Horrific: The Woman in the Wall (BBC1)

Bernard Canavan has spent decades searching for information about his life before he was adopted in 1948, when he was nearly four years old, from St Patrick’s Guild in Dublin. When I visited him at his home in Willesden, the artist showed me a huge ring-binder filled with documents: copies of birth and baptismal certificates, letters from his parents promising to find the money to pay for his keep, correspondence with religious charities, newspaper clippings, photographs, and scores of printed-out emails.
It reminded me of the box of documents that sits on the table in an inner room of Lorna Brady’s house in the TV series, The Woman in the Wall. Lorna’s box contains newspaper articles about the mother and baby homes scandals, polite denials from officials she has begged for information, and a whole series of birthday cards she has written year after year — and never been able to send — to the daughter who was taken from her when she gave birth, in the mid-Eighties, in an institution run by nuns in the fictional village of Kilkinure, County Mayo.
The real-life Bernard Canavan searching for his mother and the fictional character Lorna Brady (played by Ruth Wilson), searching for her daughter, are two sides of one bleak story — about institutional power, and a society inured to the sacrifice of women and children to religious dogma. It’s a story that the Irish public is still struggling to come to terms with.
It was Peter Mullan’s 2002 film The Magdalene Sisters that brought Ireland’s female carceral regime to an international audience. The drama followed the young women and girls sent to the infamous Magdalene Laundries in the Sixties because they had been raped, or because they had boyfriends, or because they had fallen pregnant outside marriage, or — very often — because they were the children of single mothers. Because, in short, the church deemed them “fallen”. The last of these institutions only closed in the Nineties.
Then, in 2013, came Philomena, based on Martin Sixsmith’s best-selling book, The Lost Child of Philomena Lee. The child in question was like Bernard Canavan: adopted from a Mother and Baby Home at age three, against his mother’s wishes — though in this case he was adopted to the United States, and he never saw her again.
These stories had long been the subject of public debate in Ireland. In the mid-Nineties, journalist Mary Raftery’s exposé of the treatment of children in orphanages and reformatories, States of Fear, caused a national scandal. There have been multiple autobiographical accounts of the cruelty meted out to the incarcerated women and children, and a number of campaigns for justice and reparation. A series of Irish government commissions have investigated state involvement with the Magdalene laundries and child abuse in state-run children’s homes. In 2014, the bodies of nearly 800 babies and small children were discovered in a septic tank on the grounds of a former mother and baby home in Tuam, County Galway; the scandal was met with promises from the government to make amends. And in the past few years, best-selling novels by Sebastian Barry, Roddy Doyle, and Claire Keegan have all explored the legacies of this inhuman system.
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