Misplaced Pages

Mary Norris: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 15:31, 30 April 2004 editBarbara Shack (talk | contribs)6,516 edits =External Links and Reference=← Previous edit Revision as of 21:09, 3 May 2004 edit undoAlison (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Autopatrolled, Checkusers, Administrators47,260 editsm Added link to Irish Examiner '99 articleNext edit →
Line 14: Line 14:


* *

*

Revision as of 21:09, 3 May 2004

Mary Norris was forced to enter a Magdalene laundry at the age of 16, she is now 70. She was removed from her mother at 12 years of age. Her mother was having an affair and the local priest objected. Mary and her brothers and sisters were taken away crying as those in authority thought her mother was a bad example. The family was split up, the boys and girls were sent to different places run by different religious institutions. 12-year-old Mary was forced to say she agreed with a religious sister (nun) at an orphanage that her mother was a ‘tramp’. At 16 Mary was sent to work as a maid but they returned her to the orphanage after she went to a cinema without permission. A sister told her, she always knew Mary would turn out a ‘tramp’. Mary did not even know what the word meant. The nuns had her examined by a doctor. Although the doctor said she was a virgin she still was sent to a laundry in Cork.

She feels the way she was treated at the laundry amounted to slavery.  The girls and women were forced to work every week of the year and 10 hours per day all days except Sunday.  Ironically it was done in the name of a loving God.  The place was cruelly cold in winter and steaming hot in summer.  When in the Magdalene laundry the women were even prevented from talking to one another and from seeing anything of the outside world.  Mary Norris is not ashamed that she was there.  She feels the Roman Catholic Church is guilty.  Although the Church claims to be sorry, Mary Norris feels they are only sorry the truth has been discovered.  Women were kept in Magdalene institutions solely on the decision of the Roman Catholic Church.  She would rather have been in prison.  There she would have got a trial and a sectence and would have known when she was coming out.

As one of many humiliations her name was changed to Myra. The nuns felt she did not deserve the holy name of Mary. When Mary Norris once would not work she was humiliated by being forced to lie down with her arms outstretched while the others watched. One woman who caused a disturbance was taken away and spent the night in an infirmary. Mary Norris assumes she was beaten. Despite this Mary Norris feels the psychological damage caused by constant degradation were worse than the effects of a beating and still affect her at the present time. She was told (wrongly) that her family had abandoned her.

Mary Norris feels sure some women killed themselves although that was considered Mortal sin. Women just disappeared and the others were not told why. Mary Norris herself was tempted to kill her5self but did not do it as she reared she would be crippled instead of killed.


External Links and Reference