Skip to main content
Hundreds greet survivors of Magdalene Laundries scandal
Thousands of women between 1922 to 1996 were forced to do unpaid labour in Catholic-run workhouses
Survivor of the Magdalene laundries Gabrielle O'Gorman (right) is greeted by members of the public as she arrives at the Mansion House in Dublin to attend a Gala dinner for survivors and their supporters

HUNDREDS of people welcomed survivors of the notorious Magdalene Laundries scandal to a reception in Dublin city centre yesterday, the first time the women had gathered in Ireland.

Irish President Michael D Higgins had apologised on Tuesday to the thousands of women forced to do unpaid labour in Catholic-run workhouses between 1922 and 1996 who he said had been “failed by the state.”

Unmarried mothers, women with learning disabilities and girls who had been abused were forced to enter the Magdalene laundries over seven decades.

An estimated 10,000 women and girls were forced to work in the 10 laundries. A 2013 report found the Irish state was directly involved in their incarceration.

Initially seen as short-term refuges for women, the workhouses soon became long-term institutions, inflicting a cruel punishment regime behind locked doors, with no wages and no option to leave.

Run by the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy, the Religious Sisters of Charity and the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, the last Magdalene asylum closed in Waterford as recently as 1996.

Theresa Ryan described the gathering as “bitter-sweet,” telling the BBC that she had spent her childhood in the Good Shepherd workhouse in Limerick.

“I was three or four when they took me. They changed my name, they changed my birthday, my whole childhood was gone,” she said.

In 2013 then taoiseach Enda Kelly issued a formal apology to the women, establishing the Magdalene restorative justice system to bring the survivors together and make sure the scandal would not be forgotten.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Keir Starmer
Editorial / 23 May 2025
23 May 2025
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves speaks with the media at the Rolls-Royce factory in Derby, following the announcement from the Office for National Statistics that the UK economy grew by 0.7% between January and March, May 15, 2025
Editorial: / 15 May 2025
15 May 2025
Similar stories
CRUCIAL HISTORY: A silent crowd follows the funeral processi
Features / 17 March 2025
17 March 2025
From colonialism to the Troubles, the story of England’s first colony is one of exploitation, resistance, and solidarity — and one we should fight to ensure is told, writes teacher ROBERT POOLE
AGAINST BRAINWASHING: (L) Magdalen Laundry in Ireland, early
Appreciation / 6 August 2024
6 August 2024
FIONA O’CONNOR treasures the work of Edna O’Brien for the depth of evocation of psychologies, desires and losses among ordinary lives
ROMANTIC SETTING: Enniscorthy from east
Book Review / 30 July 2024
30 July 2024
FIONA O’CONNOR relishes an artfully restrained novel whose style is perfectly in tune with the petit bourgeois existence it portrays