The movie “Philomena,” which opens this week and stars Judi Dench, tells
the true story of an unwed, pregnant Irish girl who is sent off to a
convent, where her baby is given up for adoption against her will. Years
later, as an elderly woman, Philomena tries to find her son.
The convent where Philomena was sent was a “Magdalen Laundry,” one of many convents across Ireland where thousands of girls – pregnant out of wedlock or otherwise deemed morally wayward – were placed by the church or their families. At the laundries, the girls endured harsh, unpaid labor to make restitution for their sins.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/philomena-and-irelands-magdalen-laundries/
The convent where Philomena was sent was a “Magdalen Laundry,” one of many convents across Ireland where thousands of girls – pregnant out of wedlock or otherwise deemed morally wayward – were placed by the church or their families. At the laundries, the girls endured harsh, unpaid labor to make restitution for their sins.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/philomena-and-irelands-magdalen-laundries/