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Statement regarding Fr Joseph Quinn

Fr Quinn was interviewed by the police regarding these allegations and denied them.

The day following the police interview, Cardinal Brady suspended Fr Joseph Quinn from ministry as a priest, forbidding him to say Mass publicly, to hear confessions and to have unsupervised access to minors.

Following the police investigation, the Director of Public Prosecutions considered the evidence and directed that Fr Joseph Quinn be tried on only one of the allegations.

The priest was tried in a public trial, before a Judge and Jury, at Omagh Crown Court and was acquitted.

Following Fr Quinn’s acquittal, Cardinal Brady met him again and reinforced that Fr Quinn remained suspended on the same terms, in spite of having been acquitted by the Court.

After that acquittal the complainant on behalf of whom no prosecution had been brought sought compensation for her injuries from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board and, separately, from Fr Quinn and from Cardinal Brady.

The complainant and Fr Quinn subsequently settled the case between themselves.

The complainant withdrew her proceedings against Cardinal Brady and her proceedings before the Compensation Board.

Cardinal Brady was not involved in the discussions between the complainant and Fr Quinn other than to make it clear that he would not be a party to any confidentiality agreement between Fr Quinn and the complainant, that he intended to commence a canonical process against Fr Quinn and to invite the complainant to assist as a witness by giving evidence in that canonical process.

The complainant agreed to give evidence in the canonical process against Fr Quinn and has, in fact, done so.

Father Quinn remains suspended from ministry as a priest.

Cardinal Brady has forbidden Father Quinn from wearing clerical attire.

Cardinal Brady met the father of the complainant in the early stages, following her original complaint to the police, and also arranged for his representative, Fr Bradley, to meet the complainant and her parents.  Cardinal Brady also met her father recently.

The complainant has been offered pastoral support and help, including independent counselling.

Further information:
Martin Long, Director of Communications (086 172 7678)

17 March – Mass for St Patrick’s Day – St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh

MASS FOR ST PATRICK’S DAY
HOMILY GIVEN BY
CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY
ST PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, ARMAGH
17 MARCH 2010

My sisters and brothers in Christ.

Today, Irish people across the world are remembering St Patrick and the land of their birth. Most will do so with joy and pride. They will celebrate the enormous contribution of this nation to the Christian faith and heritage across the world. They will celebrate a people renowned for generosity to others in need.

Ireland and its people have much to be proud of.

Yet every land and its people have moments of shame.

Dealing with the failures of our past, as a country, as a Church, or as an individual is never easy. Our struggle to heal the wounds of decades of violence, injury and painful memory in Northern Ireland are more than ample evidence of this.

There is always tension between the possibilities we aspire to and our wounded memories and past mistakes.

Saint Patrick, our national Apostle, our patron Saint, knew this tension throughout his life. Even as he brought the joy and life of the Gospel to the Irish people, he was haunted by the sins of his past. We recall the famous opening words of his Confession: ‘I, Patrick, a sinner, and the least of all the faithful’.

In today’s Gospel, Saint Peter wrestled with his own sinfulness while still answering Jesus’ call to become a fisher of men. Jesus calls Peter to ‘put out into the deep’. Peter responds: ‘Leave me Lord, I am a sinful man.’

We all experience this tension between being called to follow Jesus – to live up to his values – and the reality of our sinful nature. There is true freedom in humbly acknowledging – like the wounded healers Peter and Patrick –  the full truth of our sinfulness.

This week a painful episode from my own past has come before me. I have listened to reaction from people to my role in events thirty five years ago. I want to say to anyone who has been hurt by any failure on my part that I apologise to you with all my heart. I also apologise to all those who feel I have let them down. Looking back I am ashamed that I have not always upheld the values that I profess and believe in.

These are momentous times for the Church in Ireland.

I believe the two years leading up to the Fiftieth International Eucharistic Congress in Dublin will be among the most critical for us since the time of St. Patrick. I deeply believe that God is calling us to a new beginning, to a time of Patrician energy, reform and renewal. I look forward to the Pastoral Letter of Pope Benedict XVI to the Faithful of Ireland as one important source for this renewal.

The Gospel we have just read, and the life of St. Patrick, also offers us some principles for this renewal.

Firstly, renewal begins with a sincere, prayerful listening to the Word of God. We have just heard how the crowds pressed around Jesus, hungry for his Word – the Word of life itself.

Secondly, we need to listen to the Spirit as the source of our renewal. St. Patrick heard the Spirit’s call in the ‘voice of the Irish’. As we search for the voice of the Spirit in our time, the Irish faithful must be involved more effectively within the Church.

Finally, we must humbly continue to deal with the enormity of the hurt caused by abuse of children by some clergy and religious and the hopelessly inadequate response to that abuse in the past.

I believe the period up to the Eucharistic Congress has to involve a sincere, wholehearted and truthful acknowledgement of our sinfulness. Like St. Patrick, like St. Peter, we as Bishops, successors of the Apostles in the Irish Church today must acknowledge our failings. The integrity of our witness to the Gospel challenges us to own up to and take responsibility for any mismanagement or cover-up of child abuse. For the sake of survivors, for the sake of all the Catholic faithful as well as the religious and priests of this country, we have to stop the drip, drip, drip of revelations of failure.

The Lord is calling us to a new beginning. None of us knows where that new beginning will lead. Does it allow for wounded healers, those who have made mistakes in their past to have a part in shaping the future? This is a time for deep prayer and much reflection. Be certain that I will be reflecting carefully as we enter into Holy Week, Easter and Pentecost. I will use this time to pray, to reflect on the Word of God and to discern the will of the Holy Spirit. I will reflect on what I have heard from those who have been hurt by abuse.  I will also talk to people, priests, religious and to those I know and love.

Pray for those who have been hurt. Pray for the Church. Pray for me.

Mass for St Patrick’s Day – Homily given by Cardinal Seán Brady – St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh

Ireland and its people have much to be proud of.

Yet every land and its people have moments of shame.

Dealing with the failures of our past, as a country, as a Church, or as an individual is never easy. Our struggle to heal the wounds of decades of violence, injury and painful memory in Northern Ireland are more than ample evidence of this.

There is always tension between the possibilities we aspire to and our wounded memories and past mistakes.

Saint Patrick, our national Apostle, our patron Saint, knew this tension throughout his life. Even as he brought the joy and life of the Gospel to the Irish people, he was haunted by the sins of his past. We recall the famous opening words of his Confession: ‘I, Patrick, a sinner, and the least of all the faithful’.

In today’s Gospel, Saint Peter wrestled with his own sinfulness while still answering Jesus’ call to become a fisher of men. Jesus calls Peter to ‘put out into the deep’. Peter responds: ‘Leave me Lord, I am a sinful man.’

We all experience this tension between being called to follow Jesus – to live up to his values – and the reality of our sinful nature. There is true freedom in humbly acknowledging – like the wounded healers Peter and Patrick –  the full truth of our sinfulness.

This week a painful episode from my own past has come before me. I have listened to reaction from people to my role in events thirty five years ago. I want to say to anyone who has been hurt by any failure on my part that I apologise to you with all my heart. I also apologise to all those who feel I have let them down. Looking back I am ashamed that I have not always upheld the values that I profess and believe in.

These are momentous times for the Church in Ireland.

I believe the two years leading up to the Fiftieth International Eucharistic Congress in Dublin will be among the most critical for us since the time of St. Patrick. I deeply believe that God is calling us to a new beginning, to a time of Patrician energy, reform and renewal. I look forward to the Pastoral Letter of Pope Benedict XVI to the Faithful of Ireland as one important source for this renewal.

The Gospel we have just read, and the life of St. Patrick, also offers us some principles for this renewal.

Firstly, renewal begins with a sincere, prayerful listening to the Word of God. We have just heard how the crowds pressed around Jesus, hungry for his Word – the Word of life itself.

Secondly, we need to listen to the Spirit as the source of our renewal. St. Patrick heard the Spirit’s call in the ‘voice of the Irish’. As we search for the voice of the Spirit in our time, the Irish faithful must be involved more effectively within the Church.

Finally, we must humbly continue to deal with the enormity of the hurt caused by abuse of children by some clergy and religious and the hopelessly inadequate response to that abuse in the past.

I believe the period up to the Eucharistic Congress has to involve a sincere, wholehearted and truthful acknowledgement of our sinfulness. Like St. Patrick, like St. Peter, we as Bishops, successors of the Apostles in the Irish Church today must acknowledge our failings. The integrity of our witness to the Gospel challenges us to own up to and take responsibility for any mismanagement or cover-up of child abuse. For the sake of survivors, for the sake of all the Catholic faithful as well as the religious and priests of this country, we have to stop the drip, drip, drip of revelations of failure.

The Lord is calling us to a new beginning. None of us knows where that new beginning will lead. Does it allow for wounded healers, those who have made mistakes in their past to have a part in shaping the future? This is a time for deep prayer and much reflection. Be certain that I will be reflecting carefully as we enter into Holy Week, Easter and Pentecost. I will use this time to pray, to reflect on the Word of God and to discern the will of the Holy Spirit. I will reflect on what I have heard from those who have been hurt by abuse.  I will also talk to people, priests, religious and to those I know and love.

Pray for those who have been hurt. Pray for the Church. Pray for me.

Press release – 16 March 2010 – Note from Catholic Communications Office to Clarify Media Reporting on Cardinal Seán Brady

• In late March 1975, Fr Seán Brady was asked by his bishop, Bishop Francis McKiernan, to conduct a canonical enquiry into an allegation of child sexual abuse which was made by a boy in Dundalk, concerning a Norbertine priest, Fr Brendan Smyth.

• Fr Brady was then a full-time teacher at St Patrick’s College, Cavan.  Because he held a doctorate in Canon Law, Fr Brady was asked to conduct this canonical enquiry; however he had no decision-making powers regarding the outcome of the enquiry.  Bishop McKiernan held this responsibility.

• On 29 March 1975, Fr Brady and two other priests interviewed a boy (14) in Dundalk.  Fr Brady’s role was to take notes.  On 4 April 1975, Fr Brady interviewed a second boy (15) in the Parochial House in Ballyjamesduff. On this occasion Fr Brady conducted the inquiry by himself and took notes.

• At the end of both interviews, the boys were asked to confirm by oath the truthfulness of their statements and that they would preserve the confidentiality of the interview process. The intention of this oath was to avoid potential collusion in the gathering of the inquiry’s evidence and to ensure that the process was robust enough to withstand challenge by the perpetrator, Fr Brendan Smyth.

• A week later Fr Brady passed his findings to Bishop McKiernan for his immediate action.

• Eight days later, on 12 April 1975, Bishop McKiernan reported the findings to Fr Smyth’s Religious Superior, the Abbot of Kilnacrott. The specific responsibility for the supervision of Fr Smith’s activities was, at all times, with his Religious Superiors. Bishop McKiernan withdrew Brendan Smyth’s priestly faculties and advised psychiatric intervention.

Further information:
Martin Long, Director of Communications 086 172 7678

New Parish Centre – St Peter’s Parish, Drogheda

NEW PARISH CENTRE
ST PETER’S PARISH, DROGHEDA

The new parish centre is called ‘The Barbican.’

Opening night for the Barbican, St Peter’s Parish Centre, is on Friday next 12th March at 8pm.

Tickets available from the centre or from Kieran’s hairdressers, Peter Hughes and Rosaleen Reilly.  It is a charity night in aid of Cystic Fibrosis.  €20.

Barbican Centre Website

Cardinal Seán Brady welcomes the appointment of Rev Norman Hamilton as the next Moderator of the Presbyterian Church

rev_norman_hamilton

I would like to congratulate Rev Norman Hamilton on his election as the next Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland.  I know that Mr Hamiliton has worked extensively in the area of community relations, for which he received an OBE in 2007.  I look forward to working closely with him when he takes up office as Moderator in June.  I wish the next Moderator every blessing and success in this new ministry.

Formation evenings for the pastoral area resource teams

Pastoral areas A, B, C, D and E will meet in the Glenavon Hotel, Cookstown on:
Tuesday 9 March
Thursday 15 April
Wednesday 26 May

Pastoral areas F, G, H and I will meet in the Armagh City Hotel on:
Wednesday 10 March
Thursday 22 April
Monday 24 May

Pastoral areas J, K, L, M and N will meet in the Carrickdale Hotel on:
Thursday 11 March
Wednesday 14 April
Monday 10 May

Pastoral areas O, P, Q and R will meet in the Boyne Valley Hotel, Drogheda on:
Thursday 18 March
Wednesday 21 April
Thursday 20 May

Registration each evening is at 7.10pm with the sessions running from 7.30pm – 9.30pm.

Cardinal Brady’s Press Release – 3 November 2008

Cardinal Brady launches Diocesan Pastoral Plan for the Archdiocese of Armagh:

“Strengthening Parishes in the 21st Century”
Monday 3 November 2008 – Feast of St Malachy


“It is important that we strengthen our parishes so that they can proclaim the Word of God, carry on the mission of Christ and respond to pastoral needs.
” –  Cardinal Brady

Cardinal Seán Brady, the Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland today, [Monday 3 November] the Feast of St Malachy, launched a process for strengthening parishes in the Archdiocese.  The objective is to sustain parishes as vibrant faith communities for the 21st century.  The launch took place at a press conference in the Synod Hall of St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh.  A Pastoral Letter detailing this initiative was made available at all the Masses in the diocese over the weekend.

The process has three steps which will be implemented over the next three years.  Fr Andrew McNally and Dr Tony Hanna of the Diocesan Pastoral Council are coordinating and overseeing the design and implementation of this Parish Re-organization Plan.  The faithful are invited to contribute to the process and will be consulted throughout.

The first step in the process will be the clustering of parishes for the purpose of sharing resources. This does not mean the amalgamating of parishes.  There will be a meeting in each parish before Christmas and again in Lent to determine which parishes will cluster and how many parishes there will be in each cluster.  Importantly each parish will maintain its own unique identity.

The second step will be to assess the resources that each cluster has and the resources each cluster needs.  This will happen between September 2009 and June 2010.  As a part of this work we will address such matters as:

  • how many priests are to serve in each parish in the cluster;
  • what resources are to be allocated to the employment of lay leaders in the cluster;
  • the number of Masses to be celebrated at the weekend and on weekdays in each Church in the cluster.

A third step, beginning in September 2010, will be to develop and create new parish structures and ministries that will enable the parishes to continue to function and develop as vibrant Christian communities.  Some of these ministries might include the employment of lay people to administrative or pastoral roles within a cluster.  Some of the structures might include the establishment of a pastoral co-ordination council for the cluster.

These new parish structures and ministries will enable the parishes to grow as communities of worship, witness, outreach and faith.  They will encourage parishioners to continue Christ’s mission in the community, society and the world.

While the goal of this process is the strengthening of parishes, the process announced today is a response to rapidly changing times.  Influencing factors include the declining number of priests, the decline in Sunday Mass attendance, a revitalised appreciation of the role all the baptised in the life of the Church and the importance of ensuring that the Eucharist is fittingly celebrated in every parish every weekend.

Speaking at the launch Cardinal Brady said: “At the recent Synod in Rome the Church was referred to as the House of the Word of God.  We can say therefore that the parish is the house of the Word of God.  It is in the parish that we mostly hear the word of God and it is the parish community that has the task of proclaiming the Word of God.  It is important therefore that we strengthen our parishes so that they can proclaim the Word of God, carry on the mission of Christ and respond to pastoral needs.

“There are, I think, a number of factors that lead us to move towards the clustering of parishes and the development of new parish structures and ministries at this time.  Not least is the simple fact that we live in rapidly changing times and every organisation has to adapt to change.  The Church too has to adapt and changes so that it can more effectively carry on the mission of Christ.  It is our love for Christ, the Word of God, which inspires us to face the challenges that changing times demand.”

Cardinal Brady concluded by saying: “The Archdiocese of Armagh is a communion of faith communities, which are committed to each other.  As we embark on this process of renewing our structures we will rely on this spirituality of communion among all of us to strengthen our parishes as vibrant faith communities in this 21st century.  I ask the faithful to pray to the Holy Spirit to guide as we work through this important task.”

Youth 2000 Leinster Retreat

One of the speakers lined up for the weekend is inspirational former East End gangster John Pridmore who will talk about his dramatic conversion to the faith.

All details and information on booking can be found on http://youth2000.ie/events/499-castleknock-retreat-26-28-mar.html Contact: Anne 086 8501533 or James 085 7351210

1 March – Launch of the Post-Primary Review Consultation – St Catherine’s College, Armagh

LAUNCH OF THE POST-PRIMARY REVIEW CONSULTATION
ST CATHERINE’S COLLEGE, ARMAGH
1 MARCH 2010
OPENING ADDRESS BY
CARDINAL SEÁN BRADY

•    The delivery of post primary education is about so, so much more than academic selection … [it is] about what will provide a better future for every child in our society – Cardinal Brady
Ladies and Gentlemen,

Let me begin by saying how much we appreciate your presence here this morning. Your role in helping parents and other key stakeholders understand the range of issues facing education in Northern Ireland is critical. I appeal to you to do justice to the full truth of what is at issue here. Providing an education system in Northern Ireland fit for purpose in the 21st century.  That is the challenge and it simply cannot be reduced to a narrow debate about academic selection or who is on one side or another of a political divide. There is so, so much more at stake.

As Trustees of Catholic schools we come to this and other questions as educationalists. Our vision of education is based on the values of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.  Our primary concern is ensuring the best possible education for every child. For every child is made in the image and likeness of God.  We all have a profound duty of care to every child in our society. We can only fulfil that duty if we take account of all of the issues which influence the quality of education and its future provision.

That is why society needs to re-dimension the debate about academic selection. We need to locate it in the wider context of all the challenges which confront education in Northern Ireland at this time.  The debate cannot be confined to academic selection at age eleven.

For example, any effective reshaping of the future has to take account of the impact of the demographic downturn on the intake of secondary and grammar schools in every sector. The reality is that as school numbers go down some Grammar schools are effectively becoming all-ability schools. Should this be allowed to happen at the expense of resources, staffing and perhaps the very future of many existing secondary schools? Is a more strategic, inclusive collaborative solution not possible, one which takes account of the particular needs, infrastructure and resources of a local area? It is also a fact that many all-ability post-primary schools are also high performing schools in terms of academic results. We have to be honest and face this reality. We have to be just and fair to all schools.

Planning for a better future also has to take account of the obligations arising from the Department of Education’s Entitlement Framework.  That Framework aims to provide access to a wider range of subjects for every pupil. Planning also has to take account of the Sustainable Schools policy which suggests that schools should operate with a minimum number of 500 pupils at age 11-16 and 100 at post-16. It has to take account of an area-based approach to planning and the duty on all schools to contribute to greater cohesion, integration and sharing.

In establishing the Post-Primary Review initiative, this is what the Catholic Trustees have sought to do, to take account of all the relevant issues. As far back as September 2006, the Northern Ireland Commission for Catholic Education (NICCE) launched a comprehensive review of Catholic-managed post-primary education across Northern Ireland. The Review has involved post-primary Principals, Boards of Governors and Trustees working together to identify options or proposals for the future delivery of high quality post-primary Catholic education in sixteen project areas.

Supported by the Department of Education the review has been closely linked to work being developed with other educational partners. It is the culmination of the efforts of the Catholic sector to contribute strategically to the challenges facing all who deliver and manage the education of our children. 

The review has been guided at all times by the Commission’s Core Principles. These principles state that any arrangements for post-primary education should:

•    Optimise high quality education provision and excellence in outcomes for all pupils;
•    Actively promote justice, reconciliation, mutual understanding, solidarity, inclusive communities and be part of a genuinely pluralist provision of education;
•    Contribute to the provision of education choices for parents and pupils; and
•    Be the result of transparent consultative processes.

It is in keeping with this commitment to transparent consultative processes that today we are launching a comprehensive consultation exercise on the preliminary proposals from each of the sixteen project areas. This is the widest consultation exercise ever undertaken by the Catholic Trustees on the future of Catholic Schools in Northern Ireland. We want the consultation to be as inclusive as possible. We want to hear from parents, pupils, teachers, other school staff members and Boards of Governors. It is particularly important that local Catholic Primary Schools make their views known on the proposals.

The document you have received this morning called Education For All: Shaping the future of post-primary Catholic Education, will be distributed widely to the Principals of all Catholic Primary and Post-Primary schools in Northern Ireland along with the project proposals for their particular area. The Principals will be asked to ensure that all staff members receive a copy and all parents of children at their school. The decisions we reach at the conclusion of this consultation process will shape the delivery of Catholic education in Northern Ireland for decades to come. We especially wish parents to engage and consider the options and give their views on these important issues.

Critically, we wish to hear from other educational stakeholders and from other schools in the local areas for which each proposal has been developed. Plans are being made to ensure that they too have an opportunity to comment on the proposals and to shape the outcome of this process. This includes the views of Teacher Unions and the Education and Library Boards. The material will also be available on the web site of the Post Primary Review Project and of the Catholic Commission so that the wider public can contribute their views.

I want to stress this morning that this is an initial consultation and it is an inclusive consultation. The Catholic Trustees want to explore with all other school providers how we can co-operate in new and creative ways to provide the best possible education for every child – for all children – in each local area. We have been and will continue throughout this process to consult beyond the Catholic network of schools and to explore new ways of sharing resources, facilities and personnel at local level to ensure that the best possible education for all children in our society is achieved.

This marks a very significant development in our approach to the future of Catholic Education in Northern Ireland. It signals our commitment to consider new ways of building relationships which contribute to good relations based on the Christian virtues of good neighbourliness, mutual respect and reconciliation. I believe an exciting and better future can be achieved if we approach the challenges which confront all schools in Northern Ireland with a sense of responsibility for each other and for every child in our society. New models of provision can be achieved without compromise to cherished values and the right to schools with a particular denominational ethos. The Catholic Trustees are signalling today their willingness to think outside the box on these issues and to engage in wide ranging discussion about how together we can provide the best education for every child in Northern Ireland.

It is in this spirit, that I also take this opportunity to appeal to our locally elected representatives. I appeal to our politicians to move beyond the narrow focus on academic selection and to engage in a wider, more inclusive discussion about how together we can provide the best possible system of education for every child in Northern Ireland. You cannot provide a viable answer to the question of academic selection without considering a range of other issues, including the dramatic impact of the demographic downturn on existing secondary schools as well as sustainability and new curriculum entitlements at a local level.

Allowing parents and others to believe that this issue is only about the future of grammar schools is a disservice to them and to the complexity of the issues involved. We need a more mature, responsible, inclusive and wide-ranging debate. The delivery of post primary education is about so, so much more than academic selection.

In establishing the Post-Primary Review and initiating an inclusive and wide ranging discussion about provision in each local area, I hope that the Catholic Trustees have made a contribution to moving the current debate on to a wider and more helpful level about what will provide a better future for every child in our society.

As is pointed out in the document you have received, Catholic Education for All, our objective is to provide solutions in local areas which will help schools deliver several core benefits to all pupils in that area. These include:

•    Opportunities for every young person to develop their full potential;
•    The opportunity for every child in a Catholic School to receive a quality education in modern, well-equipped facilities;
•    Increased access for all pupils to high quality academic and applied educational pathways;
•    An effective transition from primary through post-primary to third level education and employment in the 21st century;
•    A network of quality schools guaranteeing access to a curriculum that will meet the needs of all pupils within the context of the Entitlement Framework.
•    Effective collaborative links with other education providers through Area Learning Communities and new, creative structures of mutual support and sharing.

This can only be achieved if we address all of these issues together. It will not be achieved without a significant shift in the way our facilities are currently organised, managed and maintained. Determining the best route through that change is the fundamental objective of this consultation process and of the Post-Primary Review.

In concluding, let me say, on behalf of the Northern Ireland Commission for Catholic Education, how grateful we are to Mrs Deirdre McDonald, Principal of St. Catherine’s College and to her staff for making the College and its facilities available to us this morning. St. Catherine’s College is an outstanding all-ability Catholic Post-Primary school. It is a good example of the partnership between Catholic Primary and Post-primary schools, and between Catholic schools and other schools in the local area which as Trustees we want to encourage into the future. St. Catherine’s has also made the journey from a system of academic selection at age eleven to all-ability post-primary education. In 1973 the Sacred Heart Secondary Intermediate School and the Sacred Heart Grammar School amalgamated into the all-ability school we are in today, St. Catherine’s College, Convent of the Sacred Heart. It has done so with outstanding success. For example, last year alone no fewer than five students from St. Catherine’s achieved top marks in Northern Ireland in this summer’s CCEA examinations. Just as importantly, pupils in this school are encouraged to develop their full range of gifts and talents and to celebrate and respect the particular talents of others. Through the establishment of a highly successful co-educational Irish medium stream St Catherine’s has also played a major role in providing new forms of education provision for a wider catchment area than just its own.

Dividing schools and pupils into academic and non-academic does not do justice to the complex way in which we now know children progress and develop. There are other schools besides Grammar schools which can provide an excellent academic education for children.

Finally, we have to face the reality that the demographic downturn and the increased demands of the curriculum mean that no school can stand in splendid isolation from others in the search for a system of post-primary provision which values and gives an equal opportunity to every child in our society.

Thank you for listening so patiently. I now invite my colleagues on the panel to address any questions you may wish to ask.