Protest over Cork apartment plan told Bessborough site 'is not just land'
Senator Alice Higgins addressing the protest outside Leinster House against the construction of residential apartments on the site of Bessborough mother and baby home in Cork. Picture: Sam Boal/Collins
A protest outside Leinster House on Wednesday was told that the Bessborough mother and baby home site is "not an empty field waiting to be filled".
Campaigners attempting to stop the construction of a 140âunit apartment development on the grounds of the former Cork mother and baby home were joined by politicians and families for the 'No Building Over Bessborough' rally.
More than 850 babies who died there remain unaccounted for, and the Commission of Inquiry said they are most likely on the vast grounds where they were born.
Some of the supporters wept throughout the rally, while others held up placards saying, âstop the developmentâ and âfind the babiesâ.
One of the speakers at the event was Carmel Cantwell, whose mother, Madeleine Bridget Marvier, was locked up in the home when she was 17 and gave birth to a baby boy, William, who died.
She said: âI stand here not only as a family member or someone connected to Bessborough, but as a voice for those who cannot speak to themselves, the mothers, the children and the generations whose lives were shaped and, in many cases, shattered by what happened on these grounds.
âBessborough is not just land. It is not an empty field waiting to be filled. It is a place of memory, of loss, of unanswered questions.
âIt is the landscape that holds the stories of thousands of women and children who pass through the gates, many of whom never came home. Hundreds of children who died here have no known burial place.âÂ
Terri Harrison also spoke at the event and described how as a teenager she was âabductedâ from London and brought to Bessborough, where her son Niall was taken away and adopted.
She was one of the campaigners who successfully opposed the previous development plans at Bessborough and addressed the crowd saying: âAnd here we are againâ.
âThese people who run this country⊠they don't give a damn,â she said.
âThey want us to die off, shut up and go away. I was one of the first people who went up against An Bord PleanĂĄla five years ago, and I was cross-examined by the state solicitor, the barrister, the developer, and we won, we celebrated.
âNow here we are again. I will never stop, but I donât mind anymore about this lot [in the DĂĄil] because they will never hear us.â
People Before Profit TD Richard Boyd Barrett, who was born in a mother and baby home in London and later adopted, said he and his birth mother, actress Sinead Cusack, went looking for his place of birth at Christmas.
âI was lucky in that 38 years after we were separated by the church and state regime, she found me, and we were reunited.
âWe went looking for the mother and baby home I was born, which was somewhere in Highgate. But she couldn't remember because she was so traumatised at the time. I obviously wanted to see where I was born."Â
Mr Boyd Barrett said they did not find the home, but it is "part of my history and that's part of my identity".Â
âIf that matters to me, my history, my identity and my heritage...how much more important is it to respect the 859 children who disappeared, who we donât know where they are, what happened to them, but who lost their lives in these dark institutions.â





