"Philomena" inspiration doesn't blame Vatican for forced adoption
VATICAN CITY -- The woman who inspired the Oscar-nominated film "Philomena," about an Irish mother forced to give up her son for adoption, says she doesn't blame the Vatican for her ordeal, despite a damning U.N. report essentially holding the Holy See responsible for such practices.
Philomena Lee spoke at a news
conference Thursday after meeting briefly with Pope Francis and screening
"Philomena" for Francis' personal secretary at the Vatican a day earlier.
Lee's son was sent to the United States to be adopted when he was 3 and she never heard from him again.
On Wednesday, a U.N. human rights
committee essentially held the Vatican
responsible for such forced adoptions arranged by Catholic-run institutions in
Ireland, urging it to investigate and compensate victims. The recommendation
was contained in a scathing report on the Vatican's
failure to protect children as a signatory to a U.N. treaty on children's
rights.
"You were made to feel so bad about having a baby out of wedlock," she recalled. "I've carried the guilt inside for 50 years, without telling anybody."
"So I had such a sense of relief that I had been forgiven," she said.
Asked if the church should ask her forgiveness, for having taken her son away from her, Lee said she initially was bitter about what had been done to her, and that she did "lose my religion a little bit."
"But over the years, after such a
long time - Anthony would be 62 this year - so how could I go through a whole
of life holding a grudge? I've long since forgiven everything that did
happen."
Lee, her daughter and an Irish organization, Adoption Rights Alliance, are pressing the Irish government to release the files of some 60,000 women whose children were put up for adoption in those years, in a bid to help mothers and children reunite.
During the screening of the film to Vatican officials, Lee and others involved in The Philomena Project asked Vatican officials to press the Catholic Church in Ireland to release the adoption files that church-affiliated adoption agencies still keep.
The so-called mother and baby houses where Lee was sent were different from the better-known Magdalene Laundries, where young women were often sent to keep them out of trouble.
The number of children forcibly put up for adoption from the Magdalene Laundries pales by comparison to the tens of thousands taken away from their mothers at the boarding houses like the one Lee attended, said Susan Lohan of the Adoption Rights Alliance.
"The women had been virtual prisoners," Kroft reported. "Confined behind convent walls for perceived sins of the flesh, condemned to a life of servitude."
As one of these women told Kroft back in 1999, "It's made me feel a horrible, dirty person all my life." .