the District line from Wimbledon as far as West Brompton (the stop for Chelsea FC at Stamford Bridge) is overground and crosses the River Thames at Putney.

There is now a London Overground network, interconnecting with many of the stations on the Underground. Construction is also proceeding on the £14.8 billion Crossrail project. In his blog Patrick also mentions one of my favourite London termini, namely Waterloo station, which serves Wimbledon and is the starting point for the South West routes to the Coast including Southampton and Portsmouth.

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Patrick Comerford

Mind the Gap, avoid eye contact,  and move along the platform

Harry Beck’s map of the Underground, first produced in 1931, was inspired by electrical circuit diagrams

For a few days recently, I took part in a number of meetings at the London offices of Us, the Anglican mission agency previously known as USPG (the United Society for the Propagation of the Gospel), including a planning meeting for the annual conference of Us at the High Leigh Conference Centre later this month.

The offices of Us are on the top floor of a former factory building in Great Suffolk Street, Southwark. On one side, we were looking out at the London Eye; on the other side was the Gherkin, a modern iconic building in the financial heart of the City of London; below us, trains were trundling away into the Tube station at Southwark.

During that week, I made a number of cross-London journeys on the Underground between the stations at Southwark and Westbourne Park for the Anglican Communion Office at Tavistock Crescent.

My mild colour-blindness and short-sightedness make it difficult for me to read the Tube maps in the heave-ho of rush-hour commuting (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The map of the Underground is so familiar to many people, that even if they never visit London they easily associate the primary colours with different lines: Red (Central), Yellow (Circle), Green (District), Blue (Victoria), and so on.

Constantly, though, my mild colour-blindness and short-sightedness make it difficult for me to read the Tube maps, particularly in the heave-ho of rush-hour commuting, at times unable to distinguish between Northern Black and Piccadilly Dark Blue, between Victoria Blue and Piccadilly Dark Blue, and Metropolitan Dark Red and Central Red. But then, colour-blindness and ham-fisted efforts to use my pidgin Italian recently left me boarding the wrong train, on the wrong platform, at the wrong time in Tuscany.

Mapping the Underground

There are 426 escalators on the Underground and with 23 Waterloo has the most (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

I suppose most of us who use the London Underground on a regular basis just keep our heads down, avoid eye contact and get into “auto-drive” mode as we work our way between stations and change lines. We never really get to appreciate where we are or where we are going.

At Southwark station one afternoon, a woman asked the cheapest way to her destination. “By walking” was the witty reply. “But it’s much slower.”

Many of us can read the London Underground map, but few of us would ever be able to follow the route if we had to walk between places more than one or two stations apart.

Mark Mason, in his new book Walk The Lines – The London Underground, Overground. has done precisely that. He has walked the entire length of the London Underground, but has walked it overground, passing every station on the way and flagging up all the sights, sounds and soul of what he claims is “the greatest city on earth.”

Underground mainly means overground … waiting on the platform at Westbourne Park (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Standing at Wetsbourne Park station in warm sunshine recently, I realised the largest part of the London Underground runs overground. I was reminded of ‘The Wombling Song’ from The Wombles:

Underground, overground, wombling free,

The Wombles of Wimbledon Common are we.

And, of course, Uncle Bulgaria came to mind too, “with his map of the world” that would take him to Tobermory.

Indeed, almost 60 per cent of the Underground runs overground – 146 miles or 58% of the 253 miles of the tracks run above ground; only 93 miles run in deep tunnels, and a further 20 miles in shallow tunnels. There is a prevalent north/south divide, with less than 10 per cent of stations south of the Thames.

Celebrating a century and a half

Protesters can be found at many stations any day, but since 2003 buskers need a licence (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Earlier this year, London Underground marked the 150th anniversary of the first Tube journey on 9 January 1863. The London Underground was the vision of Charles Pearson (1793-1862), who first thought of a Fleet Valley rail tunnel in 1845.

The engineering designs were produced by Sir John Fowler (1817-1898), who also designed the Forth Railway Bridge. Most of the District Line was designed by Sir John Wolfe-Barry (1836-1918), who also designed Tower Bridge. But the first Tube journey did not take place for another 20 years.

The first Tube line was built by the Metropolitan Railway, a private company. It took 21 years to complete the Inner Circle, and when the Circle Line opened in 1884, The Times described travelling on it as “a form of mild torture.”

By then, over 800 trains were running on the Inner Circle each day. A full journey from Stockwell to the City on the City and South London Railway, now part of the Northern Line, took just 18 minutes.

The Waterloo and City Line was the only other line built before the turn of the century. The Great Northern and City Line, between Moorgate and Finsbury Park, was mostly completed by 1902.

The Underground became known as the “Tube” in the early 1900s, when the Central London Railway (now the Central Line) was nicknamed the “Twopenny Tube” by the Daily Mail five days after it opened.

The “Twopenny Tube” line significantly boosted profits for shops around Oxford Street and Regent Street, and in 1909, Selfridges lobbied – unsuccessfully – to have Bond Street station renamed after Selfridges.

War-time shelter

Passenger etiquette often demands “eyes down” and “avoid eye contact” (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Women began to make up staff shortages on the Underground during World War I. When Maida Vale station opened in 1915, it was entirely staffed by women.

Police reports estimate 300,000 people took shelter in Tube stations during the German bombing raids on London in 1917. A memorial at Baker Street commemorates 137 Metropolitan Line workers killed in World War I.

Finding the right line is a problem for anyone who is colour-blind

The Underground expanded rapidly in the 1930s. But this came to an abrupt halt with the outbreak of World War II. Within a few days, the Underground was used to evacuate 600,000 Londoners, mainly children and pregnant women, to the countryside.

During the war, signs at Underground stations warned passengers to carry their gas masks, and .posters warned them not to use the stations as air-raid shelters. However, when the East End suffered the first of many heavy bombing raids on 7 September 1940, there was a rush to the Underground stations.

Many got round the sheltering ban by buying cheap penny travel tickets and then refusing to leave the platforms. Trains continued to run throughout the Blitz, leading to crowded stations. Soon, about 177,000 people were sheltering in the Underground each night. A government U-turn on 8 October 1940 brought an end to the unenforceable ban on sheltering in the Tube.

Between September 1940 and May 1941, 198 people were killed when Tube shelters were hit directly by bombs. In one of the worst incidents, 64 people were killed. When Bank station was hit on 13 January 1941, 56 people were killed, but details were strictly censored. In the worst single incident on 3 March 1943, 173 people were crushed to death in a stairwell at Bethnal Green station – but not one bomb was dropped on London that night.

Maps and designs

The Underground’s red circle logo first appeared in 1908 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

In the 1860s, there was only basic signage, with the station name and exit. The Underground’s red circle logo first appeared in 1908, although about 60 stations on the Metropolitan line continued to use a red diamond until the 1970s.

One of the first rail maps, produced by the District line in 1892, featured the slogan “Time Is Money.” The first free Underground map was published collaboratively in 1908 by companies running separate lines.

Harry Beck’s map of the Underground, first produced in 1931, was inspired by electrical circuit diagrams. He was paid 10 guineas (£10 10s) for his design. Beck’s map was received enthusiastically, and he remained involved with changes and updates for over 25 years. Eventually, he fell out with London Transport and his name was removed from the map in 1959. But his name reappeared on the map in the 1990s, when he was once again acknowledged as its designer.

In 2006, the London Underground map came second in a BBC competition to find the public’s favourite British design of the 20th century. The angular representation of the River Thames was briefly removed from the map in 2009, but was quickly replaced after a public outcry.

During the three-hour morning peak, the busiest Tube station is Waterloo, with 57,000 people moving through (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The Scottish sculptor Eduardo Paolozzi designed the mosaic murals at Tottenham Court Road station, which were completed in 1984. The ceramics on the City and South London Railway, now part of the Northern line, were inspired by the work of William Morris. Charles Holden based his design for Arnos Grove on Stockholm Public Library, while Gants Hill was inspired by the Moscow Metro.

Southwark Station’s blue cone wall, built as part of the Jubilee line extension’s new generation of stations, was inspired by an 1816 stage set for Mozart’s ‘The Magic Flute’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The Victoria Line commissioned artists to produce original tile motifs for each station, including the seven trees that give Seven Sisters its name. All 46 stations designed by Leslie Green have distinctive tile patterns and all his stations – such as Covent Garden – were steel-clad to allow premises to be built on top of them.

Rush hours and busy hours

Due to a rise in graffiti, the silver tube trains were replaced in the 1990s with the red, white and blue ones seen today (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

About 1.1 billion passengers now use the Underground each year. The busiest station is Waterloo, with 57,000 people passing through during the three-hour morning peak and 82 million passengers travelling through each year.

The average speed of a Tube train is 33 kph (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Each year, each Tube train travels 184,269 km, and the average speed is 33 kph. The longest distance between two stations is between Chesham and Chalfont and Latimer on the Metropolitan Line, which are 6.3 km apart. The shortest distance between two stations is from Leicester Square to Covent Garden on the Piccadilly Line, which are 300 metres apart. If you pay the full cash fare between Covent Garden and Leicester Square, a mere 0.16 miles, it works out at the equivalent of over £28 a mile.

Advertising hoardings at Saint Paul’s Underground station (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The longest journey you can take without changing is 59.4 km from West Ruislip to Epping on the Central Line. The longest continuous tunnel, between East Finchley and Morden (via Bank), is 27.8 km long. The total number of stations in use today is 270; Waterloo station alone has 23 escalators, and Baker Street has 10 platforms.

In central London, trains cannot drive faster than 30-40mph because of the short distances between stations. But the Victoria Line can reach speeds of up to 50 mph because the stations are further apart. And the Metropolitan line has the fastest speeds, sometimes reaching over 60 mph.

‘Mind the Gap’

Rush-hour traffic and pressure can make it difficult to read maps and find your way (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

But wherever you go this summer – underground or overground, slowly or at speed – always remember: “Mind the Gap.”

The original recording of “Mind the Gap” was made in 1968 featuring the voice of Peter Lodge. Most lines still use Peter Lodge’s recording, but others use a recording by voice artist Emma Clarke, and the Piccadilly Line uses the voice of Tim Bentinck, better known as David Archer from The Archers.

● Further reading: David Bownes, Oliver Green and Sam Mullins, Underground: How the Tube Shaped London (Allen Lane, £25); Andrew Martin, Underground Overground: A Passenger’s History of the Tube (Profile, £8.99); Mark Ovenden, London Underground by Design (Particular, £20).

Canon Patrick Comerford is Lecturer in Anglicanism and Liturgy, the Church of Ireland Theological Institute, and an Adjunct Assistant Professor, Trinity College Dublin. This essay was first published in the June 2013 editions of the Church Review (Dublin and Glendalough) and the Diocesan Magazine (Cashel and Ossory.

ST MACARTAN’S CATHEDRAL CLOGHER

St Macartan's Cathdral, Clogher

St Macartan’s Cathdral, Clogher

The Bishop of Clogher Right Reverend John McDowell has praised those who help to preserve small Anglican Cathedrals in towns throughout Ireland. It’s not an easy task with small congregations in many parishes. In the case of St Macartan’s, the Friends of Clogher Cathedral have made a major contribution over the years to keeping the structure and the interior maintained. The William Carleton Society has co-operated with them on a number of occasions during the annual summer school. The Society held a talk there about the Ulster English on St George’s Day. In March, the Cathedral organised a number of events to celebrate St Patrick’s Day.

St Macartan's Cathedral

St Macartan’s Cathedral

The Friends  come from different Christian churches, including Presbyterians, Methodists and Catholics. Every year they hold a service in the Cathedral to coincide with their AGM. I attended their Choral Evensong this afternoon, led by the Precentor Noel Regan, a Sligoman, along with the curate Reverend Alistair Warke. Bishop McDowell preached the homily.

Bishop McDowell & Canon Noel Regan greet members of the congregation

Bishop McDowell & Canon Noel Regan greet members of the congregation

ORDER FOR EVENING PRAYER

The Precentor sang the Vestry Prayer

Processional Hymn:  Praise My Soul the King of Heaven

Sentences of Scripture

Bishop of Clogher Rt Rev John McDowell

Bishop of Clogher Rt Rev John McDowell

Exhortation: Dean of Clogher Kenneth Hall, St Macartin’s Cathedral, Enniskillen

General Confession

The Absolution: Pronounced by the Bishop

Opening Versicles according to the Book of Common Prayer:

Priest: O Lord, open thou our lips: Choir: And our mouth shall shew forth thy praise. Priest: O God, make speed to save us: Choir: O Lord, make haste to help us. Priest: Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. Choir: As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen. Priest: Praise ye the Lord. Choir: The Lord’s Name be praised.

Bishop McDowell greeting the congregation

Bishop McDowell greeting the congregation

The Psalm: Psalm 84 How lovely is your Dwelling Place, O Lord of Hosts!

Lesson from the Old Testament Genesis 4: 1-16

Bishop McDowell greets the congregation

And Bishop McDowell greets the congregation

Magnificat: The Song of the Blessed Virgin Mary St Luke 1: 46-55

My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit rejoiceth in God my Saviour. For he hath regarded the lowliness of his hand-maiden. For behold, from henceforth, all generations shall call me blessed. For he that is mighty hath magnified me, and holy is his Name. And his mercy is on them that fear him throughout all generations. He hath shewed strength with his arm, he hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts. He hath put down the mighty from their seat, and hath exalted the humble and meek. He hath filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he hath sent empty away. He remembering his mercy hath holpen his servant Israel, as he promised to our forefathers, Abraham and his seed for ever. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be: world without end. Amen.

St Macartan's Cathedral, Clogher

St Macartan’s Cathedral, Clogher

Lesson from the New Testament: St Mark 5: 21-43

Nunc Dimittis: The Song of Simeon  St Luke 2: 29-32

Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace: according to thy word. For mine eyes have seen thy salvation, which thou hast prepared before the face of all people. To be a light to lighten the Gentiles, and to be the glory of thy people Israel. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be: world without end. Amen

St Macartan's Cathedral, Clogher

St Macartan’s Cathedral, Clogher

The Apostles’ Creed

I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth: And in Jesus Christ, His only Son our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried. He descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead; he ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead. I believe in the Holy Ghost; the holy Catholic Church; the Communion of Saints; the forgiveness of sins; the Resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen

Priest: The Lord be with You Choir: And with Thy Spirit Priest: Let us Pray Choir: Lord, have mercy upon us. Christ have mercy upon us. Lord have mercy upon us.

The Lord’s Prayer

Our Father, which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy Name; Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done in earth; as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation: but deliver us from evil. Amen

O Lord, shew thy mercy upon us:  And grant us thy salvation.

O Lord, save the Queen: And mercifully hear us when we call upon thee.

Endue thy ministers with righteousness: And make thy chosen people joyful.

O Lord, save thy people: And bless thine inheritance.

Give peace in our time, O Lord: Because there is none other that fighteth for us, but only thou, O God.

O God, make clean our hearts within us: And take not thy Holy Spirit from us.

Bell Tower window

Bell Tower window

The Collect of the First Sunday of Trinity:  The Precentor sings:

O God, the strength of all them that put their trust in thee, mercifully accept our prayers; and because through the weakness of our mortal nature we can do no good thing without thee, grant us the help of thy grace, that in keeping of thy commandments we may please thee both in will and deed, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Second Collect: for Peace

O God, from whom all holy desires, all good counsels and all just works do proceed: Give unto thy servants that peace which the world cannot give; that both our hearts may be set to obey thy commandments and also that by thee we being defended from the fear of our enemies may pass our time in rest and quietness; through the merits of Jesus Christ our Saviour. Amen

The Third Collect for Aid against all Perils

Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord; and by thy great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers of this night for the love of thy only Son, our Saviour, Jesus Christ. Amen

Hymn: All People that on Earth do Dwell

St Macartan's Cathedral, Clogher

St Macartan’s Cathedral, Clogher

The Sermon: The Right Reverend F John McDowell, Bishop of Clogher

Hymn: (The Breastplate of St Patrick)

Christ be with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.

Christ beneath me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in hearts of all that love me,
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger.

PRAYERS led by the Diocesan Curate Reverend Alistair Warke

Almighty and merciful God, who in days of old didst give to this land the benediction of thy holy Church, withdraw not, we pray thee, thy favour from us, but so correct what is amiss, and supply what is lacking, that we may more and more bring forth fruit to thy glory, through Jesus Christ our Lord.

The General Thanksgiving:

Almighty God, Father of all mercies,  we thine unworthy servants do give thee most humble and hearty thanks for all thy goodness and loving kindness to us and to all men. We bless thee for our creation, preservation, and all the blessings of this life; but above all for thine inestimable love in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ; for the means of grace, and for the hope of glory. And, we beseech thee, give us that due sense of all thy mercies, that our hearts may be unfeignedly thankful; and that we show forth thy praise, not only with our lips, but in our lives, by giving up our selves to thy service, and by walking before thee in holiness and righteousness all our days; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with thee and the Holy Spirit, be all honour and glory, world without end. Amen.

A Prayer of St Chrysostom:

Almighty God, who hast given us grace at this time with one accord to make our common supplications unto thee and dost promise that when two or three are gathered together in thy Name thou wilt grant their requests. Fulfil now, O Lord, the desires and petitions of thy servants as may be most expedient for them; granting us in this world knowledge of thy truth, and in the world to come life everlasting.

The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with us all evermore. Amen.

Hymn with the Collection of Alms: God, whose city’s sure foundation

Heather McKeown playing the bells

Heather McKeown playing the bells

God, whose city’s sure foundation
stands upon his holy hill,
by his mighty inspiration
chose of old and chooseth still
men of every race and nation
his good pleasure to fulfil.

Here in Ireland through the ages,
while the Christian years went by,
saints, confessors, martyrs, sages,
strong to live and strong to die,
wrote their names upon the pages
of God’s blessed company.

Some there were like lamps of learning
shining in a faithless night,
some on fire with love, and burning
with a flaming zeal for right,
some by simple goodness turning
souls from darkness unto light.
As we now with high thanksgiving                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     their triumphant names record,

View of graveyard from bell tower window

View of graveyard from bell tower window

grant that we, like the, believing
in the promise of thy word,
may, like them, in all good living
praise and magnify the Lord.

The Blessing: The Bishop sings the blessing

The peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep you in your heart and mind in the knowledge and love of God, and of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, and the blessing of God Almighty, the Father, the Son. and the Holy Spirit, be with you and remain with you always. AMEN.

Hymn: Abide with me

Abide with me; fast falls the eventide;
The darkness deepens; Lord with me abide.
When other helpers fail and comforts flee,
Help of the helpless, O abide with me.

Swift to its close ebbs out life’s little day;
Earth’s joys grow dim; its glories pass away;
Change and decay in all around I see;
O Thou who changest not, abide with me.

I need Thy presence every passing hour.
What but Thy grace can foil the tempter’s power?
Who, like Thyself, my guide and stay can be?
Through cloud and sunshine, Lord, abide with me.

I fear no foe, with Thee at hand to bless;
Ills have no weight, and tears no bitterness.
Where is death’s sting? Where, grave, thy victory?
I triumph still, if Thou abide with me.

Hold Thou Thy cross before my closing eyes;
Shine through the gloom and point me to the skies.
Heaven’s morning breaks, and earth’s vain shadows flee;
In life, in death, O Lord, abide with me.

As I arrived at the service, it was nice to hear the Cathedral bells ringing. So afterwards as they rang again while the congregation left the church, I went into the bell tower to look at them, expecting to find a group of bell ringers pulling ropes. Instead I found Heather McKeown at the console of the chime, with eight bells individually numbered and a wooden lever to press down to ring the bell.

"Be Still and Know" on the Chime

“Be Still and Know” on the Chime

She encouraged me to have a go, so I tried playing the hymn “Be Still and Know”. If it sounded a bit strange, I can only apologise, and I did make at least one error in ringing the wrong bell! But second time round it proved a lot easier to ring the bells in the right order and tempo.

Heather McKeown & the 8-bell chime

Heather McKeown & the 8-bell chime

Diocese of Clohger: Arms
Diocese of Clogher: Arms

For more information about the Friends of Clogher Cathedral, please contact the Reverend Precentor Noel Regan, The Deanery, 10 Augher Road, Clogher.

Copyright: photos © Michael Fisher

Material from Book of Common Prayer: © The Representative Body of the Church of Ireland 2004

The Irish Church Hymnal — Fifth Edition:  © The Standing Committee of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland 2000

ENNISH FLAX MILL

Howard Bennett at Ennish Scutch Mill

Harold Bennett at Ennish Scutch Mill

For over ten years Harold Bennett from County Tyrone has been devoted to preserving an important part of Ulster’s industrial heritage. Ennish Flax Mill between Aughnacloy and Dungannon is the third generation of his family to own the mill., which closed in 1950. In the early 2000s he decided to renovate the mill, a project which has taken considerable time, money and effort an is still a wok in progress. He has been supported in his efforts by the Killeeshil and Clonaneese Historical Society, which is currently undertaking a project on engineering in the area under the “Shared History, Shared Future” project, of which the William Carleton Society is a member.

Barbeque at Ennish Mill

Barbeque at Ennish Mill

Flax after scutching

Flax after scutching

An open day and barbeque was held at the mill to show it in operation and to give a younger generation an idea of how the mill operated. Ennish started off as a corn mill around 1770 and was owned by the Burges family of Parkanaur Manor near Castlecaulfield. In 1917 William S Bennett purchased the mill from Colonel YS Burges for £255. At that time the flax industry, which was important in Ulster in the 18th and 19th Centuries, was booming. The mill was converted to process flax, which was first scotched in October 1917.

Mill Wheel at Ennish

Mill Wheel at Ennish

Up to 1944 the mill was driven by the mill wheel but because of dry seasons there was insufficient water to turn the wheel. The then owner, William Bennett’s son Hugh John, was obliged to instal an engine to drive the mill. It was installed by AS McKee & Sons of Cranslough, who also carried out a number of renovations in order to accommodate the new engine. Farmers came from surrounding areas such as Crilly, Minteburn, Rehaghey, Brantry, Newmills, Clonavaddy and Castlecaulfield to get their flax scutched. After flowering and ripening in July, the farmers pulled the flax by hand and then soaked it in a water-filled dam for one to two weeks to ret (break down the outer coating). It was then spread on a field to dry before being taken to the mill.

Scutching handles behind the berths

Scutching handles behind the berths

The mill has seven “berths”, the space in front of each flax handle where the scutchers worked. Sometimes they worked in pairs. The first was a “buffer”, who took the rough off the flax, the second was the “cleaner”, who completed the scutching. Good flax could be scutched into long, strong fibres, which could eventually be turned into fine linen cloth. When the scotching was finished, the flax was taken to Union Street in Cookstown for inspection and if it passed the grading process, it was then taken to a linen mill in Belfast and woven int linen fabric. The poorer quality flax containing many shorter fibres was called “tow” and was less valuable. Any cloth made from it was rough and inferior. Usually the mill owner kept the tow as payment or part payment for the scutching.

Ennish Flax Mill

Ennish Flax Mill

Scutching: a dusty process

Scutching: a dusty process

The waste from scutching known as “shoves” or “shows” was a cheap and popular fuel on the hearths of mill workers. A properly lit fire of shoves would burn for hours, emitting an intense heat. It must have been difficult for the seven scutchers working in a confined space and with the noise of the machinery as well as the dust. Harold’s demonstration gave an idea of what conditions must have been like for them, but this picture was with only one blade in action!

According to the mill records for 1945, the workforce consisted of six scutchers, three strickers, one roller and a handyman, whose job it was to remove the shoves from behind the handles. Scutchers were paid by the number of stones scutched and in a good week would earn between £3 and £4. The roller was on a set wage of £2.14.6 and the strickers earned £2.10.0 a week. In 1918 scutchers were paid a bounty of £6.0.0. to secure their services for the next scutching season. The details are taken from an information leaflet kindly provided by Harold Bennett.

Thresher in action

Thresher in action

This is one of only three such flax mills still remaining in Northern Ireland. Another one is at Gorticashel near Gortin, also in Tyrone. The scutching  demonstration was complemented by a display of threshing in the adjoining field. The straw was brought in for the occasion. The thresher carried the name “Boyd” and appeared to come from Maghera.

While researching the history of the linen industry, I discovered a newspaper cutting from the USA which shows that even before the new engine was installed at Ennish, the linen industry was in decline. The Delmarva Star from Wilmington in Delaware carried a report on March 3rd 1935 (p.22) headlined: “Shortage of Flax Threatens Ulster Makers of Linen: Numbers of Mills Face Necessity of Closing Down: Prices Have Made Unexpected Rise“. The news from Belfast (March 2) states that:-

Ulster’s world-famed linen industry today finds itself menaced by an acute shortage of its necessary raw material, flax.

Unless the crisis in the industry is overcome within the next few months, numbers of linen mills in Northern Ireland will be faced with the necessity of closing down.

The outstanding reason for the present crisis is a shortage of flax from Soviet Russia. The linen mills of Northern Ireland, which employ about 85,000 workers, are dependent on Soviet Russia for more than 90 per cent of their raw materials. The Soviet Union itself is the world’s biggest flax producer, growing between 90 and 95 per cent of the world’s total flax supply.

In recent months Germany has bought ever-increasing quantities of Russian flax to take the place of wool and cotton which it has been unable to import owing to exchange restrictions. At the same time the Soviet Union itself has begun to absorb large quantities of its own raw flax to manufacture in its new factories.

The result of these unexpected developments has been a leap upwards in the price of flax. Ulster linen manufacturers state that they have only sufficient flax on hand to meet the needs of the next four or five months, after which they expect the cost of flax to be so prohibitive that it will be impossible to produce linen goods in Northern Ireland at economic prices.

With a steep rise in the price of linen goods expected the next few months, it is understood that United States and other foreign importers of Irish linen have made large purchases in Belfast before prices soar still higher“.