By Henry Srebrnik, [Charlottetown, PEI] Guardian
There were few countries as Catholic as Ireland, right into the late 20th century.
There were few countries as Catholic as Ireland, right into the late 20th century.
The island was conquered by England in the
12th century and ruled from London for the next 800 years.
As well, following the Reformation, the
native Catholic peasantry was dominated by Anglo-Irish
landlords.
Local political power also rested entirely
in the hands of the Protestant Ascendancy, while the Catholic
majority suffered severe economic privations.
Even after the partition in 1922, the
Ulster Scots-Irish Protestants continued to rule Northern
Ireland, and still do.
In reaction, the Irish became ever more devout and steadfast in their Roman Catholic faith. The independent Irish state was virtually controlled by its Catholic hierarchy for many decades.
In reaction, the Irish became ever more devout and steadfast in their Roman Catholic faith. The independent Irish state was virtually controlled by its Catholic hierarchy for many decades.
Eamon de Valera, whose political career
spanned over half a century, from 1917 to 1973, ruled the
country for long periods of time.
His Fianna Fail Party believed that the
Catholic Church and the family were central to Irish identity.
He added clauses to the 1937 Irish constitution that
recognized the “special position” of the Catholic Church. It
also prohibited divorce.
For decades, legislation opposed by the
church was doomed to fail. An ardent Catholic, Eamon de Valera
enjoyed a close relationship with the Archbishop of Dublin,
John Charles McQuaid, who helped steer Ireland’s religious
life for three decades.
But things seem to be changing. Article
40.3.3, known as the Eighth Amendment, was voted into the
Irish constitution by referendum in 1983.
The amendment states that Ireland “acknowledges
the right to life of the unborn and, with due regard to the
equal right to life of the mother, guarantees in its laws to
respect, and as far as practicable, by its laws to defend
and vindicate that right.”
But this May Irish voters will vote on
whether to remove or alter that amendment in a new referendum
that could give Ireland’s parliament the freedom to legislate
on the issue and write more flexible abortion laws.
The Irish Times recently published an
opinion poll that suggested 56 per cent favor repealing the
ban and permitting abortion for up to 12 weeks into a
pregnancy.
Ireland has become transformed from a
country where 67 percent of voters had approved the abortion
ban to one where, in 2015, 62 per cent voted to legalize
same-sex marriage.
It had already decriminalized homosexuality
in 1992, removed restrictions on the sale of contraceptives in
1993, and legalized divorce in 1996.
Ireland now has its first openly gay and
half-Indian prime minister,
a physician who is the youngest child of a
Hindu Indian doctor and a Catholic Irish nurse. He heads the
Fine Gael centre-right party.
New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, in
an interview with Varadkar last September, asked him if the
pedophile scandal in the Catholic Church allowed a more
liberal attitude to develop about gay marriage.
“I think the demise of the church and the
various scandals that they became involved in, particularly
around child abuse, did change mind-sets in Ireland,” he
responded.
Diarmuid Martin, the current Archbishop of
Dublin and Primate of Ireland, agrees that the Church enjoys
less influence now.
He praised the Eighth Amendment and thought
that the coming abortion debate might provide an opportunity
for the Church to reconnect with people, even if the amendment
were repealed.
“The one way the Church could lose on the
abortion debate is to compromise its position,” he stated.
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