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Buncrana priest criticised in child abuse report 02.06.09

A Buncrana-born priest is among those criticised in the Ryan Report into child abuse in State-run institutions.
Fr William McGonagle who died two years ago at the age of 86, was the former resident manager of the notorious St Conleth's Reformatory School for Boys in Daingean, Co Offaly. He was in charge of the school for young offenders from the late 1960s until the early 1970s.
The recently-published Ryan Report gives him the pseudonym 'Fr Luca' and criticises his ambivalent approach to the corporal punishment meted out by some of his staff at the reformatory. The punishments included sadistic floggings and beatings for even minor offences. In 1968 Fr McGonagle told visiting members of the Kennedy committee, "openly and without embarrassment", how boys were beaten with a leather strap. Asked why he allowed boys to be stripped naked for punishment, he replied, "in a matter of fact way", that he considered punishment to be more humiliating when it was administered in that fashion.
The late Fr William McGonagle Later in his statement to the Ryan Report before his death, Fr McGonagle said he had "no recollection" of having said these things.
Several of the complainants who were abused at Daingean described the screams from boys being beaten by the brothers as "horrifying and fear inducing".
The Ryan Report outlines how the "dreadful effects of these screams was most
graphically brought home to the committee by the evidence of Fr Luca himself".
He told the committee that one evening when he was saying his prayers he heard "the leather" being used on a boy. Fr McGonagle said: "I thought it was a most revolting thing and said 'here am I inside to praise God and Christ himself is being punished now right beside me. It sunk into me as a kind of horror, that it was such a contradiction to all that we were working about". He was asked by the committee if this had left a big impression on him and he said: "To this day, it still does. When I hear of anybody being beaten up, we say in the North, it annoys me, but it is much deeper than annoyance. It shook me. It confirmed my determination as soon as possible and when possible I would try to get rid of it..."
Fr McGonagle was born in Buncrana in 1920 and was one of seven children. He was educated locally and at St Columb's College, Derry. He left school at 16 to work on the family farm but six years later he returned to education. He entered Mount Melleray college and completed the Leaving Certificate. He joined the Oblates in September 1944 and was ordained a priest in June 1950. He spent the next 14 years giving parish missions in Britain and Ireland. Fr McGonagle was appointed provincial of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate in Ireland, Britain and Brazil in 1982.
After his appointment to St Conleth's in 1964, he wrote a memorandum about the institution a year later in which he recommended "complete obliteration and start right from the foundations again".
Writing in 1966 of the Daingean boys, Michael Viney of The Irish Times stated: "Theirs is a world of overriding shabbiness and decrepitude". On a positive note he said Fr McGonagle was a man "of integrity and concern".
The Ryan Report also highlights "sytemic and widespread" sexual behaviour between boys which was "often abusive and was not seriously addressed by management". There was also sexual abuse of boys by some staff at Daingean. But the inquiry team notes that the full extent of the sex abuse is impossible to quantify "because of the absence of a proper system of receiving, handling and recording complaints and investigations". The inquiry team notes that while Fr McGonagle expressed his revulsion at corporal punishment at his institution, "it was within his power as manager to put a stop to it and he chose not to do so".
Regarding the sexual abuse of boys in his care, the report team notes: "Fr Luca's procedure would have tended to suppress rather than encourage allegations of sexual abuse in Daingean". Singer and musician Don Baker, who suffered at the hands of the Oblate Brothers, recently described how Fr McGonagle did nothing to stop his abuse. Mr Baker was sent to Daingean as a 12-year-old for stealing a bicycle. "He didn't administer the flogging. He handed that over to another Brother. But he knew exactly what was going on and did nothing to stop it," said Mr Baker, following the publication of the Ryan Report.
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