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Shock as Bishops march in protest against efforts to liberalize abortion law - VIDEO

Showdown between church and state over abortion in Ireland looms


A protester at the pro-life vigil
A protester at the pro-life vigil
Photo by Journal.ie

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Four bishops have taken part in street protests against abortion outside the Irish parliamentary buildings in Dublin.

The Archbishop of Tuam Michael Neary, Bishop of Kilmore Leo O’Reilly, Bishop of Killaloe Kieran O’Reilly, Bishop of Ossory Séamus Freeman, and Derry diocese administrator Monsignor Eamon Martin took part in the Pro-Life Campaign vigil with thousands of others, reports the Irish Times.

The presence of the bishops marks a major ramp up in Catholic opposition to proposed changes in Irish abortion law following the death of an Indian woman Savita Halappanavar in child labor after an abortion was allegedly refused in Galway University Hospital.

The government has promised that new legislation will be brought forward early in the New Year to deal with the issue. Experts believe it will liberalise abortion laws allowing abortions in the case where the mother’s life is in danger.

The presence of the bishops throws down the gauntlet to the Irish government and shows that despite decades of ebbing support because of pedophile scandals the church is still intent on being a major force in Irish society.

In a previous statement, Cardinal Seán Brady said it is “important as a church that we prepare with others to defend the equal right to life of a mother and child against any effort to introduce abortion to a country which is one of the safest places in the world for mothers who are expecting a child.

“I believe any attempt to do so, even by way of a ministerial directive, will be vigorously and comprehensively opposed by many.”

Bishop Leo O’Reilly stated that that “three of the four proposals by the expert group include abortion, and that is not something that is acceptable in Catholic teaching, as everybody knows.”

Read more news on the abortion issue here

In an RTÉ interview Brady stated, “We would have a media campaign, we would be lobbying public representatives and also hope to write a pastoral letter on this situation, setting forth the argument which we have always held and providing resources to priests to preach on this topic in the pulpit.”

The Pro-Life Campaign, Youth Defence, the Life Institute, and Family and Life were are all the helm of the event. The organizers and gardai have separate estimates of how many people attended the rally - organizers say it was closer to 10,000, while gardai put the figure at around 5,000.

People at the rally held candles, banners and posters in demand for Fine Gael to keep “their pro-life promise.”

Prior to election in 2007, Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny promised that he would never legislate for abortion. More recently, before last year’s election, Fine Gael campaign director Phil Hogan issued a letter stating, "Fine Gael is opposed to the legalisation of abortion."

Niamh Uí Bhriain, the spokeswoman for the Life Institute, said at Tuesday’s rally that, “We are not for turning and we will not yield. We are proud to be a pro-life nation, we are here to tell the politicians in Dáil Éireann that they may have destroyed our economy but we will never let them kill our children.”

“The lives of our children are worth fighting for and the mothers who are driven to abortion in fear are worth fighting for and the pro-life ethos in this country is worth fighting for," she said.

Caroline Simons, a legal consultant with the Pro-Life Campaign, touched upon the message that the media has been sending: “A lot of the media imply we are obliged to legislate for abortion because of the European Court of Human Rights ABC case.”

“There is no such obligation. All we are supposed to do is clarify our own position in relation to abortion here. “We have one of the best maternal mortality rates in the world so abortion is never the answer. It is not going to save mothers’ lives and we don’t want to see it on our shores,” she said.

Simons added that the next step would be an anti-abortion rally.

Indeed, in 1992 the Supreme Court ruled in the X case that abortion is permissible in Ireland in cases where a mother’s life is at risk, including from suicide. However, no government since then has legislated to bring clarity to that judgement.

Now, after Savita’s death, the matter is under increased public pressure. An expert group report, published last month, outlined four ways in which Government could introduce such a procedure and said that regulations and legislation would be the best way to approach the matter.

On Tuesday, the official debate on the report began, and Health Minister James Reilly reiterated his pledge that the Government would "bring the required legal clarity to the issue of legal abortion in Ireland.” The government has promised to reach a decision by Christmas.

However, he stressed that, "This does not mean abortion on demand.”

"We must protect the life of the pregnant mother and yet vindicate the right of the unborn child. We have to clarify what is available by way of treatment to the women of Ireland, and clarify what is legal for the professionals who must provide that care."

In response Labor Party Minister Pat Rabbitte stated: “I would be somewhat surprised at the cardinal’s reference to lobbying and engaging with, canvassing public representatives and so on on the matter,” he said.

“I don’t have any objection to any of the churches stating its position and making it clear but I think it would be a retrogressive step if we were to go back to the days of the Catholic Church dictating to elected public representatives how [they] should address an issue that a very large section of our society believes that governments in the past ought to already have done.”

 


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61 Comments

15 - 61 | See all comments

There is never any justification for murdering an infant. Some of you morally blighted people just don't seem to get it. The liberal mindset does not give a damn about this woman - their only interest is in using the incident as a pretext for pushing their agenda of mass murder. Michael Moore admitted as much when he said, "I don't believe in the sanctity of human life." But he does believe in the 'sanctity' of filthy promiscuous homosexual relations. Go figure These liberals are as insane and poisonous as the American hate preacher Phelps - and far more dangerous - because no one but a few morons listen to Phlelps. OTOH, the policies of the neo-nazi liberals has led to the deaths of hundreds of millions of human beings and the disintegration of morality throughout the world.
Anglo Son, and Peaches, I see that you two share a brain. I know of a sausage factory that might be able to power it up a bit.
First we need to figure out how to get the bishops pregnant then see if they change their minds YOu may see this as ridiculous but thats almost what the church has done all over the world with children. The world needs a big abortion - of the power of the church. May God bless that Indian woman who was a victim of the sexist evil church. Since about 75% of hte irish support marriage equality, I bet that the people by a significant majority support abortion. Especially where the church continues to condemn birth control. Women all over the world need to say Free at last, free at last free at last of a sexist church.
May have ben a tech error Niall probably is ignorant of your existence. How terrible for you.
GavinE- Chill out son
I see censorship is alive and well and living at Teach O'Dowdy. I posted two identical posts on different articles and Dowdy took them down after an hour. No obscenities in them, no profanities .............. that's most probably why he censored them. Lefty Looney Liberal types for Free Speech? My ass.
It seems GavinE that reasonableness is in short supply in relation to the commentaries of the "pro-choice" lobbyists
"Free Speech" does not allow "Hate Speech". You guys obviously haven't heard - or just don't care.
Free speech with responsibility.
Free Speech with intelligence..
Free speech with integrity.
Free Speech
@anglo-norman and GavinE: Fr Darcy can't speak out. See "Celebrity priest Fr Brian D’Arcy is latest to be censored by the Vatican," Apr 27, 2012. While tracking down that info, I found some typical anti-Protestant comments to share with GavinE: Nicoletta | Apr 27, 2012, 03:43 PM EDT. "Why doesn't this celebrity priest move his pulpit into a Church of Ireland Church and be done with it. Oh, and he could take the dissenting nuns with him - just leave the faithful ones, there are plenty of those too, thank God." And NYCFiredog | Apr 27, 2012, 01:47 PM EDT. "....hey Fawder [Darcy]! Go down the road and join the Unitarians. The Anglicans and COI is crashing into the rocks and some are re-joining the Mother Church, but I'm sure they'll take ya. Don't let the door hit ya where the good Lord split ya. And I'll pray for your soul. Truly." And mairint | Apr 27, 2012, 10:16 AM EDT. "Sure if Fr. Darcy and his pals are so discontented with the Catholic Church why don't they just pop over the road to that other church where they can forgo their celibacy, have their wimmin 'priests' and all the other carry-on that would make them happy little chaps." Don't notice those, huh?
GavinE, don't forget that I was agreeing with seanomelb's comment that anglo-norman's calling the Catholic Church "an abomination" is offensive, bogoted. Then I added "mairint's rabid ranting about 'fiminists propaganda,' SherLinton's cursing out feminists and conjuring up hell for us, Scrivner's delusion of a 17-week fetus as a 'person,' the aptly-named Kit Marlowe (killed in 1593 over a bar bill in Bull House) calling abortion 'murder.' THESE TOO are demonizing and bigoted comments, but you don't object to them, only to anti-Catholic (and anti-Semitic, I'll take your word for) comments. And I cannot help wondering: Why the tunnel vision? Do you not see the other comments as equally bigoted?
GavinE, have you not seen comments by Phlutie Phen and his crowd of haters about the "proddy pope" and other demonizing of the ABC and American ECUSA primates and C of E? And as for anti-Semitism, as you mention, there's plenty of it, along with Islamophobia and other bigotries. You're just plain wrong that "the other churches ... are never attacked on these boards." If you wish, I will take the time to use the search engine to find and quote to you some of the diatribes against Protestants that I've dealt with on "these boards." See, the problem with bigotry is that it cannot be confined; it overflows from one target to another, so talk of anyone being exempt from it, once we turn a blind eye and deaf ear to ANY form of it, is foolish.




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