Studio flat

Roomy for Dublin.

But still.

The scale of London’s property boom was highlighted on Tuesday when a [King’s Cross] shoebox “studio flat” [above] barely big enough to fit a double bed and a sink was snapped up by eager renters less than 16 hours of being advertised, despite costing £170 a week or £737 per calendar month.

Shoebox ‘studio flat’ in London snapped up by renters within 16 hours (TheGuardian)

Thanks HappyDub

babiesIllustration: Allan Cavanagh

You may have been struck by the ‘strangely muted’ reaction to the Tuam Babies story in the Irish media since new revelations emerged in the Connacht Tribune  the Irish Mail on Sunday.

Gwen Boyle writes:

796 tiny bodies, squashed into a septic tank. Bones upon bones; the bones of 1960s babies mingling with the bones of 1950s, 40s, 30s, 20s babies in untold layers of misery, layers of starvation, layers of neglect.

The horror of the discovery, or rather re-discovery, of the mass grave at the old site of the Bon Secours mother and baby home in Tuam, Co. Galway last week caused no more than a flinch for some, an involuntary turning away.

On the day that the tireless work of local historian Catherine Corless and her colleagues became known to the wider world, RTE News devoted their time to the story of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s honeymoon in Cork. In an age of instant information and desperate press oneupmanship, it is impossible that the revelations in Tuam escaped their notice. It is also unlikely that a conspiracy was afoot at the state broadcaster to keep this unfortunate story quiet.

The most likely reason for RTE’s inexplicable blindness, along with that of many other major news outlets, is much more prosaic and much more terrifying.

It was ignored because it wasn’t a story. It wasn’t news. It no longer surprises us that these things have happened.

Almost 800 babies shoved into a septic tank, uncared for, unmarked, unremembered? Of course they were. What else would you expect from the organisation that presided over the rape of thousands of children, the forced adoption of thousands more, untold years of slave labour, and the incarceration, brutalisation and shaming of women?

The story, which is gaining traction days later as news outlets recognise their terrible oversight, has garnered little more than a shrug from the established press, barely a mumble from the State, and a defensive, sidestepping statement from representatives of the Catholic church.

What can explain this reluctance to report, to engage, to imagine?

Certainly, no-one wants to imagine it.

We would prefer not to think about those women, removed from their homes and families, giving birth under the gaze of disapproving nuns, watching their babies starve, or die from a preventable disease, or disappear one day into a car to be sold to a new family. We would prefer not to think of disabled babies slowly dying in lonely, shabby rooms. We would prefer not to think about exactly how those babies’ bodies ended up in the septic tank. We would prefer not to think of the symbolism of that tank, of what those babies meant to the people who were meant to care for their tiny souls. We would prefer not to, but perhaps we should.

That said, Irish people now outstrip their official mouthpieces. Many of us don’t share this reluctance. Given the opportunity, we react. In floods of outrage on social media, in the comments section of online news, in conversations on the street, in letters to the paper, people freely speak of things that we would prefer not to think about, but that it would be worse to forget.

With anger and disgust, people condemn the actions of a church that claimed to love and a state that claimed to care. The story goes global, but at home, fringe media and even satirical news sites provide coverage more hard-hitting than anything in the Irish Times. The attitude of ordinary people on this island toward the Catholic church has changed swiftly in the wake of scandal after scandal, while traditional media and government spokespeople still struggle against decades of ingrained deference and outdated modes of public engagement.

This week, Pope Francis, seeming concerned about the world’s chronic underpopulation, lamented the fact that some married couples choose not to have children. He accused these couples of selfishly preferring their holidays and dogs to the propagation of loyal young Catholics.

These future children, we can be assured, would be cherished. The children of marriage. The children of devout followers. Not the children of unwed mothers, the children of other religions and none, the unbaptised, the unwanted. Times have changed since these children were left to die of neglect and disposed of in septic tanks, but they are still not the right kind of children for the church to cherish.

The church that still reaches deeply into Irish lives and psyches is not the church of Jesus Christ, a man who by all accounts simply wanted people to care for one another without reservation or prejudice. It is an organisation that thrives on power, that runs on secrecy, that entangles itself in the lives and deaths of its followers.

However, revelations about babies in septic tanks, now matter how slowly they filter into the mainstream, are unforgettable once lodged in the public imagination. Ireland has changed, and continues to change, while the press and government struggle to keep up with the outrage of the people.

Some members of government suggest a memorial might be in order. The Archbishop of Dublin thinks that the matter is possibly worthy of a social history project. What neither of them wants is an excavation.

Why? Because an excavation means bones. Bones that will be brought to light, touched, examined, photographed. Bones that will reach the front pages of papers and the corners of the internet. Thousands of tiny, fragile bones, permanently engraved in the minds of Irish people everywhere.

We couldn’t be having that.

Mass Grave of 800 Babies is Too Uncomfortable for Official Ireland (Gwen Boyle)

Earlier: Mortification Once Again

times

Further to last month’s GAA football incident in Times Square, New York.

Chris Doyle writes:

“Quite a bizarre video. I suppose it shows what it is like to drive a supercar with people gawking at you.Even more bizarre at (4.22) is the two lads playing hurling on Times Square…”

90343975

[The President of Mozambique, Armando Emilio Guebuza at Aras an Uachtarain yesterday with President Higgins  and defiant students from Our Lady’s Well, Mulhuddart National School]

I’m not sure that we chose the best week,
To receive a guest from Mozambique,
With so much going wrong,
We can’t claim that we’re strong,
And not on a long losing streak.

John Moynes

(Mark Stedman/Photocall Ireland)

Screen Shot 2014-06-04 at 03.40.36Screen Shot 2014-06-04 at 03.41.10Screen Shot 2014-06-04 at 03.41.27Screen Shot 2014-06-04 at 03.41.49The Tuam babies story has gone global with coverage from the BBC, Al Jazeera, Washington Post and The Age  in the last 12 hours.

Arguably, we’re at step 4 of an Irish scandal.

It won’t be long before the legal profession becomes involved.

Earlier: You Can’t Afford The Truth

Call for mother and baby home inquiry (Claire O’Sullivan, Irish Examiner)

Previously: Notes On Irish Scandals

Fondue-Slippers-just-dip-your-feet-in-this-molten slipper

A concept for a new type of custom-fit DIY slipper by designer Satsuki Ohata who sez:

This prototype is using PVC, which hardens at 200~300 degrees Celsius (392~572 degrees Fahrenheit). This time I used my foot mold instead of my foot. I am currently developing a kit which allows Fondue Slipper to make at home. Soon this new kit will be complete and you will be able to make your own Fondue Slipper that fits your foot perfectly. You can wear Fondue Slipper both inside and outside. It can also be used as slipper by folding the heel, or you can wear it without folding the heel if you want to run.”

likecool

Broadsheet.ie