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Convent from Hell
The
Magdalene Sisters and Catholic Guilt
by Mike Hayes
Guilt and shame are two
Irish-Catholic traits that are as typical as corned beef and cabbage on St
Patrick's Day to Irish-Americans. It's one thing to be Catholic, but to be
an Irish-Catholic is a whole new ball of shameful wax.
When
I was a child, the God I was taught to believe in was a judging God, and
I think I spent more time trying to stay out of hell than I did practicing
baseball.
The theme of Irish-Catholic guilt is placed at the
center of the film, The
Magdalene Sisters , where guilt chastises and
shame paralyzes.
The Magdalene Laundries are a chapter of
Catholicism that has been relatively unheard of outside of the Emerald
Isle. Even in Ireland, the insular world of the laundries has been
relatively unexplored. According to ABC News,"over a period of 150 years, an
estimated 30,000 women were forced into labor, carried out in secret, behind
high convent walls."
Cat's out of the bag That secret was safe
until now. The Magdalene Sisters is the story of three young women
who are sent to the one of the aforementioned laundries, a type of reform school
for "wayward" women, women thought to be hussies and whores.
Sexual sin in Ireland, however, is pretty easy to commit. In fact,
Bernadette, the story's main character, never has sex with anyone, but is
sent to the laundry simply for being "a temptress," a pretty girl who attracts
and flirts with the boys, bringing them closer to the ever-dreaded "near
occasion of sin."
Work hard, fly
right The laundry becomes a place where the women can atone for their
sin through hard physical labor, as St.
Mary Magdalene did, working her way
to heaven (although there is no scriptural evidence that she was a prostitute as
is supposed). They scrub their hands raw and work themselves to near
exhaustion in sweatshop-like conditions while being considered a danger
to both themselves and the men who desire them.
Their
parents have abandoned them out of shame and leave them in the good hands
of the sisters in hopes of getting
not only their daughters into heaven, but also themselves. After all, what
kind of parents could have a whore for a daughter? Perhaps the Church, who
knows best, can save the family soul.
How do you plead? The mentality of a judging God winds its way throughout the
film
as chances for escape are often met with fear. The nuns run the laundry as
tyrants as the residents live in terror while tending to their daily
chores. The women are abused mentally, physically, and emotionally (well
displayed in a particular scene where the women are horribly maligned sexually
by one of the nuns), casting a dark pall on the Catholic Church of Ireland and
most especially on the nuns.
But not all is right in The Magdalene
Sisters. The ending is too neat and clean and perhaps a bit
unbelieveable (there's a BBC drama called Sinners about the laundries which is more plausible).
And while the stories of the women are fictitious, the director makes them seem
real (somewhat disingenuously) as he scripts out futures for four of the girls
and runs them in the closing
credits.
Catholic guilt check The film is
venomous towards the Catholic Church, and the Vatican has claimed that
it's basically anti-Catholic rhetoric. The laundries, however, are
real. And so is the sense of guilt and shame they exploited, guilt often
associated with the stereotypical depictions of Irish-American
Catholicism, but also a reality that many of us know all too
well.
How many Catholics (even
still) have thought they were hell-bound for minor sexual infractions or even
mere desires
that, by the way, are
perfectly natural? How many altar boys have shamefacedly and
urgently presented themselves to the priest for confession before morning mass
(the most scrupulous glad they made it through
the night without dying in alleged mortal sin)?
What everyone
missed So many of us failed to see that, despite our brokenness,
God will always love us and could never disown us. Jesus didn't
shame people into being sinless or embarrass them into
hopelessness.
That's what the Church and the families in the Magdalene
Sisters forgot. God values us enough to dwell within
us. It's the culture of guilt that pushes us all
away from the positive message of God as forgiving, including, and loving—a
point that the Magdalene Sisters, the film, drives home.
Mike Hayes writes from New York City.
U.S.
Bishops' Office Review of the film
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