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5 May – Faith and Identity – A Catholic Perspective on Northern Ireland. Lecture given at St Ethelburga’s Centre for Peace and Reconciliation, London

TEXT OF LECTURE GIVEN BY MOST REV DR SEÁN BRADY
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH AND PRIMATE OF ALL-IRELAND
AT ST ETHELBURGA’S CENTRE FOR PEACE AND RECONCILIATION, LONDON
78 Bishops Gate London EC2N 4AG
WEDNESDAY 5 MAY 2004

“Faith and Identity – A Catholic Perspective on Northern Ireland”
The Key to Peace is the Will to Embrace

INTRODUCTION
Thank you for your very warm welcome. Let me begin by saying what a pleasure it is to be here in this beautifully restored Church of St. Ethelburga and to give the first in this new series of lectures on Faith and Identity, organised by the St. Ethelburga Centre for Reconciliation. The fact that this Centre is so closely associated with the tragic consequences of the conflict in Northern Ireland gives a certain poignancy, perhaps even a certain symbolism to this evening’s event. For many people the conflict in Northern Ireland is primarily about the relationship between faith and identity. But as I hope to demonstrate in the course of my talk, the complexity of the relationship between these two recurring themes in modern conflict, does not permit such an easy analysis. No one in Northern Ireland is fighting over theological matters. And just as the religious commitment of people such as Bishop Chartre, Cardinal Basil Hume, Rev. Sowerbutts and Viscount Massereene turned the tragedy of this place into a powerful sign of reconciliation and hope, so I hope to convince you that, on balance, religious faith and the Churches have contributed positively to the resolution of the conflict in Northern Ireland.

As one Unionist politician has pointed out recently:
…without the Churches, for all their faults… the period of the Troubles, would have been much worse. Although the ‘two communities’ are now highly segregated in terms of where they live, work or go to school, on the whole there is probably still more civility between them than there would have been without the presence of the Churches. The Churches have been one of the factors that have prevented Northern Ireland from following the path of Kosovo or Bosnia.

Nevertheless, it is important to acknowledge that the interaction between faith and identity does remain a key social, cultural and political factor in Northern Ireland. Protestants are more likely to be interested in British culture and music and sport. Catholics are more likely to be interested in Irish culture, Celtic music and Gaelic games. To a great extent, Catholics and Protestants live in separate areas, are educated apart, play and watch different sports and develop different cultural identities.

So what is the origin of this close connection between religious, political and cultural identity in Northern Ireland?

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

Well, as is the case with so many of the conflicts in our modern world, to understand the present we must first unpack the past. In the 16th century, English Tudor monarchs began a conquest of Ireland. When King Henry VIII embraced the Protestant religion in the 1530s he decreed that Ireland should do likewise. In 1541 he declared himself King of Ireland. Initially, Protestantism made little headway in Catholic Ireland and it was not until the reign of his daughter, Queen Elizabeth I, that the Anglican Church of Ireland slowly began to take root.

Many historians maintain that the most significant event that happened in Northern Ireland during the 16th century was the Plantation of Ulster. This involved the systematic introduction of English and Scottish settlers, designed to establish English rule and suppress the Irish. Land was taken from the native Catholic population and redistributed to settlers, often as a reward for services rendered to the Crown.

During the Plantation of Ulster some 30,000 Scottish people, mainly of Presbyterian faith, and a substantial number of English colonists, arrived in Ulster and were given land previously owned by Catholics. The result of the Plantation left thousands of Irish Catholics dispossessed and, as a result, very resentful. This in turn, led in 1641, to an armed rebellion by Catholics. In the uprising, and in the ten year civil war that followed, many Protestants were massacred. These events profoundly shaped Protestant popular opinions of Catholics as being untrustworthy and hostile. The result was that the Protestant community in Ireland began to develop a siege mentality and to equate Protestantism with being English and Catholicism with being Irish.

Furthermore, the 17th century English civil war between Charles I and the English Parliament also had far reaching consequences in Ireland. Oliver Cromwell, leader of the victorious parliamentary forces, maintained the English presence in Ireland and consolidated his success in Britain by quashing ensuing Irish rebellions. Following Cromwell’s military success, the 1653 Act of Settlement involved further large-scale confiscation of Irish lands and their transfer from Catholic to Protestant ownership. This served to fuel a further legacy of hatred and bitterness by Catholics towards the English and indeed towards Protestantism.

Now allow me fast-forward to 1685 when the accession of the Catholic Stuart King, James II, to the British throne sparked a new wave of discord in Ireland.

The Protestant aristocracy in Britain vehemently opposed their Catholic King who sought to expand his power at their expense. On being deposed, James fled to Ireland, where, with the exception of the Protestant community in Northern Ireland, he found many willing and sympathetic supporters. During this time, the British throne had been offered to a Protestant Dutch Prince, William of Orange, as part of a pan-European coalition supported by the Pope, against the dominant French King, Louis XIV. William of Orange and his supporters followed the deposed James II to Ireland and defeated him at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. This victory effectively crushed the hopes of the Catholic political nation. 20,000 of the gentry went into exile on the Continent in what is known as the Flight of the Earls. In Europe the victory was celebrated as an important one for those who were opposed to the French Alliance. William’s defeat of James at the Battle of the Boyne continues to be celebrated annually by the Orange Order on the 12th of July. The association of Orange Marches with this victory and the subsequent domination of Catholics still play a significant part in the reaction of Catholics to the issue of Orange Parades. For Irish Protestants who had supported William, this war had been a great success. It was followed by severe penal laws, which decreed that only Protestants could sit in Parliament, hold office under the Crown or take part in local government. And this too left its own bitter legacy. It was seen as a further injustice in a course of gradual domination, firstly political – with the removal of the Irish Parliament; secondly economic – with the Plantation of the land and thirdly religious – with the anti-Catholic Penal laws.

British Rule of all of Ireland continued until 1920. Then, after the 1916 Rising and the Civil War that followed, Ireland was partitioned. Two parliaments were set up, one in Dublin for the 26 Counties and one in Belfast for the six counties of Ulster which now make up the entity we know as Northern Ireland. For Protestants the validity of the Northern Ireland State as an integral part of the UK, resided in a morally justified and legally binding agreement between two sovereign nations. For Northern Catholics, however, Northern Ireland was a gerrymandered and unworkable entity, to which they had not given their consent and which had been conceded by Britain in direct response to the threat of violence from the Protestant community.

AFTER PARTITION

Consequently, after the partition of the island of Ireland in 1921, the ecclesiastical and political experience of Catholics in the north of the island was to become radically different from that of their southern counter-parts. While the fledging State in the South focused on the task of becoming an independent nation, discrimination in housing, voting, employment and exclusion from the levers of power and security, resulting particularly in a lack of representation in the civil service, the judiciary and policing, meant that the new Northern Ireland State was quickly becoming a ‘cold house for Catholics’, a phenomenon famously captured by the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, James Craig, when he declared that, ‘All I boast of is that we are a Protestant Parliament and a Protestant State’.

In the midst of such discrimination and a deep sense of alienation from the Northern State, the structures of education, health, parish and community provided by the Catholic Church, made it a very natural alternative source of political and cultural identity for Northern Nationalists. As one commentator explains:
After partition Northern Nationalists kept a respectful distance from the State and became ‘a society within a society’. The Catholic Church was the key institution in integrating the community and clerical leadership was important. There was an intertwining of Catholicism, Irish culture and political nationalism.

This sense of collective self-sufficiency and alienation from the Protestant, Unionist entity called Northern Ireland, was further compounded by the Catholic experience of the Orange Order, actively promoted at that time by many Protestant clergy and politicians. Defined and motivated by its sacred oath to ‘strenuously oppose the fatal errors of Rome’ and to uphold ‘a Protestant State for a Protestant People’, the Orange Order had become a hugely powerful and unifying force within the otherwise disparate elements of Protestantism and Unionism. As one historian explains:

The Orange Order was a powerful political force, nominating 25 per cent of delegates to the Ulster Unionist Council… Unionist politicians joined the Order as a matter of course, marched in its parades and affirmed its beliefs in their speeches. Loyalists exercised constant vigilance to detect and deter possible Catholic threat and to guard against any softening of unionist or anti-Catholic principles…. Protestantism was all-pervasive in the public culture: in the street preachers, the missions, the Protestant Sundays, the public prominence of the Orange Order. Unionist governments systematically identified the State with this
culture and the Protestant Churches reciprocated. There was an interrelation of Unionism and Orangeism.

At the heart of this alignment between Orangeism and Unionism was an often unspoken ecclesiology of separation – an ecclesiology of election and exclusion, rooted in the historic memory of both the Plantation of Ulster and the Battle of the Boyne (which I have already referred to). Ostensibly a religious institution based on the fundamental principles of the Reformation, as well as the instrument of public celebration of Protestant possession of the ‘chosen land’ of Ulster, the Orange Order became known to Catholics as a powerful vehicle of social, economic and political exclusion and a key unifying force for the anti-Catholic religious superiority of the otherwise fragmented Protestant and Unionist tradition.

It should be no surprise then that up to the 1970’s, both communities in Northern Ireland lived largely autonomous, independent and politically divided lives. Critically, from the point of view of our theme, what characterised, motivated and sustained this experience of mutual exclusion and self-sufficiency in religious terms, was the existence of two static, self-contained and mutually excluding identities in which the proximity between political and cultural identity, and the visible structures of ecclesial life, were presumed to translate, more or less directly, into similarly self-contained and mutually exclusive ecclesial-political identities.

POSITIVE DEVELOPMENTS

An important factor in the development of this overlap between religious and political identity in Northern Ireland was the fact that the proximity between the Church and the world, that tension between being in the world yet not of the world (John 17:14), is a notoriously difficult tension to keep in balance in a situation of communal conflict, particularly where the conflict is defined along religious lines. As the Croatian theologian Miroslav Volf points out:

‘Churches often find themselves accomplices in war rather than agents of peace. We find it difficult to distance ourselves from our own culture so we echo its reigning opinions and mimic its practices.’
What is required in this context is a way of moving communities through the self-contained, mutually excluding ideologies of conflict to a theological, spiritual and political framework which moves them to a sense of collective need and mutual interdependence.

From a Catholic point of view, one could find a basis for such a shift in the ecclesiological aggiornamento (bringing up-to-date) of the Second Vatican Council and in its subsequent absorption into Catholic theological, catechetical and liturgical praxis. At the heart of this aggiornamento was a rinnovamento (renewal) of the Church’s understanding of itself and of its relationship to the world, captured most powerfully in a fuller exploration of the Church as a ‘Trinitarian’ reality.

The Church in this context was now more fruitfully described, not as the perfect and self-sufficient society, but as the ‘sacrament of the unity of the human race:

the sign and instrument of man’s union with God and of all men among themselves’ (Lumen Gentium #1). As such, Vatican II held that the Church exists not for itself but for the whole world. Permeated by the Holy Spirit, it lives and moves in an atmosphere of love for all humankind, the same love in which the Spirit unites the Father and Son and by which the Son in turn draws all people to Himself.

The implications of this Trinitarian ecclesiology for Catholic thought and praxis were immense. On the one hand, the profoundly historical and biblical understanding of the concept of the Church as Sacrament (mysterion) ensured that any static understanding of the Church as a self-contained and perfect society was ‘renewed’ by a new sense of responsibility for, and solidarity with, the world. This was a theme which Vatican II developed in the Constitution on the Church in the Modern World. At the same time, the emphasis on the Church as the ‘sacrament of unity of the human race’, gave new impetus to the search for Christian unity and the desire to engage constructively in dialogue with other communities of faith, themes taken up more fully, again in Trinitarian terms, in the Decree on Ecumenism and the Declaration on the Relationship of the Church to Non-Christian Religions respectively.

The atmosphere created by this new commitment to ecumenical and social engagement created by the Second Vatican Council was to prove both timely and providential for Northern Ireland. In the new year of January 1969, only four years after the Council, the People’s Democracy march from Belfast to Derry took place, ending in what was described as ‘the bloody encounter at Burntollet’ . Regarded as one of the first events of the Troubles, this Catholic civil rights march marked a significant escalation in Catholic reaction against discrimination and exclusion and, less happily, an escalation in cross-community tension and violence.
Up to this point, it is worth noting that contact between the Churches in Northern Ireland at an official level had been minimal. But now, under the influence of the renewed ecclesiology of the Second Vatican Council, new initiatives were possible.

The emergence of the four main Church leaders as a working group in 1969, for example, was the first sign of official Catholic-Protestant co-operation. In succeeding years joint statements by the four leaders (at first signed separately), joint television appearances (at first addressing the chairperson rather than each other), and joint consultations between them became commonplace and, as the Troubles escalated, these unique expressions of cross-community engagement became a vital witness to cross-community tolerance and respect in an otherwise deteriorating situation.

In May 1970, after a further escalation in the Troubles and the arrival of British Troops on the streets of Northern Ireland, the work of the four Church leaders led to the establishment of the Joint [Irish Council of Churches and Roman Catholic] Group. This was a group established ‘to advise on the role of the Churches in Irish society on such matters as world poverty, employment and housing conditions, drug addiction, alcoholism etc.’ While some were disappointed that issues such as ‘Faith & Order’ and ‘causes of tension in the community’ were absent from the terms of reference , a brief excerpt from the first Report of the Group, issued in March 1972, gives some sense of the significance of the very existence of such a group in Northern Ireland terms:

In the context of the present upheaval it might appear to some that we have been concerning ourselves almost with trifles. It is nonetheless astonishing that we have met at all – in view of the disintegration around us – and we have continued to do so regularly not only in the Group itself, but also in its working parties.

This ‘disintegration around us’ was a reference to the intensity with which the Troubles had escalated in the months running up to the publication of the Joint [ICC-RC] Group Report. August 1971, for example, had seen the introduction of internment without trial, an event in which the army’s dawn swoops to arrest hundreds of suspected IRA members had left 22 people killed (including a Catholic priest) and 7,000 homeless. The impact of this deterioration on events was not lost on the broader ecumenical movement. A few months later the British Council of Churches issued an unprecedented statement calling on ‘the leaders and members of the Churches to make still greater efforts to contain passions and to take fresh courageous initiatives to establish effective co-operative ventures in which Catholics and Protestants can share together in the service of all the people of Northern Ireland.’ The early months of 1972, however, saw Bloody Sunday (when thirteen men were shot dead and seventeen wounded by the British army in Derry), the suspension of the Northern Ireland parliament at Stormont and the imposition of Direct Rule from London.

During this time both the Church leaders and individual members of the clergy, often at considerable risk to themselves, continued to seek ways of giving more visible expression to their conviction that the Gospel was not served by inter-community conflict and violence. Motivated on the Catholic side by the doctrinal and pastoral impetus of Unitatis Redintegratio and Gaudium et Spes, the Irish Episcopal Conference responded positively to an initiative taken by the Irish Council of Churches in March of 1972 and issued an invitation to representatives of the Protestant Churches in Ireland to attend a joint meeting ‘at which the whole field of ecumenism might be surveyed’.

In response, at their November 1972 meeting, the ICC ‘warmly welcomed’ the invitation from the Catholic Bishops as ‘one of the most progressive moves made in Ireland’ , something unimaginable but for the impetus of the Trinitarian ecclesiology of Vatican II.

This initiative in turn established the first Ballymascanlon Meeting in 1973, later to become the Inter-Church Meeting, which continues to this day and which was described at the time as ‘an enormous step forward in inter-church relations in our country for which we would have hardly dared to hope over a decade ago.’
Attended by all of the Catholic Bishops of the island and the leaders of the other main Christian denominations, the Ballymascanlon Meeting established a series of working groups to explore ecumenical issues as well as ‘Social and Community’ problems. Among two of the more influential projects to emerge from the initiative were the establishment of the Church Leaders’ Peace Campaign in Christmas 1974 and the inter-church working party on ‘Violence in Ireland’.

In the Christmas Peace Campaign of 1974 the then Cardinal, the Church of Ireland Primate, the Presbyterian Moderator and the Methodist President, issued a common appeal for peace. They appeared together on television, placed full page advertisements in the press, met the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, the British Prime Minister and the Taoiseach (the Irish Prime Minister), and were in conference together seventeen times in the course of a few weeks. In the words of one commentator: ‘Never before had the Churches been seen to co-operate together so openly and so vigorously on a public issue. Rallies in Belfast and other towns revealed many thousands willing and anxious to follow their lead…. The Churches were seen more clearly in a reconciling role than ever before.’

Clearly, from the Catholic point of view at least, this joint witness of the Church leaders to the possibility of respect, tolerance, friendship and even forgiveness across the established religious, political and cultural divide, was the Church living out, concretely and practically, its mission as a ‘sign and instrument of Triune unity’ in Northern Ireland. It was a real and practical witness to the possibility of unity in distinction, of inclusion and interdependence, of equality and freedom, of the things at the very heart of the Christian Gospel and of the Triune God.

But this reconciling role of the Churches also became powerfully evident in a more painful and pastoral way, with the involvement of the Churches in the care of victims of the Troubles and their families. Funerals associated with the Troubles were widely reported by the media and heroic and challenging appeals for ‘forgiveness’, for ‘no retaliation’, for ‘tolerance and respect for difference’, for ‘rejection of all forms of violence’ and ‘the need for a political way forward’ were often made by clergy and, even more poignantly, by relatives of the victims themselves. The impact of such appeals, even to this day, has been incalculable, but what is certain is that that they influenced both the impetus and the direction of the subsequent search for a political solution to the Northern Ireland conflict.

As the Inter-Church Group on Faith and Politics has pointed out more recently:

One of the main reasons why violence was not much greater over the past thirty years has been the way that many people have chosen consistently to seek to cut out cycles of vengeance by calling for, and practising, non-retaliation and forgiveness. Forgiveness is a central aspect of the Christian Gospel. It has significantly penetrated Irish life, and its practice – particularly by many victims and their families – has had social and political effects.

Spiritually, socially and politically, this public fidelity to the Gospel theme of forgiveness opened up an awareness of another critical Gospel theme – the essential link between justice and reconciliation. As violence increased and its futility became ever more evident through the blood and tears of its many victims, more and more people realised that the two main communities had a simple choice: either they found ways to forgive each other and move forward together or they would continue to threaten or even ensure each others destruction.

On the one hand this required the British Government and the Unionist community to address the structural injustices that were weighed against the Catholic community. In the words of my predecessor Cardinal Cahal Daly, then Bishop of the Diocese of Down and Connor, which includes the city of Belfast, no one could ‘rightly speak of peace where no recognition or respect is given to its solid foundations: namely sincerity, justice and love in relations between States, and, within the limits of each nation in the relations of citizens with each other.’ ‘In the concrete situation of Northern Ireland,’ he went on to say, ‘I am convinced that justice between the two historic communities requires that representatives of the minority community be given proportionate but real access to the level where political decisions are taken which determine the distribution of power and wealth and opportunity, the allocation of industries, resources and jobs.’

What was also becoming evident, however, was that for peace to be achieved, justice also required reconciliation, the restoration of relationships that had been broken or held at bay by the fear-threat relationship which had dominated the history of the two religious, political and cultural traditions on the island.

Reconciliation in this context meant going beyond the ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ of the conflict – beyond the vicious circle of action and reaction – to create new and creative relationships with the other. It meant going beyond identities of exclusion to create identities based on mutual recognition and need. It meant wanting to participate with the other, of knowing that agreement with the other was necessary for the security of my own identity and for the creation of a new and agreed future.

CREATING A NEW LANGUAGE

For the purpose of our theme it is important to note here that it was the Church leaders of this time who were being prophetic in their actions and creative in their language. Political leadership remained locked within traditional cultural and religious boundaries. Church leaders on the other hand, and many of the clergy in the four main denominations, were moving out to build bridges between local communities, often in situations of great danger to themselves and in some cases amidst opposition from within their congregations. Numerous peace marches, meetings and movements sprung up at this time which owed their origin, directly or indirectly, to Church inspiration and support. Groups such as the Corrymeela Community, the Cornerstone Community, the Columbanus Community, Friends of the Way, the South Down Clergy Fellowship, the Ballynafeigh Clergy Fellowship, the Clonard-Fitzroy Fellowship, the Assisi Fellowship, Protestant and Catholic Encounter, People Together, the Servite Priory Initiative, the Faith and Politics Group, the Glencree Centre for Reconciliation, the Churches Initiatives Group, Youthlink, and a host of children’s joint holiday schemes, to name just a few, all had their origins in and developed from specific Christian and Church-based initiatives at or around this time.

The ultimate impact of these movements and groups on subsequent events in Northern Ireland is incalculable. They were places of encounter and dialogue in which the tough issues of the day were discussed frankly and sometimes painfully, but nonetheless within the restraining boundaries of Christian forgiveness, tolerance and respect. It is testimony to the perseverance and foresight of these various Church based initiatives that many of the concepts and values which surfaced through their reflection and praxis were to emerge, some twenty years later, in the vocabulary and principles which would underpin the Good Friday Agreement. Only this time, more secular and political language would be used.

A brief survey of the documents produced by the Inter-Church meeting, the statements of the four Church leaders and the sermons of the Catholic and Protestant clergy who were involved in courageous initiatives at that time, reveals something of the themes which would later dominate the search for peace:

* The need for dialogue.
* The need for mutual respect, for parity of esteem and for due recognition of the rights and entitlements of the other. (To do unto others as you would have them do unto you).
* The need for mutual liberation from conflict, to be convinced that there is no outright victory available to any side, that there is no absolute claim to historical or moral righteousness and no future without the other.
* The need to develop a Christian empathy, the habit of seeing things from the perspective of the other, of recognising the pain and suffering of the other rather than just our own, and to understand the fears that we generate for the other community.
* The need for structural justice as the basis for stability and agreement, including the need to review the processes of criminal justice, policing, civil administration and political power-sharing.
* The need to heal the past and agree a future based on consent, to draw a line under the complex moral history of the past by constructing a new and binding agreement.
* The need to compromise on our deeply held convictions, to find new ways of seeing the other and the conflict, (and perhaps most critical of all);
* The need to build up trust in each other by making practical gestures which by themselves reduce fear and encourage trust.

From a Catholic point of view, the shift to this kind of terminology had emerged as the indirect result of the renewed Trinitarian ecclesiology of the Second Vatican Council. At the heart of this Trinitarian, relational model of the Church was a theological conviction that we are made in the image of God and that, if God is three Persons whose relationships are the most important truth that has been revealed to us about them, then we must also understand ourselves primarily in terms of the dynamics of these relationships.

For the Christian, this means that any expression of the Kingdom in history, in the form of an ecclesial identity, cannot involve any form of self-sufficiency or exclusion, other than that which is essential to the integrity of one’s own identity. By its very Trinitarian and historical nature, ‘being in the Church’ means living with, learning from and even celebrating all forms of human diversity from a confidence in one’s own religious, cultural or political particularity.

In his work After the Ceasefires, Brian Lennon, a Jesuit Priest in the Co. Armagh town of Portadown, the town associated with the contentious Orange March at the Church of Ireland Parish of Drumcree, unpacks the practical implications of this doctrine of the Trinity for the two communities in Northern Ireland:
The Christian community will therefore see diversity not as a threat, but as an opportunity to look for the mystery that exists in other communities, to search for God not only in the familiar, but also in what is different. The doctrine of the Trinity is a fundamental challenge to Irish and British Christians. If we cannot build community with each other, then we cannot be in community with God.

This means maintaining what Mirsoslav Volf has described as ‘porous boundaries’ between distance and belonging. The insight of the Trinitarian model of human relationships is that there is a viable and legitimate boundary between distance and belonging, between particularity and diversity, between unity and distinction.

We need distance and we need belonging. Particular identities and allegiances offer us homes in which we can belong; a sense of pride; a space where we are among our own; a place of nourishment and security. In this sense we cannot live without boundaries and differences – even if we know that boundaries and differences can be dangerous. What is required, however, is that these boundaries are porous, that they are sufficiently accessible and unthreatening, that the other can be welcomed in and embraced, if this is their desire, without dissolution of their particularity. Here there is respect for difference and diversity, for particularity and personal identity.

It is only with this attitude of careful balance between distance and belonging that we can avoid the potentially destructive relationship between faith and identity which manifests itself in the pernicious evil of ‘sectarianism’. One of the constant challenges to Churches and others in any society where religion plays a part in political identity is to guard against and seek to confront head-on the influence of sectarianism. At its roots, it is a totally distorted alignment between religious identity and a host of unrelated but very powerful influences on human identity such as superiority, historical memory, the need to be accepted by the group, the need to be on the winning side, the need to exercise power over others. All of this frequently manifests itself in people who often have little or no contact with the Churches in their given denomination.

In this regard it is worth highlighting the work of three organisations which have played a leading role, in recent years, in assisting the Churches and society in Northern Ireland to face up to this particularly insidious challenge. They are now emerging as centres of international significance in peace and peace-making, with a particular expertise in the areas of sectarianism and reconciliation.

The first is Corrymeela, which when translated means ‘the hill of harmony’. No Irish name is more widely known in ecumenical circles, inside or outside Ireland.

It is regarded as pioneering since its inception. Founded in 1965, it set the tone and provided the vision for much of the inter-church work which was to follow in Ireland. As one Irish author explains, ‘It is our Taize; Reformed/Presbyterian in the person of its founder, Rev Dr. Ray Davey, inter-denominational as well as international in its outreach, but different from Taize in being a dispersed rather than a residential community, a dispersed community which originally was mostly if not entirely Protestant but is now half Protestant and half Catholic.’ It continues to this day as a sign and symbol that Catholics and Protestants can share together in common witness to and ministry of reconciliation.

The second is the Glencree Centre for Reconciliation, founded in 1974. Inspired by and affiliated to the Corrymeela community, the Glencree Centre for Reconciliation is nestled in the Wicklow Hills just outside Dublin. Not unlike your own initiative here in St. Ethelburga’s, Glencree works to discover and promote the conditions for a just and peaceful society in Ireland by providing opportunities for dialogue and encounter among groups of young people who come from schools north and south, among political and religious representatives from across the island and through the provision of training in mediation, peace-making and the respectful use of natural resources.

The third is the Irish School of Ecumenics and its various outreach projects, most notably its Moving Beyond Sectarianism Project; its Transforming Sectarianism Project and, more recently its Partners in Transformation Project. Each of these has sought, through academic research and analysis on the one hand, and extensive dialogue and engagement with individuals, Churches and political parties on the other, to analyse the sources of and frame a comprehensive response to the issue of sectarianism in Irish society. In its latest initiative, the Partners in Transformation Project, aims to ‘enhance, nurture, and support the capacity of churches and faith communities in their calling to be peace-builders and agents of transformation’ by ‘generating new agendas and strategies for peace-building at an executive level that can authorise, support and ultimately sustain grassroots activity.’ This project, which is scheduled to run for another three years, is targeted towards “church leaders” by which is meant:

executive and middle range leaders of all churches and faith communities willing to participate; and local leaders: ministers, elders, members of parish councils, leader’s meetings, synods, vestries and lay leaders who have an active or influential role in their denomination at local or regional level.’

During the last year, for example, the Partners in Transformation Project facilitated the main Churches in framing their response to the UK Government’s discussion paper entitled ‘A Shared Future: A Consultation on Improving Relations in Northern Ireland’. In it, the Catholic Bishops, were able to restate our conviction that ‘the only future available to the people of Northern Ireland is one which is shared.’

It was also in the context of this joint discussion between the Churches that we were able to reflect on and identify those obstacles which still remain in our society in terms of moving towards a shared future. Chief among those obstacles, it emerged, was the ongoing absence of trust.

TRUST: GOING THE EXTRA MILE

It seems that, in spite of the great progress of recent years, it was the issue of building trust between the two communities that was to prove the most critical and the most difficult to secure as the effort to sustain the institutions of the Good Friday Agreement evolved. People often say that the first victim of war is the truth.

In my experience, the first victim of violence or of injustice, is trust. It is no coincidence that Senator George Mitchell was able to record in one of his first Reports on the progress of the Good Friday Agreement that ‘Common to many of our meetings were arguments, steeped in history, as to why the other cannot be trusted. As a consequence, even well-intentioned acts were often viewed with suspicion and hostility.’

Northern Ireland is a society pervaded with distrust. The faltering, stop-start pattern of the peace process since the signing of the Agreement in 1998, has its roots in this inherent capacity to distrust. Yet trust is a necessary precondition for everything else: for a peaceful sharing of space together, for sharing power and responsibility, for reconciliation. As long as we distrust each other we live defensive lives and define our identity in exclusive and excluding ways. What we are discovering more and more in Northern Ireland, is that for reconciliation to be possible, and for lasting peace to take hold, people must do all that is within their power to remove fear and to build trust.

And here again I suggest, it is the vocabulary of faith which has something important to offer in terms of moving our community beyond the debilitating cycle of fear and distrust, which lies at the heart of our current impasse. It is found in the specifically Christian concept of supererogation – the duty to go the extra mile, to do more than is reasonable or justified in our own terms, for the sake of the common or greater good.

For Catholics and Nationalists, this going the extra mile to create trust would mean vigorously challenging any ambivalence that continues to exist in our own community about the presence or actions of non-democratic and totally unaccountable armed groups in our own community. In my work as Archbishop, I meet more and more Catholics who are concerned about the sense of control being exerted by powerful individuals or paramilitary groups in their local areas, sometimes subtly, sometimes violently.

The Catholic community cannot seek a more just, free and equal society and at the same time be patient with the forces in our own community which contradict these principles. We cannot swap old forms of captivity and oppression for new ones. The referenda by the Irish people, on both sides of the border, on the Good Friday Agreement, was an act of self-determination by the people of Ireland. Then they declared clearly and unequivocally that there is no further need of violence to resolve or pursue the question of a United Ireland, or indeed to maintain the Union. I believe it is now time to face up to the full implications of that act of self-determination.

No doubt some people will say that such gestures are treated with contempt by those for whom they are intended to encourage trust. But this is to miss the point. The Catholic community should remove itself totally from the legacy of violence as an expression of our own self-confidence, confidence in our own ability to pursue issues through political means, to construct a new Ireland in a peaceful and constructive manner through discussion, dialogue and debate.

Going the extra mile for the Catholic community would also mean moving beyond the many historic and legitimate reasons they have for distrusting the police to taking shared responsibility for the administration of law and order and continuing to ensure its reform. The Catholic Church was very clear about the need to reform the police when the issue was subjected to independent and international scrutiny. We share some of the disappointment about the manner in which this matter was handled by the British Government. This in itself contributed to a lack of trust, as has the failure to address sufficiently the deep distrust that continues to exist in relation to the activities of Special Branch and British Military Intelligence. But the fact remains that many nationalist areas are crying out for effective policing in Northern Ireland and this cannot be provided until support from the Catholic community has been maximised. For this reason it is vital that enough is done to maximise the confidence of the Catholic community in the new beginning to policing which has already begun, but also the participation of the Catholic community, to the maximum extent possible in that ongoing process of reform from within and with others, envisaged by the Patten Recommendations.

Going the extra mile for Catholics and Nationalists would also mean assuming some responsibility for creating greater confidence in the Protestant community about the future of their religious, cultural and political identity.

For Protestants and Unionists, on the other hand, going the extra mile would mean accepting the full implications of the principles enshrined in the Good Friday Agreement; the legitimacy of the nationalist aspiration to a united Ireland; the presence of people with an Irish identity in Northern Ireland and the full implications of this identity in terms of the need for credible north-south institutions. It would mean accepting the legacy of violence and threat of violence on the part of the unionist community which led to the foundation of the Northern Ireland State and its continued existence. It would mean recognising the right to parity of esteem for the Nationalist community, including the right to expressions and celebration of Nationalist identity. In particular, it would mean addressing any ambivalence in the Unionist community in relation to loyalist violence. In my experience, it is more than just a perception that Unionist leaders, British politicians and the British media do not treat the existence of the loyalist paramilitaries with the same vigour and determination as that of republican paramilitaries. This not only leads to further resentment and distrust of unionists and of the British State on the part of Catholics (to whom their violence is directed), it also reinforces any ambivalence which nationalists might have to the presence of republican paramilitaries in their community as a line of final defence.

Other important sources of distrust in this regard include the endless allegations of collusion between the security services in Britain, the security forces in Northern Ireland and loyalist paramilitaries listed in, among other places, the Stephen’s Inquiry. It is difficult to underestimate the impact of these allegations on the confidence of the Catholic community in the impartiality of the British Government generally and in the new beginning to policing in particular. This is an area for which only the British Government can take responsibility. The failure to honour the commitments given in relation to the Cory Collusion Inquiry Reports
and the call for a Public Inquiry into the murder of Mr Pat Finucane, are not only unacceptable, they have served to compound the sense of suspicion which exists about the extent of collusion, and about the continued influence of these same elements of the security services right into the present. The reform of Special Branch within the Police Service of Northern Ireland and the recognition of the disproportionate presence of British Army personnel and structures within Nationalist areas, provides the British Government with ample opportunity to make practical gestures which could inspire further momentum and trust.

In terms of building an atmosphere of trust and confidence, the value of creating dynamics of blame and counter-blame is also deeply questionable. Such dynamics contribute nothing to the creation of understanding. Indeed, it is possible to argue that they further undermine it by rehearsing well established obstacles to progress rather than developing creative solutions to the conflict. Individuals or organisations which contribute to the blame game rarely contribute anything new. Locking ourselves into cycles of blame and counter-blame do not bring solutions any closer. In the words of the German philosopher Hannah Arendt, the primary requirements for people to live together are ‘their willingness to enter into promises and agreements and to keep them; and their willingness to set aside the past – its broken promises and agreements, its enmity and its vicious circles of action and reaction – and to start anew.’ This is a time to start anew, not to recriminate about what we already know.

CONCLUDING REMARKS

I appreciate that these are challenging and very practical comments. But trust itself can only be created through concrete actions which create confidence in the other, from the words we use to the political decisions we take. This is why I have felt it necessary to outline these gestures of trust in such practical terms. The basic principles of the resolution of this historic conflict have not changed. What is required now is to face the most challenging aspects of what has already been agreed and to go the extra mile – preferably in the shoes of the other.

Immense progress has been made in recent years and I personally remain very confident that this progress can be consolidated in the coming months by people doing all in their power to go the extra mile, to take that extra step into the unimaginable gesture or the unthinkable shift of position which can create deeper and more enduring trust. If we can resolve the remaining issues, then the future for the whole of our society in Northern Ireland will be brighter and more certain than heretofore.

Some of the creative proposals that are emerging from the political parties at this stage are encouraging and deserve careful and constructive consideration.

We should not let the perfect become the enemy of the good.

In conclusion, I notice that it was out of the fragments of the old east window of this Church, that people of generosity and heroic faith were able to construct the striking depiction of St. Ethelburga gathering up broken fragments in the window which now replaces it. It is a symbol, in your own words, of the brokenness of the past and of the reconciling mission of the Church in the future. I hope that what I have said to you this evening has demonstrated in some small way that people like St. Ethelburga, who find the truth about their human identity in their religious faith, can play a powerful role in gathering up the fragments of conflict and division. The brokenness of Northern Ireland’s past is a powerful testimony to the dangers of an uncritical relationship between faith and identity based on themes of superiority, exclusion and distrust. But Northern Ireland’s present is testimony to the healing, restoring power of those who believe to bring about a new approach to conflict rooted in the values of forgiveness, reconciliation and justice. The key to which of these prevails lies in the religious language we choose to emphasize within our own tradition at any given time. In this regard, the renewed emphasis on the doctrine of the Blessed Trinity, such a dominant theme in the life of St. Patrick, must be a source of hope and confidence for all those who see the relationship between unity in diversity as a critical issue for the future of the world, indeed of this very society. This most fundamental conviction of the Christian tradition provides the ultimate motive and model for living constructively with difference. It enables us to see difference as an opportunity for mutual enrichment rather than an obstacle. It calls Christians to a sense of mutuality and inter-dependence, themes which are becoming increasingly important in our increasingly diverse, yet interdependent world.
In the end, the relationship between faith and identity is always a struggle between the language of dominance, exclusion and superiority and the language of mutual liberation, interdependence and acts of trust. The Anglican Croatian theologian Miroslav Volf captures this choice in the powerful metaphor of exclusion and embrace.

Let me end with his words:

There can be no justice, no resolution to conflict, without the will to embrace…
My point is simple: to create justice you must, [like the persons of the Trinity] make space in yourself for the other, in order to make that space, you need to want to embrace the other. If you insist that others do not belong to you and you to them, or that you will have your justice and they will have theirs; your justices will clash and there will be no peace between you. The key to peace, therefore, is the will to embrace.

Thank you.
+Seán Brady
Archbishop of Armagh and
Primate of All Ireland
5th May 2004

3 May – Supporting Marriage and the Family

SUPPORTING MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY
Irish Bishops’ Conference seminar ‘Supporting Marriage and Family Life’
Monday 3rd May 2004, Buswells Hotel, Dublin

Speaker: Most Rev Seán Brady, Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland.

INTRODUCTION
Bishop Jones, distinguished guests and friends.
The Church is well aware of the changed conditions of families in today’s world. In Ireland, this is sometimes characterised as the growing shift from the large, rural, family with strong religious commitment to the small, nuclear, independent, urban style family. Yet we should be wary of over simplifying the picture. On the one hand, the concept of the close family bond is so ingrained in Irish history and culture and so appreciated for its worth, that it would be a mistake to proclaim its inevitable demise. On the other, the experience of the new and broader sense of family which has emerged over recent years has not proved so successful at securing the happiness of its adherents that it can be presumed to be the agreed,
even the dominant model of the future.

Family: The Primary Vital Cell

What is certain, however, is that in discussing the relationship between the family and society, there is much at stake. We are, in this debate, in a very real sense, on sacred ground. The Holy Father did not exaggerate when he said that ‘the future of the world passes by way of the family’ (FC #86). Not only are marriage and family grounded in the will of God and revealed by the order of nature, they are also the
primary source of stability, life and love in any society, that ‘primary vital cell’ from which the rest of society derives so much of its own cohesion and potential success. This fact is recognised by our own Constitution when it describes the family ‘as the necessary basis of social order and as indispensable to the welfare of the Nation and the State.’ (Article 41.1.2 Irish Constitution). The Greek Constitution expresses the same conviction when it describes the family as ‘the foundation of the conservation and the progress of the nation.’ Such values are consistent in turn with Article 16 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights when it states:
‘The family is a fundamental nucleus or cell of society and of the State and, as such, should be recognised and protected.’ Article 16 of the Social Charter of Europe (1961), Article 23 of the International Treaty on Civil Rights, Article 10 of the International Charter on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights as well as many other national and international instruments both affirm and develop this basic insight that the family is the nucleus of society, and for that reason is deserving of special status, development and care.

Our seminar here today is an expression of that care. In the words of the Holy Father’s recent exhortation on the Church in Europe, recognition ‘is due to the many families who, in the simplicity of a daily existence lived in love, are visible witnesses to the presence of Jesus who accompanies and sustains them with the gift of his Spirit. In order to support them on their journey,’ the Holy Father goes on to say, ‘it will be necessary to enrich the theology and spirituality of marriage and family life; to proclaim with firmness and integrity, and to demonstrate by convincing examples, the truth and the beauty of the family founded upon marriage and understood as a stable and fruitful union of man and woman; and to promote in
every ecclesial community an adequate and integrated programme of pastoral care for the family.’ (#91). Such issues are at the very heart of our discussions today.

But as we begin this seminar, it is important to acknowledge that the Church also needs, in the words of the Holy Father, ‘to provide assistance to those who are in difficult situations… In all events it will be necessary to encourage, assist and support families, both individually and in associations, who seek to play their proper role in the Church and in society, and to work for the promotion of genuine and adequate family policies on the part of the individual States and the European Union.’ (#91)

It is for this reason that the Catholic Church has both a duty and a right to teach and act in defence of the primacy of the natural institutions of marriage and the family. It is also for this reason that it cannot and should not apologise for insisting that other forms of relationship are not of the same nature and status
as that of marriage and the family. The looming debate about the level of recognition that is appropriate for what are called “de facto” unions makes this an important and urgent issue.

THE QUESTION OF “DE FACTO” UNIONS

The so called ‘De Facto’ unions have been taking on special importance in recent years. The common element of such unions is that of being forms of co-habitation of a sexual kind, which are not marriage. Some recent initiatives propose the institutional recognition of ‘de facto’ unions and even their equivalence to families which have their origin in a marriage commitment. It is important to draw attention to the
damage that such recognition and equivalence would represent for the identity of marriage as traditionally understood. The question of recognition of same-sex unions has also been raised. The Catholic Church remains committed to advocating and promoting the common good of everyone in our society and to giving practical expression to our pastoral concern for homosexual people within and beyond the
Catholic Church. The Catholic Church teaches that homosexual people are to be ‘accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity’ . The Church condemns all forms of violence, harassment or abuse directed against people who are homosexual.

In recent years there have been significant changes to the law to remove discrimination against people on the grounds of their sexuality. These changes have removed injustices, without of themselves creating any parallel legal institution to marriage.

However, it is essential when considering future legislation concerning marriage and the family, to acknowledge the vital distinction between private homosexual behaviour between consenting adults, and formalising that behaviour as ‘a relationship in society, foreseen and approved by the law, to the point where it becomes an institution in the legal structure.’ Legal developments must be considered not
only in terms of their impact on individuals, but also in terms of their impact on the common good and on the fundamental institutions of society such as marriage and the family. As a recent Vatican Congregation’s note on this issue points out, ‘civil laws play a very important and sometimes decisive role in influencing patterns of thought and behaviour. Legal recognition of homosexual unions would obscure certain basic moral values and cause a devaluation of the institution of marriage.’

The recognition of same-sex unions on the same terms as marriage would suggest to future generations and to society as a whole that marriage as husband and wife, and a same-sex relationship, are equally valid options, and an equally valid context for the bringing up of children. Sacred Scripture and the natural order clearly point out that this is not the case.

What is at stake here is the natural right of children to the presence normally of a mother and father in their lives. Given the legal changes that have already taken place and the fact that two people can make private legal provision covering many aspects of their lives together, including joint ownership of homes, living wills and powers of attorney, the argument that same-sex marriage is necessary to protect
human rights becomes a redundant one. When it is balanced against the manner in which it will undermine such a fundamental institution as marriage and the family, it is difficult to see how such a development could be justified in terms of the Government’s duty to defend marriage and the common good.

THE ROLE OF THE CHURCH

The Second Synod on Europe discussed the pastoral care of the faithful who are divorced and civilly re-married. In the words of the Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Europa, ‘they are not excluded from the community; rather, they are encouraged to share in its life, while undertaking a journey of growth, in the spirit of the Gospel’s demands.’ (#93) We need to examine again how seriously here in Ireland we have undertaken this task of encouraging and convincing people who are struggling with unresolved issues
in their lives that they are not excluded but belong to the community of the Church. We must constantly examine how faithfully we seek to make the Church a living sign and a sanctuary of God’s compassion for all of human kind.

The strong conviction that marriage and the family should have a privileged status has made the defence of marriage and the family a constant theme in Catholic social teaching and a legitimate focus for much of the Church’s activity and resources. It is wholly appropriate, for example, that the Catholic Church funds organisations such as CURA and ACCORD, about which we will hear more later. These organisations contribute in an outstanding way, on behalf of the Catholic Church, but not exclusively for the
Church, to the support of those three values of Catholic life which are inextricably linked – the Gospel of Life, the Covenant of Marriage, and the love of family.

ACCORD, provides care and support for those preparing for marriage in the Catholic Church, for those already married through programmes of enrichment and for those experiencing difficulties in their relationships, through its highly professional counselling service, in which it is generally regarded as a leader in its field. Currently it has 57 Centres throughout the island of Ireland and is jointly funded by the Irish Bishops’ Conference and by the Family Support Agency, under the Department of Family and Social Affairs. ACCORD is a welcome and worthy example of appropriate and effective co-operation between Church and State in the mutual support of the family. I salute the members of ACCORD for their generous and
invaluable contribution to the safeguarding and promotion of marriage.

ACCORD also provides the Irish Bishops’ Conference and Irish society as a whole with an important facility for research into the dynamics of marriage and family at work in our society. I found it particularly interesting to note the findings of their recent survey on ‘Unhappy marriages: Does Counselling Help?’ It indicated that three main issues were contributing to unhappiness in marriage:

• Trading criticism and insults and not listening
• Disputes over sharing housework and childcare chores
• Experiencing financial difficulties.

It seems that for men the main issue was criticism and for women, not being listened to. Perhaps there are lessons here for more than just married couples! It is also a timely reminder of the need to invest time in building our relationships at home, something which is under increasing strain because of the many financial pressures on the modern Irish family. To afford a house, to meet the demands of our consumerist
society and to pay the basic bills, including child care, more and more families have to have both parents going out to work, with the possibility that both parents are coming home tired, with little ‘quality’ time to spend with each other or with their children. The increased mobility of some families, their frequent movement from place to place without establishing any real roots, has further aggravated this situation.

This is particularly acutely felt by immigrant families and by refugees. Their sense of fear and isolation can be profound. Both the Government and local communities have an obligation to do all in their power to support the needs of those families in their midst who, like many Irish families who have emigrated, know what it is to be ‘strangers in a foreign land.’

In addition to ACCORD, the agency known as CURA also plays a central, and thoroughly professional role, in supporting the Church in its promotion of the Gospel of life, marriage and the family, providing care, counselling and support for those who find themselves dealing with an unplanned or unwanted pregnancy. Recent statistics show that more and more children are being born to single mothers, some of whom are very young. That this has coincided with the increased availability of contraception for young people, under the banner of reducing unwanted pregnancies, is a statistic deserving of more honest and objective reflection. Last year over 30% of all births registered in the Republic of Ireland were born outside of wedlock. CURA offers compassion and care for these mothers, fathers, children and their families. Many
of its voluntary workers open the doors of their homes to host these young mothers- to–be and to support them through their pregnancy. That the Trojan work done by CURA is often ignored is something much to be regretted. I thank this agency for its splendid service to the cause of life.

In more recent years the outstanding work of both these organisations has been supported and extended by the development of a wide range of Family Ministry programmes in various Dioceses throughout the country. These important initiatives are yet another concrete expression of the priority given to the support of the family in the life of the Church.

Their objective is to provide support for all aspects of the family through all its experiences, from parenting programmes to bereavement groups, from support for those facing separation and divorce to support for those preparing for marriage, to initiatives for children coping with separation or bereavement to the development of formally recognised training programmes for lay people who wish to work voluntarily in support of family life at Parish level.

The development of these initiatives is itself an indication of the unique and varied pressures which the family now faces in Irish life. The rapid pace of social change; the revolution of values within our culture; the sometimes inappropriate intrusion of the mass media into our homes; the impact of changing political and economic conditions, most notably the lack of affordable housing, the growing disillusionment with rampant consumerism and the increasing gap between the haves and the have nots: all of these have placed the Irish family under unprecedented stress in recent years.

Modern Challenges

Some of these pressures are due to broad social forces over which a family has no control. When market forces militate against the family then, the case for Government intervention is strong. Whether it is the lack of affordable housing, the promotion of excessive drinking, or the targeting of young people through highly sexualised music, marketing, clothes and magazines, there comes a time when someone in our
society must ask, is this the kind of society we really want? Have we got the balance right between the tried and tested values of the past and the legitimate hopes of a freer and more prosperous future? Have we substituted old forms of social and moral slavery for new ones? Where is the evidence that, for all the changes family life in Ireland is any happier, loving, or more secure than it was before?

Today I seem to meet more people, particularly parents, who are expressing concerns about what they see as the moral and social disintegration of Irish society. They feel isolated, unsupported and powerless in the face of a persistent undermining of the values which have traditionally sustained Irish society and the family, values like self-respect, self-control and sobriety.

They are deeply concerned about the increase in violent crime; excessive drinking patterns; the easy availability of illegal drugs; the disintegration of the sense of community; the loneliness and isolation of the modern city and the rural parish; the sexualisation of their children at an increasingly early age; the pressure to earn and to succeed; the fear that one of their children might commit suicide; and the development of a selfish class with little or no concern for the common good.

When the family disintegrates through unbearable social pressures, or when its privileged status is diminished, then a move towards unacceptable individualism is inevitable, with increased fragmentation and an accompanying loss of social cohesion. The home is where we learn how to live with others, how to cope with diversity, how to limit our individual desires in the light of other people’s needs. It is where we first learn the healing power of love and acceptance, how to cope with loss and hurt, where we learn the meaning of life and who we are. It is the first school of faith, the ‘domestic Church’, the ‘imprint of divine love’, the place where you can go, when no-one else will take you in. For all these reasons the family has a very valuable and irreplaceable role in Irish society.

CONCLUSION
It is for these reasons that our seminar here today is so important. A magnificent weekend of celebrations marked the accession of ten more countries into the EU. On Saturday last I was present at a meeting of the Polish Bishops’ Conference in Warsaw.

It was attended by bishops representing the vast majority of the EU countries. They spoke of the strong commitment to marriage and the family among their people. They voiced their concerns in case their governments or the European Union should do anything to undermine marriage and the family. It is probable that issues about marriage the family will play an increasingly important role in the forthcoming
European elections. It is right that the Church should offer this opportunity for people to press the ‘pause’ button on the issue of the Irish family and invite them to reflect on its future. Should we rewind, fast forward, or perhaps even reset our understanding of this particularly important and profoundly valuable institution?

Are we in danger of becoming more and more like the Simpsons, or has Ireland something deeper and more fruitful to offer to European, indeed to international reflection on the nature and role of the family?

My own suggestion is that we should honour the richness of our own Celtic and Christian tradition, with its ability to see the will of the Creator in the design of nature, with its instinctive sense of the sacred value of family and clan, yet with its remarkable capacity for hospitality, inclusion and welcome. We must draw from the best of what is old and what is new.

In thanking you all for being here, let me also thank the Irish Government for its decision to celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the United Nations Year of the Family. It shows a keen awareness of the importance of the family in our society and provides us with an opportunity to reflect on how critical it is for all of us to nurture and support the institutions of Christian marriage and the family.

At the Second Synod for Europe, held in 1999, which I had the honour to attend, it was noted that the age in which we live, with its own particular challenges, can seem to be a time of bewilderment. The loss of Europe’s christian memory and heritage can sometimes mean that many Europeans give the impression of living without spiritual roots like heirs who have squandered an inheritance entrusted to them by history.
The heritage of truth about the family has been, from the beginning, tied for the Church and for the world. All generations of Christ’s disciples have drawn frequently on this treasure of truth.

In conclusion, let me renew the invitation of the Holy Father to all Christian families: –
‘Families become what you are! You are a living sign of God’s love, a sanctuary of life and the foundation of society, a model for the establishment of social relations lived out in solidarity and love… Be credible witnesses to the Gospel of hope! For you yourselves are ‘gaudium et spes’ ( joy and hope). (#94)

END
3rd May 2004

1 May – The Roman Catholic Church in Ireland today – Address to Polish Episcopal Conference Warsaw

THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH IN IRELAND TODAY
ADDRESS TO POLISH EPISCOPAL CONFERENCE, WARSAW
BY MOST REV SEAN BRADY, ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH AND PRIMATE OF ALL IRELAND
1 MAY 2004

It is both a pleasure and an honour for me to visit Warsaw and address the Polish Bishops’ Conference on this historic day. I thank you for the kind invitation to be here. As a citizen of the country that is currently host to the European Union Presidency, I warmly welcome Poland into the European Union. Today in Dublin, Poland returns officially to where it truly belongs, at the heart of Europe.

As President of the Irish Episcopal Conference I congratulate you and I bring you most cordial greetings from my fellow bishops. We rejoice at the prospect of belonging to the European Union of twenty-five (25) nations, which includes your country. We believe that Poland has much to teach the rest of Europe about tolerance and political freedom. We are aware of your long parliamentary tradition, going back to the fifteenth century, and of the part which you have played in paving the way for the expansion of the EU.

OUR TWO COUNTRIES HAVE MUCH IN COMMON

Although distant geographically, the histories of our countries are, in some respects, closely linked. In terms of a shared heritage and values, our countries resemble one another. Just as Irish monks kept the faith alive in parts of Europe in the latter years of the first millennium (AD), the Polish Church, inspired by the Holy Father in Rome, headed the drive in the latter years of the last millennium to dismantle the “Iron Curtain”.
Our two countries share troubled histories. Religious persecution has been visited on both our peoples. Our countries have both been colonized. While the Irish population was ravaged by famine in the mid-nineteenth century, Poland suffered the worst atrocities imaginable under Nazi occupation in the mid-twentieth century. Emigration has for centuries torn families and communities apart in both our countries. Both nations have had to struggle to regain an independent state. And of course, both populations are
predominantly Roman Catholic. Perhaps, because of both our countries’ experience of mass emigration and volatile relationships with our near neighbours, we have a strong sense of national identity. We both also
have a noble missionary tradition. During the last century the Polish and Irish worked well together in the Irish College in Paris.

When Ireland’s Celtic Chieftains fled from Ireland to find refuge in the Catholic countries throughout Europe, some settled in the Polish Commonwealth and served in the Polish military. One such man, Bernard O’Connor, became the royal physician to King Jan III Sobieski.

The 1916 uprising was an important moment in Ireland’s revolutionary history. Poland’s link with the Easter 1916 Rising is noteworthy. Married to Polish Count Markiewicz, Constance Gore Booth (Countess Markiewicz), played a leading role in the 1916 rising and became the Minister for Labour in the first Irish
government. I am told that there is a school here in Warsaw called after Countess Markiewicz.

NORTHERN IRELAND: THE NEED FOR RECONCILIATION

Nonetheless, Ireland has witnessed its own share of carnage in the last thirty-five years. More than three thousand lives have been lost in Northern Ireland which has a population of 1.5 million. The era of “The Troubles”, with all their community hatred and sectarianism has resulted in terrible atrocities. Fortunately, the intolerance of the last thirty-five odd years now appears to be diminishing. The Belfast Agreement of Good Friday 1998 is still recognised as the structure most likely to end, once and for all, centuries of tribal tensions in Northern Ireland. It has succeeded in bridging a gap between sectarian violence and political dialogue. Although the institutions of the Agreement are at present suspended, and the road to a fully functioning democratic society is not altogether agreed, the truth is that the killing has been dramatically reduced. But there is great need of reconciliation. We have much to learn from the people of Poland. Your willingness to forgive your neighbours after World War II should be an inspiration to us in Ireland to achieve the reconciliation which is so badly needed.

1979 PAPAL VISIT

We were tremendously honoured that the Holy Father decided to visit Ireland in 1979. He had already visited Poland and Mexico and chose to come to Ireland next because these three countries had suffered so much for the faith. Six months later the images of the Gdansk Lenin Shipyards, during the crucial strike of 1980, began to appear on our television screens. They depicted the locked shipyard gates and the workers barricaded behind the icon of the Black Madonna and the portrait of Pope John Paul II; along
with the pictures of priests hearing outdoor confessions just inside the shipyard gates.

Because Pope John Paul II had visited Ireland so recently and because just under one third of the population of the country had gathered in Dublin’s Phoenix Park to attend the Papal Mass and hear the Pope, there was great empathy for the Polish people. For only sixty five years earlier, Ireland had fought to create its first republic. So, there was genuine concern in Ireland for the people of Poland in their struggle to establish a third Polish republic in 1980.

1989: A NEW DEPARTURE IN POLAND AND IRELAND

Ireland’s recent economic success is indeed the result of its membership of the European Union. In 1990, the year Lech Walesa was elected President of Poland, the Irish economy was on the verge of financial collapse. Then a remarkable change took place. That turnaround is best exemplified by the rapid reduction in the unemployment rate. In 1994, the Irish unemployment rate stood at 18 percent. By 2000 the rate of unemployment had fallen to less than 5 percent. It was virtual “full employment.” As a result, the
dignity and self-esteem of a generation that had suffered large-scale emigration were restored. The prospect of a precarious life of dependency on state welfare benefits vanished, virtually overnight.

Despite this success, there are still large areas of poverty in cities and rural communities throughout Ireland. The income gap between high and low earners is now the widest in the Europe Union. Our young married couples are facing a daunting task to get their own homes.

Tragically, the young male suicide rate in Ireland is amongst the highest in Europe. The economic boom has brought many fruits to Ireland but there is a growing realisation that growth for growth’s sake may not sit well with a caring and an inclusive society. So when policy makers from Central and Eastern Europe visit Ireland to learn about the policies that resulted in the doubling of Irish Gross National Product between 1989 and 2001, they would also do well to learn from our mistakes. There is a growing risk that in the rush to improve our material well being, we are losing sight of our own identity.

RELIGIOUS BELIEF AND PRACTICE IN MODERN IRELAND

From 1850 until 1950, Ireland experienced a great religious revival. There was almost universal attendance at religious services and a high degree of acceptance of the moral authority of the Church. Confidence in the Church was very high also.

But times change. The last thirty years has seen a decline in the moral authority of the Catholic Church in Ireland, a certain loss of confidence in the Church and a decline in religious observance. Nevertheless, I think the Irish remain a religious people.

From the most recent statistics there is a near universal acceptance of belief in God. 96% of the people state that they believe in God. There are also high levels of belief in both life after death and Heaven. Only
9% of Irish people do not belong to any religious denomination. This figure remains low by International standards but it has risen very much in Ireland over the past 18 years.

There is strong evidence that Irish people wish to mark the important moments of their lives, such as birth, marriage and death with religious services and to publicly celebrate these events. The Irish attach considerable importance to prayer but increasingly they prefer to pray in private rather than in community.

While religious identity is still strong in Ireland it is, however, no longer synonymous with regular Church attendance. Last September an Irish opinion poll found that just 44 percent of those who regard themselves as Catholics attend mass once a week.

There is also increasing evidence that Church teaching in key areas of sexual ethics is progressively less influential in determining life style choices. There is a weakening in adherence to Catholic Church teaching on abortion, pre marital sexual relations, extra marital relationships and same-sex relationships.

The loss of confidence in the Catholic Church is a very serious issue. Clearly the sex abuse scandals which have recently come into the public forum and the manner in which they were perceived to have been handled have been a factor in the loss of confidence in the Catholic Church. Over the last ten years
the Church in Ireland has suffered a lot through sexual abuse of minors by priests and religious. The whole Church in Ireland has been hurt in recent years by this scandal. The number of candidates for priesthood and religious life has dropped dramatically. This decline was identified at the Second Synod for Europe as one of the signs of the existential anguish which accompanies a certain dimming of hope in Europe today.

IRELAND AND THE DRAFT EU CONSTITUTIONAL TREATY

“Ireland has an essential role to play in the construction of a new Europe and in confirming its profound identity,” so said the Holy Father to Ireland’s President McAleese, on her official visit to the Holy See last November.

My hope is that during its Presidency of the European Union, the Irish Government will play its part, not only in ensuring the retention of Article 51 of the Draft Constitution, but also in doing all it can to persuade its partners in the European Union to include a reference to God in the Preamble to the Constitution. Article 51 recognises the juridical status of Churches and of Religious Communities and the need for formal dialogue between the Churches and the Institutions of the European Union. The Irish Bishops’ Conference has already made representations to the Irish Government on this topic and on other issues, for example, the matter of stem-cell research on the human embryo. We look forward to working closely with the Episcopal Conference of Poland and with the other member Conferences to ensure the kind of Europe which we all desire. Together we will have to work for the growth of a mature culture of acceptance of immigrants which calls for the recognition of the fundamental rights of each immigrant.

TRÓCAIRE

Another issue on which we could all possibly co-operate is that of help to the developing nations. Trócaire, the Irish Catholic agency for world development, constantly reminds us that the overall level of development from the rich countries has dropped to an unacceptably low level. Poverty reduction, rather than poverty management, is fundamental to Europe’s future security. Perhaps together we can work to help to end the poverty which oppresses so many people in the developing world today.

CONCLUSION
I look forward to a Europe of good neighbours, whose citizens know the joy of living in peace with dignity, respect and justice. These are values which we all share already. May we continue to champion them as citizens of the enlarged European Union.
Laudetur Jesus Christus

17 Mar – St Patrick’s Day Message

CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY PRIMATE OF ALL IRELAND
ST PATRICK’S DAY MESSAGE
17 MARCH 2004

Lá fhéile Pádraig faoi shona do Ghaeil tríd an domhain agus beannachtaí na féile orthu go léir.

It is my very great pleasure on this our National Feastday to wish Irish people everywhere a very
happy and faith-filled St. Patrick’s Day. All over the world today, Irish men and women, and
those who claim Irish descent, will gather to celebrate their identity and their heritage.

Patrick – Ambassador for God

The first time Irish emigrants came together to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day, according to historians,
was on 17 March, 1737 in Boston. Over the centuries it has grown into an international celebration
of Irish culture and identity. Today, Manhattan will come to a standstill and the white line in
the middle of Fifth Avenue will be painted green. The occasion affords the opportunity to
celebrate “being Irish.” Amidst the music, parades and merriment, the real focus of the
celebration may become lost. 17 March is the anniversary of St. Patrick’s death. We join
together today not just to celebrate Irish culture and identity, but also to remember the man
who described himself as an ambassador for God and who prayed that it might never happen that
he (Patrick) should lose the people which God had won for himself at the end of the earth.
Today we honour a man who nurtured and spread Christianity throughout our native land – setting
down a strong foundation by building on the solid rock of steadfast faith.

Patrick and Europe

Scholars tell us that Christianity had already taken root before Patrick’s arrival in Ireland.
There is evidence that missionaries like Declan of Ardmore preceded Patrick. However, there is
no doubt that Patrick kindled a flickering flame and turned it into a blazing fire. Whether he
banished the snakes from Ireland or confronted druids on the Hill of Tara matters little! His
achievement as a preacher of faith in Jesus Christ in Ireland made Christianity on this island
a living force that has never been extinguished. By spreading the Christian faith to the pagan
Irish, Patrick linked Ireland, a remote island on the periphery of a crumbling Roman Empire,
to mainland Europe. By taking Ireland into the Christian world, Patrick forged new bonds and
links, which, thankfully, have endured to the present day. Spreading a knowledge of Latin
throughout Ireland, Patrick enabled the people of Ireland to participate in the life of Europe.
This paved the way for the early Irish Church to seek out missionary paths in later centuries
and so contributed hugely to the development of faith and culture in mainland Europe. It is
therefore appropriate then that come May 1st, the formal entry of the ten EU accession states
from Central and Eastern Europe will be signed into law here in Ireland. Patrick was one for
breaking down barriers. Though borders were ever transient in fifth century Europe, Patrick’s
message is one of pushing back frontiers.

5 Mar – Funeral Mass of Cormac McAnallen

FUNERAL MASS
CORMAC McANALLEN
ST PATRICK’S CHURCH, EGLISH, CO. TYRONE
FRIDAY, 5 MARCH, 2004, 11.00AM
HOMILY PREACHED AT FINAL COMMENDATION
MOST REV. SEÁN BRADY, DCL
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH
PRIMATE OF ALL-IRELAND

A Aire Rialtais, a theachta Uachtaráin na hÉireann, a Thiarna Easpaig, a chomhaltais
Chumainn Lúth Chleas Gael, a chairde Gael, idir cléir agus tuath.
Today tens of thousands are with us in spirit as we come to pay our respects to a
noble hero.

For the tragic and sudden death of Cormac McAnallen has shocked and saddened countless
people. United with all of you here present, and with Fr Breslan and the people of
his beloved Eglish in particular, and in union with Tyrone people everywhere, I offer
my deepest sympathy to Cormac’s parents, Bridget and Brendan, to his brothers, Donal
and Fergus, to his fiancée, Ashlene, and to the extended family. Their loss is truly
great.

Today the words of the Book of Wisdom seem particularly appropriate. I hope that
they can offer some consolation:

“The virtuous man, though he dies before his time, will find rest.
Length of days is not what makes age honourable,
Nor number of years the true measure of life;
Understanding, this is ripe old age.” (4:17)

In the eyes of all of us, Cormac has died before his time, carried away in the twinkling
of an eye by a deadly freak virus. It is hard to make sense of it all. And yet in his
very short life Cormac achieved so much. On and off the playing field he was a star.
Inside and outside the classroom and the examination hall he was hugely successful.
Naturally gifted in so many ways – intellectually, physically, emotionally – he worked
hard to develop his talents. He did so not to hoard them for himself, but to share
them generously and to bring happiness, joy and glory to others. I am thinking of
the huge round of speaking engagements at functions which he undertook over recent
months. I am thinking also of his commitment to activities like Scór with the Club
and the community. Scripture tells us that it is not length of days, nor number
of years that make life honourable or memorable. The true measure of greatness
is the living of a good and sincere life. For virtue does not die but gives the
assurance of immortality.

One of the intercessions in the Prayer of the Faithful in the Mass recalled the
extraordinary influence exercised by Cormac McAnallen on a variety of people.
Time and time again he inspired team-mates to strive for the good and the glory
which they desired. Now his memory will burn brightly in the hearts of all who
loved and admired him. The example of his all too short, but brilliant life,
will be a light to very many others. It will inspire them to live so as to win
the crown of eternal glory.

Who will best honour the memory of our dead hero? I firmly believe that Cormac’s
memory will be best honoured by those who will best imitate the good that he has
done. The word, icon, is much used nowadays and perhaps overused. Cormac was an
icon in the proper sense of that term. He was a role model, gentle and modest,
dedicated ad disciplined, joyful and happy.

There is immense grief and sorrow at the death of Cormac McAnallen. Understandably
so – for his passing is a huge loss to his parents, brothers, fiancée, Ashlene,
and to countless others. St Paul urges us to take heart from what we believe.
We believe that Jesus died and rose again, and that it will be the same for those
who died in Jesus. God will bring them with him. This is our Faith. We are
proud to profess it. Let is also be our consolation in these days of sorrow and
sadness.

In these days, justly and not surprisingly, there is a lot of attention given to
the No 3 red and white jersey which Cormac so proudly and effectively wore. We
should not forget another garment which he wore much earlier. I am speaking of
the white baptismal gown which he wore in this Church of St Patrick, Eglish, on
leap day, 29 February, 1980. On that day Cormac was brought here as an infant
by his parents and godparents to receive Christian baptism. On that day the
seed of Christian faith was sown – a faith which Cormac went on to practise
and live.

For the life of Cormac McAnallen we praise the Lord. For the life-journey which
brought him from Derrylatinee Primary School in Eglish to St Patrick’s Grammar
School in Armagh, to Queen’s, UCD, Healy Park, Casement Park, Croke Park, Australia,
back to Armagh, this time to St Catherine’s College, as a teacher, and now finally
back to Eglish for Christian burial, we give thanks to God. We ask God to forgive
him for any human weakness, any sin on his part. We commend him graciously, if
so reluctantly, to the Lord, to his ultimate goal and destination, eternal life.
We pray that we all might be found worthy to be re-united together in our heavenly
home in due time.

Moldah le Dia, le hAthair na Trócaire agus le Dia an tSóláis uile. Is é a thugann
sólás dúinne inár gcuid trioblóidí sa slí go bhféadaimíd sólás a thabhairt do dhaoine
eile ina gcuid trioblóidí féin as ucht an tsóláis a fhaighimid féin ó Dhia. Suaimhneas
síoraí tabhair dó, a Thiarna, agus go lonraí solas suthain air. Go bhfaighe a anam
agus anamnacha na bhfíreán go léir trócaire.

Sa bhaisteadh gealladh an bheatha shíoraí do Chormac. Tabhair dó anois, a Thiarna,
páirt a bheith aige i gcomaoin na Naomh go deo.

Suaimhneas síoraí tabhair dó, a Thiarna, agus go lonraí solas suthain air. Go
bhfaighe a anam agus anamnacha na bhfíreán trócaire ó Dhia agus cónaí faoi shuaimhneas.
Go bhfáilti Críost romhat i bparthas, a Chormaic dhil, agus go bhfáilti sluaite na
n-aingeal romhat. Amen.

31 Jan – Address to Irish Association in Manchester

ADDRESS GIVEN BY
MOST REVEREND DR. SEÁN BRADY,
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH AND PRIMATE OF ALL-IRELAND
TO THE
IRISH ASSOCIATION SOCIAL CLUB,
SATURDAY, 31ST JANUARY 2004,
IN THE JARVIS PICCADILLY HOTEL, MANCHESTER

Your Excellency, Ambassador Ó Ceallaigh, distinguished guests and friends of the Irish Association Social Club in Manchester, I am particularly pleased to be able to celebrate with you tonight on this the occasion of your Association’s 48th Annual Dinner. Thank you for your warm reception and generous words of welcome.

When any of our emigrant communities meet, it is an opportunity for us to remember those who have journeyed ahead of us. In the mid nineteen fifties, very large numbers of young Irish men and women emigrated from Ireland to England. Very few of them had either work or lodgings awaiting them. The Irish community, which had settled in Manchester in tougher times in the nineteen thirties, was very concerned about the welfare of these young Irish immigrants. They wanted to help them avoid some of the pitfalls, which they themselves had encountered.

It takes enormous courage to leave home and loved ones and begin an adventure in a foreign land, filled with uncertainty, risk and hardship. Today, when global communications can inform one part of the world about what is happening in another in a matter of seconds, it is relatively easy to know what to expect in the country to which one intends to emigrate. In the fifties, such knowledge was not available. The support, therefore, that the settled Irish community gave to the newcomers was absolutely necessary and extremely valuable and helpful.

I congratulate you on your work in this regard down through the years. Long may you continue to watch for and reach out to the stranger among you.

Manchester today is a wonderful city with many Irish connections. For many in Ireland, Manchester is “Manchester United” and the team’s popularity is truly astounding. Their supporters cross all divides in Ireland – North and South. This is largely due to the many Irish born heroes that played, and still play, at Old Trafford. According to the Manchester United Supporters website, seven out of every ten young people in Ireland support ‘The Red Devils’. One has only to think of names like: Kevin Moran, Denis Irwin, Johnny Giles Roy Keane and John O’Shea – to name but a few – to see why this is so.
Manchester also hosts the largest Irish Music Festival in the U.K. I am not surprised that Manchester calls itself the ‘Rock and Goal’ capital of the world!!

Of course there are many famous Irish names associated with football and music. We have every reason to be proud of them. However, they should not distract from the tens of thousands of Irish who also influence the heart and soul of life in this city today. There are many unsung heroes who make gallant efforts to improve the quality of life of this city by their involvement in parish organisations, clubs and societies, and many other of this city’s sporting and cultural bodies. Long may you continue to enrich the associations and societies you so generously serve.

Many second generation Irish are happily integrated into the life of Manchester and Britain generally. Many of you Irish born parents are proud as you look at how your children have achieved so much. It happened because you took the risk of making your home here. Many of you, as migrants, were motivated not by your own interest solely but you also thought of the opportunities that this land could offer to your children.

As the Irish have enriched Manchester, over the past two centuries, the Irish community here have also been a source of enrichment for the mother country. On a basic level, it was money sent back from the Irish in Britain which kept many an Irish farm and family afloat during harsher times back home. More recently, many Irish have returned from cities such as Manchester with new skills and experiences gained here which they, in turn, have used to reinvigorate Ireland. Indeed the returning Irish are some of the unsung heroes of Ireland’s recent economic boom.

Since 1957, the Irish Bishops have endeavoured to serve the needs of emigrants. Over the years, we have tried, to the best of our ability, to serve you and where possible send Migrant Chaplains who are dedicated to your care. Sadly, with a shortage of priests back home, we will have to carefully examine how we can sustain this into the future.

Here, I would like to pay tribute not just to our Migrant Chaplains but to the many Irish born who came here and ministered to your needs in many and varied ways. I would like also to pay tribute to the many amongst the English clergy who understand the distinct cultural needs of the Irish as you practice your faith in this land. Their understanding is very important.

The Irish Bishops’ Conference recently welcomed the findings of the Report entitled, ‘Ireland and the Irish Abroad’, given to the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr Brian Cowen TD. I ask the Irish Ambassador to pass on our appreciation to Minister Cowen for his enthusiasm for and commitment to this project. Bishop Seamus Hegarty of Derry, who is Chairman of the Irish Bishops’ Commission for Emigrants, a few weeks ago, called on the Minister to implement the Report’s recommendations.

This was in light of an R.T.É Irish television programme (Prime Time). That programme highlighted the plight of a number of Irish people who have fallen on hard times. What makes their predicament so heartfelt is that they gave so much to our country in leaner days. In many cases they left Ireland out of absolute necessity. When they went abroad, they continued to remember their families and friends at home and regularly sent money back to their loved ones. The ‘Prime Time’ television programme revealed their sad circumstances and highlighted the urgent need for the implementation of the nineteen recommendations contained within the ‘Ireland and Irish Abroad’ Report.

The Bishops’ Conference in Ireland fully supports Bishop Hegarty’s call to Government as a matter of priority to establish an “Agency for the Irish abroad” as recommended by the Task Force set up to co-ordinate services at home and abroad for our Diaspora.

The Task Force report is strong in its support for a holistic approach to the care and nurturing not just of the Irish abroad but of Ireland abroad. The efforts of the Irish abroad to promote their culture should be supported and guided as we journey into a Europe where cultural and ethnic identity are essential to a truly balanced and integrated Europe.

With this in mind, some Irish dioceses, this year, are participating in a Saint Patrick’s Day initiative entitled Supporting Irish Abroad .The aim of this initiative is to remember the Irish abroad in a constructive way. To create awareness is important but more is needed. We promise to use whatever resources we can to continue to campaign on your behalf.

In 1985 the Irish Bishops’ Commission for Emigrants identified and highlighted the needs of Irish prisoners and set up the Irish Commission for Prisoners Overseas (ICPO). This body is entrusted with the care of prisoners and their families. There is one major and long-standing difficulty in this area that causes us particular concern. Under the European Convention on the Treaty of Sentenced Persons Act (1984) foreign nationals, in prison, are entitled to apply for repatriation to the country of their birth to serve their sentences closer to their families. The Irish Bishops’ Commission for Prisoners Overseas, which has offices in Maynooth and London has been assisting with the repatriation of Irish nationals from prisons in the UK for many years. It has long been concerned about the inordinate delay in the processing of such applications.

According to records, it takes between 2½ to 3 years to process a straight forward UK to Republic of Ireland application. This is entirely unsatisfactory. We are dealing with two legal jurisdictions which share a common language. This time scale compares unfavourably with that for British Nationals where the process of repatriation from all countries (including non-English speaking countries), takes between 9 to 12 months to complete. It is little short of a scandal that Irish families should find themselves in this situation. This is an example of the need that exists for an Agency for the Irish Abroad that will co-ordinate the necessary Departments and Agencies to ensure that the emigrant in prison does not suffer unnecessarily. In this “International Year of the Family”, our governments should make every effort to reduce the burdens on prisoners’ families. It is obvious that if society facilitates close links between a prisoner and his or her family’s support and influence, then it greatly reduces the risk of re-offence and also reduces the likelihood of homelessness after release from prison.

Movement of peoples on a global scale is a reality today. We take for granted, for the most part, that capital, goods and information, but not people, move freely and quickly across borders. In today’s world all categories of migrants are experiencing increasingly restrictive policies and procedures.

Over the centuries, we have learned a great deal as an emigrant people. The task now is to remember that experience. Of course we should acknowledge the pain and the sorrow but without forgetting the opportunities and blessing which this experience contains. We should reflect on the lessons that reside within our collective emigrant experience and learn from them. Ireland, as current holder of the EU Presidency, should make reference to the story of our people in contributing to the debate about the appropriate policies and legislation that the EU needs to put in place vis-à-vis the movement of peoples. In its term of Presidency of the European Union, Ireland has a duty to lead public opinion and debate on this emotive issue and not fall victim to scaremongering and myths. The objective of our Presidency should be to provide the most enlightened legislation and to avoid the creation of a ‘fortress Europe’ mentality.

There are legitimate measures which countries must take to control borders, and the movement of people. However, there is a great danger in the post Sept 11th world that an ever-increasing range of security measures, some of which may breach human rights, become acceptable and, in addition, fuel ungrounded fears.

Research shows how much the EU is, and will increasingly become, dependent on migrant labour. The EU has a decreasing and ageing population. Even where there is unemployment there will always be the 3 “d”s – difficult, dirty and dangerous work, which will largely be carried out by immigrants.

As the Irish once enriched Manchester, so can new global immigrants enrich Europe. To quote remarks made earlier this week by the Secretary General of the United Nations, Mr. Kofi Annan: a closed Europe will be “a meaner, poorer, weaker, older” one. An open one will be “fairer, richer, stronger, younger – provided Europe manages immigration well”. In making these points, he argued that immigrants are “part of the solution, not part of the problem”. They must not be made a scapegoat for “a vast array of social ills” as they adjust to their new societies.

Ireland’s Presidency of the European Union should be an opportunity to take the lead in assuring that the European Union’s approach to asylum seekers in particular and migrants in general will be marked by a humanitarian approach, which upholds the dignity of each person and respects their human rights through policies that are fair, just and transparent . Our EU Presidential leadership should be marked by our experience of being for centuries a migrant people – people, on the one hand forced abroad to seek a living and, on the other, people who chose to go abroad to tell others about the goodness of God and about the coming amongst us of Christ … THE STRANGER. In the words of His Holiness, Pope John Paul, “How can we say we welcome Christ if we close the door to the stranger in our midst?”

The arrival of the stranger in our midst calls us to embrace a new and more authentic vision of Church. To be Catholic and universal in the truest sense….calls us in the words of Isaiah ‘to widen the space of our tent'(Is.54:2), to be part of the Reign of God which gathers together people from every tribe, language, nation and race'(Rev. 5:9), where all are children of God and ‘there can be neither Jew nor Greek, ..slave or free person….male or female… (Gal. 3: 27, 28).

The presence among us of people from a variety of cultural and religious backgrounds is a gift for us in that it enables us to broaden our experience of Church, to see that God calls all of humankind into one family and to realise that the earth is given for all. God’s map does not have the same boundaries that our map has.

Speaking of maps and boundaries, I am reminded of home and of a different but equally important topic. In Northern Ireland, the political pace is set to quicken when the formal Review of the implementation of the Good Friday Agreement commences on Tuesday next, in Belfast, under the co-chairmanship of the British and Irish Governments. I wish all the parties well in their deliberations. Last Thursday evening’s cordial and constructive face-to-face meeting between Dr. Ian Paisley, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, and the Taoiseach, Mr. Bertie Ahern, and their respective delegations, at the Irish Embassy in London, augurs well for the upcoming Review. I hope and pray that the Review will take account of all the participants’ viewpoints and difficulties and will see an end to all forms of paramilitarism and will, in turn, accommodate the re-establishment of a truly inclusive and robust Northern Ireland Executive that is both just and stable and committed to peace building and the development of good relations between all of the people of these islands, irrespective of political persuasion, creed, class or colour.

Finally, I would like to leave you tonight with the prayer of the Breton fisherman: “Dear God, be good to me, the sea is so wide and my boat is so small”.

27 Jan – Holocaust Memorial Day

HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL DAY
27 JANUARY 2004
MESSAGE FROM
MOST REVEREND SEÁN BRADY
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH

Tuesday, 27 January, Holocaust Memorial Day, marks the anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau. One of the purposes of marking this date is to try and ensure that the horrendous crimes committed during the Holocaust are never repeated anywhere in the world.

Holocaust Memorial Day gives an opportunity to respectfully remember the six million Jews who suffered and died in the Holocaust. It also calls us all to see where attitudes of hatred and bigotry can ultimately lead. We need to heed the lessons of the Holocaust and learn for the future. We know that these lessons have not been learnt, as the genocide of 1994 in Rwanda shows. There one million people were murdered within the space of 100 days.

Racism and bigotry continue to raise their ugly heads, much nearer home, albeit on a much smaller scale, and in different contexts and circumstances. A truly democratic and tolerant society, free of the evils of prejudice, racism and other forms of bigotry, acknowledges and respects, at all times, the dignity of all its citizens, regardless of race, religion, gender or social condition. Holocaust Memorial Day beckons us all to work to build such a society. May the God of Abraham, Allah and Jesus Christ, the God of mercy, justice and love, empower us to contribute to the building of that society.

1 Jan – World Peace Day

MASS FOR WORLD DAY OF PEACE
HOMILY
MOST REV DR SEÁN BRADY
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH
PRIMATE OF ALL-IRELAND
THURSDAY 1 JANUARY 2004, 11.00 AM
ST PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, ARMAGH

PEACEMAKING AND THE LATE ARCHBISHOP COURTNEY

On this World Day of Peace my thoughts are very much centred on the late Archbishop Michael Courtney, brutally murdered in Burundi last Monday. Six weeks ago to the day (20 November 2003) we met in Rwanda. Michael was in good form. He was convinced that the peace processes in Burundi and Rwanda were going well. At the same time he appeared tense and preoccupied. He was someone who believed that peace does not just happen; it must be made to happen.

Peacemaking requires respect and a great deal of grinding patience. Jesus said: “Blessed are the peacemakers”. But peacemaking is difficult and sometimes dangerous, very dangerous, as Archbishop Courtney knew too well. But he also knew that the responsibility for fostering peace is not limited to government. It is part of the following of the Prince of Peace.

Archbishop Courtney took the words of Christ – Blessed are the Peacemakers -very seriously. He has paid for his commitment to peace with his life. We know that Jesus keeps his promises. Today we pray that Michael Courtney is among the blessed of the Kingdom of the Lord.

All who are committed to peace must work on a daily basis for justice, and seek to understand and forgive others when wrongs are done to them. It was for this that the Child of Bethlehem came among us. His adult words are worth reflecting on here: “As I have loved you, so you must love one another. If you have love for one another, then everyone will know that you are my disciples.” (John 13.37f).

WAR IN IRAQ AND INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM

The war in Iraq last year did not produce any clear winners. We saw a weakening of the United Nations and its consensus-building approach to international affairs, in favour of the individual determination of nation-states, prompted by varying complex reasons. As Pope John Paul II points out in his New Year’s message today, there is now a temptation to appeal to the law of force over the force of law.

The growth of international terrorism certainly requires a security response, but not exclusively so. While terrorism can never be excused, it can be explained, and we must always tackle the reasons for terrorism where the aims and concerns inspiring it may be deemed just and legitimate. The developing world is strewn with injustices and inequalities, which create the whirlwinds of recruitment to terrorist cells. Famine and pestilence are real weapons of mass destruction, and a basic cause of instability in our world, and must be destroyed through the concerted and continuous collaboration of the international community.

IRELAND’S PRESIDENCY OF EUROPEAN UNION

With the assumption of the Presidency of the European Union, I hope that Ireland can literally set out an agenda for peace on the international stage. I hope that Ireland’s pivotal influence over the next six months can refocus world attention on the problems of the developing world, particularly on Africa, which remains a stain on the conscience of the western world.

NORTHERN IRELAND PEACE PROCESS

Our own fragile peace process shows just how much hard work, patience and understanding are needed to make peace happen. Despite an apparent hardening of attitudes in 2003, it is important that we all remain committed to and focused on the search for a just and lasting peace in Northern Ireland.
Part of that work involves acts of closure such as the Tribunal of Inquiry into Bloody Sunday. Although there have been criticisms of the amount of money spent on such inquiries, I believe that they are legitimate and necessary vehicles to acknowledge the hurts and injustices of the past.

To build confidence in the future we must also have other types of acts of closure or completion. I refer specifically to the need for the decommissioning of all paramilitary weapons, the modern equivalent of turning swords into ploughshares, of which the prophet Isaiah spoke. As with the inquiries and other reforms, decommissioning is not easy for some, but it must happen, and it is an integral part of our long quest for peace.

DISAPPEARED

There is one act of completion and closure that would benefit greatly the lives of some particular families within Northern Ireland – the families of the Disappeared. For these families, there can no closure and no peace of mind until they are allowed to bury their loved ones. Funerals and burials have a particularly important place in our culture since they are personal ceremonies for closure and saying goodbye. I hope that during 2004 all those who can help will do so, and that all the families of the Disappeared will finally be able to say farewell to those they have lost.

RACISM IN NORTHERN IRELAND

During 2003, while we were striving for tolerance between Republican and Loyalist, between Nationalist and Unionist, there was a marked rise in the level of racist attacks against foreign nationals in Northern Ireland. Last month we heard of a series of barbaric and heinous attacks on defenceless women in South Belfast motivated solely by racism. The problem of racism is not exclusive to the North, but I do think it would be a supreme irony for us to solve our old sectarian prejudices, only to replace them with a new bigotry based on colour or ethnicity. We must work towards greater tolerance of all creeds and colours during this coming year.

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

Countries and communities are not the only ones which can be terrorised and attacked. On this World Day of Peace, I would also like to remember those who suffer from domestic violence. For most homes the festive period was one of harmony and peace, but for an unfortunate minority it was one of increased anxiety and indeed violence. As we pray for peace in the world and within our own community, let us also pray for peace for those families who suffer from kitchen-sink wars fought behind closed doors. As a society we can work for peace in such homes by addressing our attitudes to alcohol and domestic violence, for example, as well as by assessing the State’s provision of services in this regard, North and South.

MENTAL HEALTH AND DEPRESSION

Finally, I wish to pray for those who are suffering from mental health problems and depression. As we pray for world peace, let us also pray for peace of mind for those who suffer internally and alone. As a society we need to address our attitudes to mental illness. The stigmatisation of such illness makes the loneliness and pain all the more palpable for the sufferer. We must strive to attain a greater understanding of mental health problems so that we may help others achieve a greater peace of mind.

DAWN OF NEW YEAR

We stand at the dawn of a new year. We know not what it holds, nor where it will take us. That said, we can hope and pray that it will be a year of greater peace. As we ring out the old year and ring in a new one, let me quote the poet Alfred Tennyson:

Ring out false pride in place and blood,
The civic slander and the spite;
Ring in the love of truth and right,
Ring in the common love of good
Ring out the old shapes of foul disease;
Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;
Ring out the thousand wars of old,
Ring in the thousand years of peace
Ring in the valiant man and free
The larger heart, the kindlier hand;
Ring out the darkness of the land;
Ring in the Christ that is to be. (In Memoriam AHH, 1850)

25 Dec – Christmas Message

CHRISTMAS MESSAGE 2003
RTE
MOST REVEREND SEÁN BRADY
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH
PRIMATE OF ALL-IRELAND

One of the most memorable events in Ireland this year was the Special Olympics in June. All over the country, in cities, towns and villages, a céad míle fáilte was extended to the international group of young sportsmen and women, with their families and companions. The experience brought out the very best in people as they opened their homes and their hearts to these ‘special’ athletes. Archbishop Eames and I greeted the participants from Australia here in Armagh, and we’ll long remember their joy and enthusiasm, as well as their sense of accomplishment, at simply being here. They blessed us with their presence, and renewed our awareness of what it means to really enjoy life to the full, despite the limitations sometimes imposed by ability. I hope they and all the athletes have many happy memories of their Irish visit to recall as they celebrate with their families this Christmastime.

The Australian athletes gathered with us in our newly restored Catholic Cathedral in Armagh which reopened its doors earlier that month after years of planning and several months of restoration. Thanks to the enthusiasm and generosity of so many, this work of renewal, which was very much a labour of love, now bears witness to the faith, hope and vision of God’s people in the 21st century. Archbishop Eames and his congregation are also engaged at present in a similar enterprise in their Cathedral. Restoring and renewing our church buildings is not just an exercise in good house keeping, and keeping faith with past generations. Churches are built to make Christians, to produce living stones of faith. They symbolise the readiness of the current generation of believers to face present and future challenges, of which there are many.

As we celebrate the birthday of the Prince of Peace we’re all conscious, I think, of how fragile peace has become in our world. There is an Asian prayer, from the Philippines, that says:

” Bless your people Lord,
who have walked too long in this night of pain.
For the child has no more tears to cry
and the old people no song of joy to sing,
and the blood of our youth drains away in the gutters,”

The use of weapons of war and conflict, the great loss of human life, and the threat of further tragedies, seem to have multiplied this past year. On a daily basis we witness, mostly from the protective distance of a TV screen, scenes of real grief and suffering. In Africa the scourge of AIDS has decimated an entire generation, and set back the development of several nations. On a recent visit to Rwanda, I saw the problem at first hand. There a million people, thirteen percent of the long-suffering population, are HIV positive. But I also saw the magnificent contribution which Irish aid-workers make to help the situation.
In Ireland, too, there have been disturbing and worrying trends in violence, addiction, and suicide. In the face of all these challenges, good people can become discouraged and disheartened, and sometimes be inclined to give up on humanity, but if the Christmas story teaches us anything, it is that God does not give up on us. He set about mending the broken relationships of human beings through the birth of his Son, and that story has continued to regenerate human lives and relationships ever since.

In T. S. Eliot’s poem, ‘Journey of the Magi’, the wise men returned home after their quest had ended, but things were never the same for them again. Eliot wrote:

” We returned to our places, these Kingdoms,
but no longer at ease here in the old dispensation,
with an alien people clutching their gods.”

The story of Christmas is not just a pretty tale to be repeated once a year, and then put away with the decorations. It invites hope in every human heart, and it also should make us, like the returned wise men, a bit uneasy, a little dissatisfied, as we recognise all that still remains to be done to bring about that vision of God, sung by the angels, for peace on earth among all peoples.

May this be a time of peace for every family. May it be a time of hope for those who are struggling or alone. May the Christmas story renew our faith in God and humankind, and inspire us to continue the work of building that kingdom of love which began in such a new and radical way in Bethlehem two thousand years ago.

4 Dec – Launch of ‘Time to Listen – Confronting Child Sexual Abuse by Catholic Clergy in Ireland’. Report of Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

LAUNCH
TIME TO LISTEN – CONFRONTING CHILD SEXUAL
ABUSE BY CATHOLIC CLERGY IN IRELAND
REPORT OF ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS IN IRELAND COMMISSIONED BY THE IRISH BISHOPS’ CONFERENCE
ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS IN IRELAND, DUBLIN
4 DECEMBER, 2003
ADDRESS
MOST REV. SEÁN BRADY, DCL
ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH
PRESIDENT, IRISH BISHOPS’ CONFERENCE

WELCOME
I welcome you all here today to this launch, and I thank you for coming.

RESPONSE TO CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE

In the early nineties it became clear that the dioceses and religious congregations needed to work together in responding to the sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy and religious. The Irish Bishops, working with the Conference of Religious, set up in 1994 an Advisory Committee to frame a response. The resulting document, Child Sexual Abuse: Framework for a Church Response, was published in January 1996. For several years nothing has received higher priority from the Bishops than the effort to address the problem of child sexual abuse within the Church. That some priests have betrayed the sacred trust placed in them by offending in this way is abhorrent. The Bishops are committed, with the help of all within the Church and in society, to bring healing and hope to those who feel betrayed and hurt.

COMMISSIONING AND PURPOSE OF REPORT

As part of this ongoing work, two years ago the Irish Bishops’ Conference, through its Committee on Child Protection, commissioned an in-depth, independent study by the Health Services Research Centre of the Department of Psychology of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. The purpose of the Study was to assess the impact of child abuse by clergy, its management by the Church, and to discover what lessons could be learned for the future. We are pleased that a body which is respected for its impartiality and objectivity, with considerable resources and expertise in this area, has carried out this work. This study, conducted to the highest international standards of scholarship is, we believe, the first of its kind. We hope that it will throw new light on the reality of child abuse for society as a whole, as well as for the Church, both in Ireland and further afield.

A broader perspective on the impact of child sexual abuse has been achieved by the authors listening respectfully to, and carefully documenting, the experiences of those who have suffered. The oft-times chilling impact of the experience on victims, as recorded in their statements, will help us all to a greater recognition of the pain that can be inflicted by even one act of sexual abuse.

We offer this study, Time to Listen – Confronting Child Sexual Abuse by Catholic Clergy in Ireland, to Irish society in the knowledge that child abuse – whether by clergy or by others – is increasingly recognised as a source of tremendous pain in our society – psychological pain, physical pain and also spiritual pain. We now know that the majority of child sexual abuse happens within the home or in the child’s immediate environment, and is usually perpetrated by a family member or by someone known to the child. The Church at all times tries to be acutely aware of the pain of all victims. Victims have a right to have someone held to account for what they have suffered. They legitimately feel the need to have their story heard and acknowledged. They want the abusers to acknowledge the harm they have done.

APOLOGY TO VICTIMS

Wrongs from the past cannot always be fully righted. Today gives me the opportunity to express once again, on behalf of all the Bishops, our deepest sorrow that some of our priests were responsible for the pain of child sexual abuse in society. We apologise once again to the victims and their loved ones for the hurt caused, the damage done, and the failures in pastoral responsibility on our part in the handling of these cases. This report on the horror of sexual abuse of minors tells a very complex and tragic story of deep hurt, and trust betrayed. It is a story that has taken a long time to tell. We hope that this Report can be a useful part of the telling of the story, and that it will help to ensure that the next chapters are of healing and reconciliation. We hope that someday those who have been abused and harmed will feel able and be ready to forgive. Until that day we will continue to work to restore people’s trust in the Church.

COMMITMENT OF BISHOPS

This study makes painful reading, not least for a bishop. It tells of mistakes made in responding to those who came to the Church seeking sensitivity and compassion. On the other hand, where a positive response to disclosure was experienced, that response played an important part in terms of healing. The Catholic Bishops are pledged to study, carefully and fully, the findings of this Report. We are committed to be guided by its conclusions and be informed for the future by its recommendations, some of which are already in place. We are confident that this commitment is shared by the priests of Ireland. We are happy that their fidelity to their priestly vocation has been acknowledged by several respondents to the surveys conducted for this Report.

Today, on behalf of the Bishops, I gladly salute the fidelity of the priests and Religious of Ireland. I encourage them to continue to serve the Lord and their people with the same loving dedication, despite the trials of this present age.

The Report will enable us to identify more clearly shortcomings in our handling of this problem in some cases, and will point the way forward to a more effective and comprehensive response. We now know that the effects on those abused, and their families, have been persistent and very serious. Their confidence in the Church and sometimes even their faith in God, have been greatly shattered.

PROTECTION OF CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE

The launch of this research is another step on a long road. We have promised to continue to take all the steps required to protect children and young people from this kind of abuse in the Church, now, and in the future.

Children and young people are an integral and cherished part of Church community. It is the responsibility of all within the community to respect the dignity and rights of all children. We willingly pledge to work with all sections of society to ensure their greatest possible safety and wellbeing. Along with the Conference of Religious of Ireland and the Irish Missionary Union, we have recently appointed a Working Group to review the 1996 Framework for a Church Response, and to develop a comprehensive and integrated child protection policy for the Catholic Church in Ireland. This Report will inform that work. We are hopeful that the Working Group Report and Recommendations will be available during the first half of next year, thereby enabling us to further the process of continuing our assurances in relation to the promotion of the welfare of children and young people in our communities.

PART PLAYED BY THE MEDIA

The Report documents the pivotal role the media has played in disclosing the reality of child sexual abuse. The lack of public awareness as outlined in the Report of the positive measures which the Church has taken in tackling the issue of child sexual abuse is disappointing, and something that requires careful examination. I hope that the Church, the media, and wider society, can all work constructively together to bring healing to those who have suffered in the past, and to ensure protection for children, today and in the future.

MAJOR SOCIAL PROBLEM

In recent years child sexual abuse has come to be recognised internationally as a major social problem. Last year the Health Services Research Centre at the Department of Psychology of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, published, on behalf of the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre, the first ever national survey on lifetime sexual abuse in Ireland. That piece of research – The SAVI Report – Sexual Abuse and Violence in Ireland – is highly regarded and groundbreaking. It revealed a high prevalence of child sexual abuse in Irish society generally. I am inclined to think that this research has not received in any measure the kind of public attention which it deserves. If, as a society, we are to ensure the greatest possible safety of children, it means recognising the full nature and extent of the problem. The inadequate attention which The SAVI Report has received would seem to suggest that as a nation, we may still, sadly, be in denial of the scale of the terrible reality of child sexual abuse in our midst, and of its effects. Without confronting the issue in its awful fullness, as individuals and as various legitimate interest groups which comprise society, we can scarcely best protect our children or make amends to victims.

CONCLUSION

I believe that this Report will help us to better understand child sexual abuse and its effects. It brings us into direct contact with the experience of victims and their families, offending clergy and their colleagues. The chapter headings and subheadings as outlined on the contents pages point to the comprehensiveness of this publication. I repeat that the Catholic Bishops are fully committed to studying the findings of this Report, to be guided by its conclusions, and to be informed for the future by its many recommendations. The work of the Child Protection Office of the Irish Bishops’ Conference, the Bishops’ Committee on Child Protection, and the Working Group on Child Protection, must continue with great determination and urgency.

This publication is, I think, an important milestone in the difficult journey which the confrontation of child sexual abuse is. The journey for the Church, as for society in general in this issue, has been an arduous one, through steep and rocky terrain. It would be wrong, from several perspectives, to think that this journey is nearing completion. I wish to repeat that this journey must be made from the perspective of the abused and their families, and from the perspective of the safety of all children and young people, both in the present and the future. The limits of what have often been perceived as an unduly legalistic response, attempts at “avoiding scandal”, and protecting the institutional Church, are already well documented. The mistakes of the past must be acknowledged, and must not be repeated.

I think it is positive that the Irish Bishops decided to commission this pioneering research, and that it is being published in full. The Bishops willingly share this Report with all who are interested in this issue, whether in the Church, or in wider society. I hope that this Report can make some contribution to the healing of all who have suffered child sexual abuse, and to the healing of their loved ones, and to ensuring the greatest possible protection for all children in the future.
Ends.