Cemetery Masses are being held all over Ireland during these summer months. Yes, we remember our deceased relatives and friends in November with its feast of All Souls, but the long days and good weather of summer allow us to hear Mass in a unique way in the open air and to pray, almost in…
Month: June 2026
Laois nun who helped generations of women into work to be honoured
A Co. Laois nun remembered for helping generations of young women in Portlaoise find work is to be honoured with a permanent memorial at her former convent. Mother Columba, the late principal of the Presentation Convent in Portlaoise, has been described as “a legend” for her efforts to secure jobs for pupils in the civil…
Pioneers encouraged to discuss Synodal Pathway themes
In preparation for the Synodal Gathering this coming October, members of the Pioneers have been invited to include discussions on the seven Irish Synodal Pathway Working Group themes in their meetings, Fr Robert McCabe, Central Spiritual Director for the Pioneers, told The Irish Catholic. Fr McCabe said there are some questions he is sharing with Pioneer members…
Archbishop Farrell praises those who make hidden contributions to the Church
People who believe in Jesus in a very worldly way can miss the true meaning of the Gospel, Archbishop Dermot Farrell has said. He was speaking at a Mass last week in which he praised those who often make an unnoticed contribution to the life of the Church. He spoke of their “deep faith and…
Irish nun who defied the Nazis remembered in new book
A new book is shining fresh light on the life of an Irish nun who helped save hundreds of people from the Nazis before surviving imprisonment in Ravensbrück concentration camp. The Nun of Ravensbrück: The Irish Nun Who Defied the Nazis, by historian Cathi Fleming, tells the story of Sr Kate McCarthy, a Franciscan nun…
Little demand for school divestment in rural or working-class areas
Most demand for the divestment of Catholic primary schools to other patron bodies is in middle-class urban areas, with much less demand for divestment in rural and working-class areas, according to new analysis of an extensive Department of Education survey of parents around the country. More details of that survey have now emerged, and Alan…
Holy Rosary Sisters remember founder at birthplace in Tipperary
The Missionary Sisters of the Holy Rosary remembered the birthday of their founder Bishop Joseph Shanahan last weekend, gathering in Dublin and at his birthplace in Borrisoleigh, Co. Tipperary. Bishop Shanahan founded the Missionary Sisters of the Holy Rosary in 1924, as Bishop and Vicar Apostolic of Onitsha in southeast Nigeria, where he had been…
Documentary to counter ‘myths’ about Tuam mother and baby home
A planned new documentary aims to counter the widespread belief that the Bons Secours Sisters who ran the Tuam mother and baby home deliberately neglected, or even murdered, more than 800 babies over its 36-year history, and then ‘dumped’ the bodies in a septic tank. The documentary is being made by local historian, Eugene Jordan.…
Leaving Cert paper attacked for using the term ‘pregnant person’
A question in this year’s Leaving Cert has sparked controversy by using the words ‘pregnant person’ rather than ‘pregnant woman’. The question was in the Leaving Certificate’s Social Education exam. It illustrated a pregnant woman and asked, “Besides taking folic acid, describe two positive lifestyle changes a pregnant person should make to protect the unborn…
Housing crisis ‘biggest obstacle’ to getting married, says bishop
Housing is the “biggest obstacle” facing couples preparing for marriage in Ireland, Bishop Denis Nulty has said, as new figures from the CSO show the country’s marriage rate has fallen to its lowest recorded level outside the pandemic years. Speaking to The Irish Catholic, Bishop Nulty, who is head of the Accord Catholic Marriage Care Service, said the…



Renata Steffens






