Priest criticises Tuam excavation describing nuns who ran mother and baby home as 'outstanding'

Fr Brendan Kilcoyne said the excavation of the former mother and baby home would take two years, during which time a 'black mass' would take place in Tuam, peddling 'black propaganda' about the history of the home. Picture: The Brendan Option/YouTube
A priest and former diocesan secretary of Tuam has criticised the excavation of remains underway at the former mother and baby home in the town, describing the nuns who ran the institution as âoutstandingâ.
Excavation works began last month with the aim of recovering and forensically analysing the remains of nearly 800 infants buried at the site, many of whom are believed to have been interred in a disused septic tank.
A special body has been established by the Government to oversee the project and ensure that the recovered human remains are memorialised and buried with respect and dignity.
Fr Brendan Kilcoyne, who served as secretary to the Archbishop of Tuam for over a decade, said âa fortune of moneyâ was being spent on the excavation works despite the completion of a âfirst-classâ government inquiry.
He said the works would take two years, during which time a âblack massâ would take place in Tuam, peddling âblack propagandaâ about the history of the home.
Fr Kilcoyne said there was an âoutrageous mythâ that children at the institution had âmet an untimely end through bad actionâ. He described the nuns who ran the home as âoutstandingâ, and said he did not believe there was any âbad actionâ.
âWe are now about to spend two years and a fortune of money excavating every single piece of human remains in an area where it was always known human remains were buried,â he said.
A âblack massâ is a satanic ritual or a blasphemous ceremony mocking the Christian mass.
He claimed that the Church was being âshaftedâ by the deliberate propagation of misinformation surrounding the history of the mother and baby home, and said the government inquiry had âlargely exoneratedâ the nuns.
Appearing to question the decision to carry out excavation works in Tuam, Fr Kilcoyne asked whether anyone knew where âthe 60,000 Irish children who have been murdered since abortion was brought inâ were buried.
âLetâs dig them up,â he added.
Fr Kilcoyne, who also served as president of the local post-primary school in Tuam for five years, was speaking on his podcast,
.He said an impression was being given in an âunscrupulous mannerâ that children died through bad action or criminal behaviour in Tuam, and that they were âdeliberately buried in a septic tankâ.
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